Published
I should also add that the facility that considers mittens to be restraints is reporting them as part of restraints use in comparison to other Magnet hospitals (their numbers are considerably higher than the national average).
I think the results are skewed because the other hospitals may not be counting the mittens in their audits and there is no way to tell which ones do or don't!
in2ICU
71 Posts
Hi All,
Are mittens, used alone, considered a restraint at your facility?
I have worked at a couple of major magnet-designated medical centers and they have opposing views on classifying the use of mittens as a restraint. One says they are, and the other calls them a restraint alternative.
Just to be clear, I mean the boxing glove looking mittens that have velcro at the wrist to hold them on the patient's hands. These are NOT tied down in any way shape or form and the patient can still move his/her arms. Specifically, I use these in the ICU to keep patients who are sedated from pulling their ET tube or central line because obviously they are not thinking clearly!
Please let me know what your hospital's stance is... thanks!