Being blamed for fall after shift

Nurses General Nursing

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Hello all,

I have a question maybe you can offer some input. Even if you can't I need to vent a little to people who may understand.

I'm a relatively new ICU nurse. I've been on the unit for about 2 month now, 5 weeks or so on my own. I have never had less than 2 patients. Several weeks ago I had a very confused patient fall while I was next door working on a spontaneous breathing trial for a vented patient. I was told it was my fault because I should have asked someone to watch the confused one any time I stepped away from his room. OK I accepted this and took responsibility.

Fast forward to yesterday. I have a patient who is alert and oriented x 3. Orders are to get her out of bed and to bedside chair, commode, etc. I get her out of bed to the chair (with multiple BMs in the commode along the way). I look for a chair alarm - there are none - and I request it from our charge nurse. None can be located. Throughout the day we find 2 single alarms but utilize them for the 2 most confused patients on the floor.

Come shift change - this is long I know please bare with me - I give report to the night nurse and let her know about the lack of chair alarm. I also explain to patient that myself and night nurse will pUT her back in bed shortly. 5 minutes later I'm documenting and night nurse calls me and says she was in the room, saw patient attempt to stand up, aND she lowered the patient to the ground. Charge nurses are made aware, director is made aware. No injury.

Today I get in and am told that I am being held accountable for the fall because the patient was out of bed without a chair alarm which never should have happened .

Finally the meat and potatoes - your opinions are requested. Was this my fault for allowing patient to remain in chair with no alarm? Does the fact that we didn't have alarms matter? Would this fall under my shift given that I'd already endorsed the patient?

I should note that my employer is a huge corporation and that we are not provided sitters (not that an aox3 patient needs one), and we are unable to use restraint of any type except chemical if patient is agitated. Should I have left this patient in bed all day since we had no alarms? Moreover I pointed out today that the nurse being IN the room meant she was able to respond much faster than anyone would have upon hearing a chair alarm. No dice.

I feel this is going to become an issue and it looks very bad considering my newness. Would appreciate feedback.

That depends on your facility. At mine, even with assistance, if the patient's knee touches the ground, its a fall.

Specializes in School Nursing.

Since when do alarms actually prevent falls?

Specializes in Neurology.
Specializes in LTACH/Stepdown ICU.

Any update on this issue?

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