What is a new nurse to you?

Nurses General Nursing

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Specializes in Certified Med/Surg tele, and other stuff.

Is it a year? Two?

Yesterday, I had a nurse with 5 yrs experience miss a very high bp. The dr was not happy and neither was I. The CNA who took the bp didn't report it to the night shift RN, and the day shift nurse saw this number populate to the computer and she never questioned it. :uhoh3: The number was dangerously high and should have been reported. This was no baseline for the patient.

Anyway, I told the assistant manager of the missed bp, stating lack of communication from the CNA, and the lack of critical thinking from the RN who never thought it was reportable. The A.M response back to me?

This nurse is new. She only has FIVE years experience under her belt.

Five years is NOT a new grad. Anyone should know that a bp that is 30+ pts higher both systolic and diastolic from baseline is NOT normal, especially someone with 5 yrs experience.

What was the BP?

Specializes in Certified Med/Surg tele, and other stuff.

205/116.

205/116.

I'm not even a nurse yet, and I know something is not right there...

What!?!? And the NM excused her because she is "new"? Wow. The nurse is not providing what a reasonable, prudent nurse would do. IMHO. Nothing was done? Was clonidine ordered? Or did she not do anything at all?

Specializes in Certified Med/Surg tele, and other stuff.

Doc ordered meds, based on a bp that was taken 8 hr prior. The new bp was more reasonable 140/70's. The doc had to be notified of the new bp as the doses ordered might have been too high. Thank God the guy didn't stroke out.

This nurse is new to the facility but not a new nurse.. Ai Yi Yi...

No the AM didn't do anything. The dr and I did. (insert annoyed look)

Specializes in CVICU.

As a new grad, I would have recognized that as a dangerous BP. There's no excuse for that at all. Even the CNA, without benefit of nursing school, would recognize that!

Specializes in ER, IICU, PCU, PACU, EMS.

My question is this since it is unclear:

You spoke directly to this "new" RN with 5 years experience and she said she didn't think it was high or didn't see it?

"The CNA who took the bp didn't report it to the night shift RN"

How about the night shift RN, is she totally off the hook now?

Were there any further BP's measured after that?

Was that number rechecked; perhaps the patients was temporarily agitated or in pain and the pressure decreased with pain meds?

Specializes in Med Surg/Tele/ER.
Doc ordered meds, based on a bp that was taken 8 hr prior. The new bp was more reasonable 140/70's. The doc had to be notified of the new bp as the doses ordered might have been too high. Thank God the guy didn't stroke out.

This nurse is new to the facility but not a new nurse.. Ai Yi Yi...

No the AM didn't do anything. The dr and I did. (insert annoyed look)

A doctor ordered meds on a b/p from 8 hrs prior????? No re-check??? How long was the b/p elevated..or was this just a one time event? Did this b/p come down on its own or were b/p meds given? This is just odd to me that any doctor would order anything and not have a new set of vitals, and I would not have given it without them either.

Specializes in geriatrics.

She should have known better. That is a dangerous BP. And if you have been steadily employed, I would think once you hit the 2nd year mark, that's not a new grad anymore. We're always learning, but after 2 years, a nurse should have enough insight to be effective on the job.

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