Re: How does inadequate staffing relate to patient safety? Any stories?
No one watches our central monitor either. I'm not sure why we even have one.
On our unit, we are expected to cross-cover for breaks in a level 4 PICU where in recent years the majority of our hires have been new grads who in turn were precepted by staff with less than a full year of experience. This cross-coverage very often results in critically ill post-cardiovascular surgery patients covered by nurses who are not qualified by our unit's policies, or cross-covering patients who are supposed to be 1:1 by policy. There are times when one nurse might be responsible for 4 infants all on pressors, with intracardiac lines, and a host of other factors. We rarely use neuromuscular blockers so the odds of one or more of these little people getting into trouble at the same time is high. I could cite many instances of unplanned extubations, loss of central and arterial lines, monitor alarms going ignored for several minutes, and other such consequences of inadequate (or inappropriate) staffing.
But one instance jumps to mind. I was not there when it happened but someone whose credibility is unquestioned was. Her patient was a child with chronic serious health problems, trached on CPAP and prone to seizures. He had come in with sepsis and was starting to rally. She went for her supper break, leaving the nurse at the next bed to cover him. When she returned to the unit, she discovered that her patient was now on a rate. She asked her break nurse what happened and the nurse told her that he had gone apneic not long after my friend had left the unit at least half an hour previously, so the RT put him on a rate. Her next question was, "Why did he go apneic?" and the response was that the other nurse didn't know. "Well, did you assess him?" "No, I was busy changing the linen for my patient so the RT just bagged him then put him on a rate." When she assessed her patient his pupils were blown. He was also bradycardic and hypertensive... A stat CT showed a massive intracranial bleed and incipient herniation. The boy died hours later. My friend was livid; this wasn't the first time something like this had happened with one of her patients while she was on her break and in short order she quit.
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