Thought I'd start a general discussion on the use of restraints, giving us the opportunity to discuss how common it is, the ethics, professional and legal implications, and what you may have come across in the course of your professional practice. As...
Sheer curiosity - I was reviewing the protocol for triage and it consists of a two pager Q&A that notes the method of arrival, time of arrival, presenting complaint, allergies, obs, GCS, investigations (ECG, urinalysis and tetanus), pain score, d...
So in your experience would that mean that the triage nurse would only make a mental note of the information that would be conveyed to him/her by the ambulance crew at triage? Surely, not recording anything would leaves staff wide open legally?
Another quick question. We all know the importance of good record keeping, but would the receiving ED nurse in addition to recording the findings of their own assessment, also make a formal written record of all information that would be conveyed to...
You probably thought I was being smart - no I don't have a paper to write - it's just that I am trying to understand how triage operates in ED - and if there'd be a policy and protocol to guide practice. I no longer practice at the coldface (health ...
Quick question - do most ED's have triage policies and protocols in place to guide practice - and would the policy identify the locations where triage would be sited ie, majors and minors? How many triage areas are there in the unit that you work in,...
I think this trumps it! Only three weeks ago it was a Policy with a nice shiny title which clearly delineated it as a policy, staff duly recognised and implemented it as a policy, and then suddenly within a three week time frame the "policy" magical...
And when you document "Nil concerns/complaints to time of report" what process of assessment do you undertake to reach that conclusion out of interest? Should there not be more detail as to what you're referring to?
We are all familiar with the standards of proper documentation that say's that any matter that affects patient care needs to be documented, and the presumption in cases of litigation that "If it isn't documented it isn't done"! Progress notes would t...
I used nursing as a stepping stone sideways into another career. While in training I always knew that I'd be heading back to uni - essentially nursing and my training was the catalyst to move in health policy analysis. What I would suggest, is that...
Does the emergency department in which you work restrict the access that patients have to their significant other's and families, and if so, why? Patients who've attended a particular emergency department have reported that they were not allowed acce...