Vent!

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Specializes in Cardiac/Progressive Care.

I work 6pm-6am. I had this particular patient 5 days in a row last week, and came in last night, after 3 days off, to have him again. Some background: He's been in the Hospital for 2 weeks. He was being treated for complete thrombosis of the portal vein, among other things, so he was getting Lactulose multiple times a day to try to prevent/help with hepatic encephalopathy (his ammonia level was 82 upon admission, but came down to normal within the first week he was with us). As time went on, He started to refuse his Lactulose. When I left him last week, he was still totally cognitive, competant, able to hold a conversation, although he was becoming increasingly lethargic.

I came in last night to find they had had to insert an NJ tube (after multiple NG attempts), put him in soft limb restraints (wrists), and he was made a 1:1 observation- He was confused, agitated, constantly trying to pull out his tubes and lines when he was unrestrained, even with the 1:1, and he had managed to pull out his foley before the start of my shift. The doctors were blaming the hepatic encephalopathy, and the fact he had refused several doses of lactulose, so he was recieving the lactulose and some Osmolyte because he wasn't eating or taking anything po. When the 1:1 order was written, it was for the 1:1 for 10 hours after the NJ tube was placed, to keep pt from pulling out the tube. He was still to be in the soft limb restraints if needed. Midnight rolled around, the 1:1 person left, as the time was up, but he was still decently confused and the charge nurse and I split up the rest of the night hanging out in his room with him.

GI were the ones who placed the tube, and they generally round between 5 and 6 am. I was going to ask GI if they wanted to continue the 1:1 (well, beg them), but I ended up getting caught up with my other patients, and GI hadn't rounded yet by 630. At this point, he was still restrained but sleeping comfortably, and i was out at the desk giving report. The phlebotomist went in to draw blood for labs, and the oncoming nurse and I were keeping an ear out, but not really worrying about him too much, because there was someone in the room with him. A good 5 minutes go by, and the phlebotomist comes wandering out, and says that he is pulling his tubes out. We rush into the room to find that he has indeed pulled his wonderful NJ tube out. He was still in restraints, but had managed to slouch down far enough and bend sideways at the waist enough to reach his hand to his nose to pull it out.

Now, this may just be me, but if I were the phlebotomist, and I go in to do a labdraw, and notice the patients' wrists are tied down, and he has a tube in his nose, and he starts trying to mess with it, I would be yelling out to the nurses to come and help, or at least try to keep his hands away and ask for him to be repositioned, or SOMETHING. Not just stand there and watch as he cheats through the restraints to pull a tube out. Who would do that? Granted, he wasn't technically a 1:1 anymore, and we hadn't talked to GI yet, but still. Let a patient pull tubes out? UGH!

Yeah, that sux. But, probably should have continued the sitting order earlier. Sure they are gonna be ****** to have to redo the NG, but such is life. The phleb probably didn't realize how quick the patient was, especially if not warned. All she had to do was turn away to deal with her equipment and that's enuf time for these sneaky patients to pull something. After all her job is to get the draw, then go get the next.

It's gonna happen and you need to vent, but I wouldn't let myself blame someone for this.

Specializes in ER.

Our phlebotomist would do the same thing as yours. Another nurse would grab onto the tube and yell for help. Probably the difference is that another nurse knows what a pain it is to reinsert the darn things.

Specializes in ER/ICU/STICU.
Yeah, that sux. But, probably should have continued the sitting order earlier. Sure they are gonna be ****** to have to redo the NG, but such is life. The phleb probably didn't realize how quick the patient was, especially if not warned. All she had to do was turn away to deal with her equipment and that's enuf time for these sneaky patients to pull something. After all her job is to get the draw, then go get the next.

It's gonna happen and you need to vent, but I wouldn't let myself blame someone for this.

I have to agree. You also don't know when the pt pulled out the tube. For all you know the tube was out before the phlebotomist went in. By your own admission you were at the desk "keeping an ear out", but not much noise is make when they pull out an NGT. Pt's can be very resourceful trying to pull things out. I personally think they try to harder when they are restrained.

Specializes in Pediatric/Adolescent, Med-Surg.

It sucks, but I personally would have paged GI to get the sitter re-ordered if you believed the pt was still agitated and at risk for pulling out his NJ tube.

Specializes in Cardiac/Progressive Care.

He was asleep until she went in, and i had just left his room to come out to update the day nurse. We could hear him snoring, and he was directly across from the desk with his curtain wide open. As he was confused and had the encephalopathy going on, he wasn't quick at all, he was really sluggish.

Now that i've had time to sleep, I know I can't reallly blame the phlebotomist. But it's still very frustrating. Thye most likely are not going to reinser tthe tube, as it was a huge deal to get it in the first time. They ended with the NJ because he ended up being sedated for the placement.

And we generally would have let the sitter step out of the room when the lab came in anyway, if they needed to go to the bathroom or grab a drink or something, As long as there was someone else in the room with the pt.

Just very frustrating, overall/

+ Add a Comment