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How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?



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  #11  
Old Aug 28, 2007, 11:54 PM
cardiacRN2006's Avatar
Moving on......
Join Date: Jan 2005
Re: How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?

My fear would be that some people aren't quick enough to change the arm band if someone changes their mind. I've had families change their mind 1-2 minutes into the arrest (of course we are there when that happens). But I worry that a change has occured and isnt' reflected right away.

For me, in the ICU, code status is passed on in report is on the Kardex, and we also have a sheet in the front of the chart.

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  #12  
Old Aug 30, 2007, 07:31 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Re: How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?

I work on a Med-Surg/Telemetry unit and we currently use a black and white striped arm band for DNR or DNR-CC.

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  #13  
Old Sep 06, 2007, 04:10 PM
David's Harp (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Re: How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?

Hi, newbie nurse here. Our floor is tele, and our institution uses blue bracelets to indicate DNR status. However, I haven't heard code status featured in report unless there's some discrepancy somewhere, and I've been bothered by this. I have made it a point to fish it out of the chart, and from now on I'll be putting it in my reports no matter what the status is. Should be right in there with pt's age, gender, admitting Dx, etc. I may be completely new to this profession, but this strikes me as being a matter in which there should be no ambiguity at all, especially on an acute cardiology floor.

On a related note, I sure hope the bracelet system becomes uniform at some point. I can't imagine being a travel nurse, for instance, and having to learn a new damn color scheme with every change of institution...

-Kevin


Last edited by David's Harp : Sep 06, 2007 at 05:37 PM. Reason: misspelled "newbie", as only a nooby would do...
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  #14  
Old Sep 11, 2007, 06:01 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Re: How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?

We don't use colored arm bands for code status. we have a code status form in the main chart which needs to be addressed by the MD upon admission. This form has a yellow copy in the bottom which goes to the bedside chart once signed. At the beginning of the shift, we look at the code status and write in our report sheet. If MD didn't address the code status right away, we look at the old chart and if the patient is A/O, we clarify it with them and write a note to the MD (there's a note section in the code status form). It is a case to case basis. If the patient is not alert and oriented and has a family, we ask them for advance directives (to find out who's the primary agent), then we ask the primary agent for the code status. If the patient is not A/O and doesn't have a family, we look for conservatorship, then we ask the conservator for the code status. If there's no one available at all and the patient is not A/O, the patient is considered a Full Code.

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  #15  
Old Sep 11, 2007, 06:08 PM
Registered User
Join Date: May 2007
Re: How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?

The last hospital I worked in had little metal placards with a triangle on it that was placed on the door under the room number of a patient's room if they were DNR.

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  #16  
Old Sep 20, 2007, 09:00 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Exclamation Re: How Does Your Facility Identify Code Status?

At our facility we identify pts that no code with a yellow armband. We do our charting electronically so all our informtion is on the computer. The pts DRN status is identified when the pt. is admitted . As soon as the the DRN order has been written the arm band is placed on the pt.

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