Re: RN-Attention Deficit Disorder-Nonhyperactive Originally Posted by TraumaNurse07
Do you have a routine? I found that my routine keeps me on track. Like Viking said, make it a point to chart your assessments after you do them. It saves a lot of time and headache when you forget what your patients lungs sound like. For me, when I come in, I get report, do my assessments, chart, review MARs, pass meds, clean the rooms etc. Maybe a routine would help. I used a brain sheet too when I worked my first nursing job, was great because I had to care for four patients then.
How can you possibly get meds done on time if you take time to chart assessments before med rounds?

I have assessed before meds, but couldn't possibly take the time to chart it before meds. We have a long computer version of assessment. I have started trying to remember to leave my SBARR at the wallaroo where we keep the chart, so I am loosing them less frequently. I also carry one of those reusable grocery bags that you buy at the store for a dollar on my COW. I keep supplies in it like flushes, fill needles, even some lab equipment, alcohol pads and I can put my SBARRS in there if I need to. That has helped a lot. Leaves my pockets available for carrying narcs and pens, scissors and keys. Now I just have to make sure I keep up with my bag, LOL! This morning an oncoming nurse grabbed my COW while I was giving report, I had to track my bag down before I went home, so I could put it in my locker. Took me 5 or 10 minutes to track her and my bag down. She thought she should get to keep it, seemed surprised that I wanted it. One of my coworkers uses a craft bag which she sets on her COW but I like to hang mine on the back so it is out of the way.
My routine is to get report as quickly as possible, pull up my patients on the MAK, check to see what I need to get out of the PYXIS like colace or pain meds if I know them and know they will be wanting them, then I go to the sickest pt first (if I know) and assess then give meds. I make notes of any particulars on my SBARR, like Rhonchi, bloody urine, IV wouldn't flush, residual levels, etc. I go to the next patient and repeat the process and so on. On a night where noone has a BM and I am not interupted by a crisis I can generally finish my round by 9 pm, then I chart the assessments. That is on IMCU where we have 3 pretty sick patients. On a night where everyone is pooping, in crisis or begging for pain meds, or if I get a new admission it may be after midnight rounds when I get to chart. If I have a lot of line draws, then it will be another 30-45 minutes which puts me up to around 2 am charting. If I have had to call docs I almost always make a computer note at the time I call the doc, then write out the TORB and use that time noted on order to finish charting about the event if I am not at a computer when I get the call back from doc.
If I work on the other end where we have 6 patients, it is just plain hell the first night because inevitably they are all yelling for pain meds before I can get to them on rounds and I am not going to carry pain meds for 6 different patients in my pockets. I try to see that my "patients in pain" are all nicely medicated

before giving report so that they don't blow up the call light during shift change which can be 30-45 minutes on a good day. I don't know why the shift I follow can't pick up on this and do it too! This floor is notorious for having report interupted which makes it even worse.

It is a nightmare just getting through report down there, whether you are oncoming or going off! It is so hard to chart assessments on 6 patients especially if you have new admits or surgeries the next day. I am usually charting till 8 or 9 am especially after the 1st night on the floor and if I get a load of new patients in.
Mahage
"The fairly new nurse with 57 years of life experience!"
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