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With the new changes in allowing family members to witness code activities, would you want to watch your family member go through a code? I've heard this is done so that the family knows that the staff did all they could do, and to take the mystery out of codes. But would you want to watch a family member go through the pain of a code and all that it entails? What do you think?
I personally would not want to watch a family member, or even an acquaintance involved in a code. I have a difficult enough time when it's my patient, whom I have no other ties to. I would have no problem if a family member wanted to be in the room during a code......But if it caused additional agony (to the viewer) afterward, I'd probably have second thoughts on this subject.
Its a difficult situation. I personally would not want to watch my parents or anyone I know be in cardiac arrest and watch someone pump on their chest. However, I will say that I think it is a good idea for people to watch. I think it is sad watching CPR on someone who is in their 80s or 90s and has lived a long full life. When it is time to go, it's time to go. Let them go in peace. Maybe having family members present will help.
Last time I renewed my CPR the medic who did it severly lectured me on the fact that nurses do not support the new trend. That is allowing the family to witness CPR. I did not appreciate being talked down to like that and told him I was aware of the new thinking on the subject. I also told him that this new policy had to be instituted by the individual health care facilities. I could not just go in to work and start a new policy. I did not tell him that I have mixed feelings about the subject and do not know if I approve or not. I therefore voted UNSURE AT THIS TIME.
This is a touchy-feely trend that will go back out of style when the lawsuits mount.
But more important, while it might be family advocacy, it's not patient advocacy and the patient is my PRIMARY objective, with families taking a backseat.
During a code, I need every ounce of my energy, focus, skill, and experience on that patient. Familes require, if nothing else, keeping an eye on what is said and how - and that extra eye, that off my patient eye, is not advocacy.
And everybody in the business knows that codes are clustered messes at times. When the doc asks for a spinal needle, or you choose the esoteric device here, and it takes 72 seconds for it to arrive, how is that gonna impact perceptions of outcomes.
The other thing is, how much longer are codes going to last, when they are clearly futile, because the family needs more than 10, 20, 30 minutes to believe in the closure.
This is bad medicine. But eventually, common sense will win out over touchy feely.
And that's just my opinion, even if it's a strong one, so let the debate begin.
I think it is a bad idea. Codes are not pretty, this isn't TV, it's loud, it's confusing, it's ugly...it isn't anything that a family member should see...it is just going to confuse the family more than help them, the staff in the code do not have time to explain anything.
I believe, yes, they should be allowed. They should be able to see for themselves that everything possible was done. Are the results always good? Well obviously no. And for the family that doesn't want to be in there, they usually excuse themselves. Sometimes the family being there and seeing the code will actually end it early. They say to stop, the patient wouldn't want it, which in most cases is true.
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