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Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube



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  #11  
Old Jul 15, 2007, 03:53 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Re: Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube

Originally Posted by XB9S View Post
Reading the OP this lady is anorexic and under the mental health act which in the UK means that they are allowed to perform interventions in her best interest even without consent. I imagine she is pulling the tube because she is trying to refuse treatment
Exactly right - (without breaking her rights of confidentiality), she is someone who would sooner have the trauma of the NG tube resited than gain weight.

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  #12  
Old Jul 15, 2007, 03:56 PM
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Re: Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube

Originally Posted by birdrecruit View Post
Exactly right - (without breaking her rights of confidentiality), she is someone who would sooner have the trauma of the NG tube resited than gain weight.
To clarify this , she would sooner have neither the NG tube nor food nor water - its a pretty desperate situation.

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  #13  
Old Jul 15, 2007, 04:07 PM
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sharrie (Female)
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Re: Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube

Originally Posted by birdrecruit View Post
To clarify this , she would sooner have neither the NG tube nor food nor water - its a pretty desperate situation.

It sounds like a really difficult patient to nurse, I can't offer any advise about restraints as it is not something we use in general nursing I really admire your skills being able to deal with this

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  #14  
Old Jul 15, 2007, 04:26 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Re: Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube

Originally Posted by XB9S View Post
It sounds like a really difficult patient to nurse, I can't offer any advise about restraints as it is not something we use in general nursing I really admire your skills being able to deal with this
Thanks for your support. I'll let you know how we go on.

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  #15  
Old Jul 15, 2007, 08:31 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Re: Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube

Originally Posted by XB9S View Post
Reading the OP this lady is anorexic and under the mental health act which in the UK means that they are allowed to perform interventions in her best interest even without consent. I imagine she is pulling the tube because she is trying to refuse treatment
I once had a 15 year old suffering from anorexi. She pulled her ng tube out just once. We made it very clear to her that it would be reinsterted each time she yanked it out. She never yanked it out again. Truely, having an ng tube inserted ranks right up nesxt to being entubated while you are still awake-something I also experienced once and only once. No matter how much I knew the need for my ng tube, it didn't make it any easier to co-operate with its insertion. I am really not joking, it feels like a garden size hose being inserted down your thoart. And I didn't enjoy it nor was I able to cooperate one tiny bit.

One of the other least enjoyable things of my stay last July, was the insertion of an aterial line into my jugler artery. I suffer from a mild form of tartive dsykensia(?). The attending kept yelling at me not to move my jaw. And I kept trying to tell her I had no control over the movement. Unfortunately, too late in my career I have learned all the nice little things we tell patients, when inserting tubes into them, is just not nice and certainly none of those tubes feel little. They all felt huge like the size of a garden hose or even a fireman's hose.

Woody

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  #16  
Old May 25, 2008, 02:23 AM
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Join Date: May 2008
Re: Restraining patient with naso-gastric tube

Oh, good God!

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