Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty
General Nursing Discussion /

What is the appropriate action to take?




Did You Know?
allnurses.com is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 328,705 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.
Page 1 of 3 1 23 >
May 23, 2007 11:55 PM

What is the appropriate action to take?


This is just a totally random question I thought of on a trip home from New Orleans recently. There was a very bad accident off one of the exits and it got me thinking.. If I were to witness a bad car accident, pulled over to assist--and for whatever reason it was clear that the person probably had neck injuries--but was not breathing/no pulse and needed CPR.. What is the appropriate action to take? I'm a student nurse, and I realize that I could get sued for potentially paralyzing someone in an effort to help, but the person would die without CPR.. So what would be the appropriate action to take? Hope this makes sense.


Bookmarks: Submit Thread to Digg Submit Thread to del.icio.us Submit Thread to StumbleUpon Submit Thread to Google

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Page 1 of 3 1 23 >
21 Comments:

No. 1
from TazziRN
Old May 24, 2007, 12:00 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
If the person has obvious neck injuries (badly out of alignment, etc.) and no pulse and is not breathing, chances are the spinal cord has injuries not compatible with life. In other words, he's already dead.
Top
 
No. 2
from TheCommuter Staff
Old May 24, 2007, 12:02 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
Good Samaritan laws should protect healthcare workers who are assisting the injured on their own time, as long as they are not accepting payment or gifts from the patient. Under these laws, you cannot be sued for providing care to the injured while you are off-duty at the scenes of vehicle collisions, fires, slip-and-falls, etc. As long as you do not accept money for the services rendered, you cannot be sued if the injured person goes downhill.

Good Samaritan laws were enacted to encourage healthcare workers to help the injured without fear of litigation.
Top
 
No. 3
from TazziRN
Old May 24, 2007, 12:35 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
But this is only true as long as the healthcare worker renders aid within his/her scope of practice. If a nurse attempts, albeit in good faith, to perform an emergency trache, which is normally a physician's procedure, the nurse can indeed be sued if anything negative happens.
Top
 
No. 4
from HoorahFLY
Old May 24, 2007, 12:40 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
Well, for the patient's sake---would you take them out of the car and perform CPR?
Top
 
No. 5
from TazziRN
Old May 24, 2007, 12:42 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
At that point, with obvious neck injuries, no I would not.
Top
 
No. 6
from TazziRN
Old May 24, 2007, 12:45 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
Another way to look at it: accident victims who have no pulse almost never make it back because they have injuries not compatible with life: severe head trauma, spinal cord severance, ruptured aorta/heart, etc.
Top
 
No. 7
from HoorahFLY
Old May 24, 2007, 01:02 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
But then if I didn't do anything--I could be in trouble, right?

Sorry, I'm still learning!! Thanks for your input everyone!
Top
 
No. 8
from TazziRN
Old May 24, 2007, 02:03 AM

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
No. You are not considered a medical professional since you are a student, so you would be held to the same standards as any other bystander.

If, after you are licensed, you identify yourself and still do nothing, yes you could be in trouble but only if it can be proven that your inaction caused the death.....very hard to prove if the person was dead when you arrived on scene.

Because medical personnel are not protected by the Good Samaritan Law once they identify themselves as medical personnel, many choose not to reveal this fact and will either help silently or not help at all.
Top
 
No. 9
from NREMT-P/RN Premium Member
Old May 24, 2007, 02:44 AM
Updated May 24, 2007 at 02:51 AM by NREMT-P/RN

Default Re: What is the appropriate action to take?
IF you WITNESS the accident, you should stay at the scene for the purpose of giving a WITNESS STATEMENT to the law enforcement officers.
In this CASE - you must stay to give a statement. END of LEGAL duty.

As to rendering aid - I'll try to be succinct.

As a rule - I DO NOT stop at accident scenes (yes, I have stopped before - but it has to be an exceptional circumstance). This is a personal decision. I DO NOT have red lights, decals, license plate, etc. on my POV that would identify me a nurse or paramedic. I will call 911 and give as much info as I can - exact location, # vehicles, possible resources they may need (fire truck, etc). Stopping at accident scenes that you have no duty to stop (witness) will firmly land you in the 100% accountable for your actions.
Reasons I DO NOT stop:

• Traffic scenes that are "fresh" are very unsafe, No LEO control puts you at the mercy of the scene gods - I've found that they can be punishing.

• No equipment, increases my chance of exposure (blood, haz mat, unstable vehicles, fire, electricity, other drivers, wreckage) - all the while, I am acting in an independent nature - so, if I became ill/injured as a result of my hero actions I alone suffer the consequences.

• Litigation. I know, go save lives - alleviate suffering - yada, yada, but, although I KNOW that I can be prudent and make good decisions and provide excellent care - I just cannot reconcile with the potential for a BAD OUTCOME for me. MVC's are often events that produce injury, injury = pain+suffering+economic damages. This equation makes a lawsuit. I choose not to be a factor.

A CAUTION on the GOOD SAMARITAN laws. Most states have found them to be unconstitutional - a law generally CANNOT limit one's rights to be "made whole"/recover damages. It is also NOT an AFFIRMATIVE defense. As such, I act in a manner consistent with my DUTY to ACT only. ANYONE can sue ANYONE for ANY REASON. Now, they may not win - but, you can bet that defending yourself will not be free/easy.

HoorahFLY - In the case that you describe - NO I would NOT start CPR. Blunt force trauma that has NO VITAL SIGNS on scene has a ZERO 0% factor to survive, no matter what is done. But as a student you probably did not know that. Also, I know of NO STATE that REQUIRES anyone to stop at a scene (unless they are the witness of the accident themselves). This includes NURSES. Now, is there a moral duty (personal choice)?


Anyway, I encourage all to be clear on your state laws.
Know your duty to act.
Make good decisions as it relates to your safety in UNCONTROLLED situations (no training, equipment, etc.). DO NOT become a victim.

The difference between HERO and (scape) GOAT is very narrow.
Stay safe.
Top
 
Page 1 of 3 1 23 >


Did You Know?
allnurses.com is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 328,705 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Thread Tools

Who's Online
154 members
1,693 guests
1,847
32

Hospital extends smoking ban to...

23

Old, but Not Out: The Aging Nurse...

47

Hospital throws out stillborn baby...

22

Health Industry is Desperate for...

3

India: Probe Against Two Nurses at...

0

Mum Was One of Derby's First Paid...

8

Wrongful Death Suit Will Be Heard...

0

City Youngsters Face Kidney...

0

The Doctor Is In: Shingles Vaccine...

1

Protein Lifesaver ; In Association...


Sponsored Links
Health Care Degrees Online
Healthcare Degrees Online!


0

Rejecting the Transplant

1

"Transcultural Nursing...

4

It's up to you

3

My life in Ireland and US...still...

9

Hasidic Jew Admitted for Bone...

16

Day One in the Life of a Nursing...

17

Suicide On The Ward

17

Culture of Violence

5

My First Nursing Instructor

0

Matua and Joseph Smith Junior, a...


Current Readers: 1



Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address:


New To Site
Need Help
Quick Links

Copyright © 1996-2009, allnurses.com. All rights reserved.  allnurses.com, Inc.
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:36 AM.

What is the appropriate action to take?