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Thanks for listening! I actually was assigned that same patient earlier this week (not as charge) and the mom was so thankful and made fudge to give to everyone that was there that night. (We, ahem, did not eat the fudge as the patient was germy but I told her how much everyone enjoyed it anyway. )
anon456, BSN, RN
3 Articles; 1,144 Posts
I work on a pediatric airway unit, and the charge nurse got sick about two hours into the shift, so I took over as relief charge by seniority. PICU is right across the hall so I felt secure in that. It was only my second time being relief charge nurse. At around 230 in the morning a nurse calls HELP and I was only about two doors down. I ran over and flipped the light on and the kid was in clear respiratory arrest and a color of blue I never want to see on anyone ever again. They were on the monitor and in the 40's O2Sat. I yelled out to call a code (still not believing this was actually happening) and then my PALS training took over and I took appropriate actions as the team leader. I am normally not that assertive but somehow I became so in this situation and was calling out orders. The patient was able to be revived and recovered well.
I am only a 2 year nurse and although I feel I am well trained with the patients on my floor, I never have done a code before. Sometimes when I'm about to fall asleep, I picture different code scenarios on my unit and reheorifice how I would react with a patient in a room on my unit, where all the supplies were and so on. I really, really think that's what helped me keep it together and make the right choices. I felt I was just acting out what I had reheorificed. I know skills can get rusty and most people only take PALS or ALS once every two years. I would encourage nurses to try mentally rehearsing scenarios on a regular basis with their PALS or ALS material. It saved a child's life because I was doing this.