I work in an SICU. It is common that I will receive a pt. who is intubated and on propofol or versed and has either nothing at all ordered for analgesia or what is in my opinion very skimpy pain med orders i.e. tylenol or 1 5/500 hydrocodone. Every once in a while I might luck out and find an old order for morphine 2mg Q 6 hours or if I am really lucky the PACU orders that have not been d/ced yet.
Very few of the other nurses give these meds at all. They question why I feel the need to give them, but I have found that when I do give pain meds consistently I can often turn the sedation down a little bit and the patient does not buck the vent as much. Also their foreheads relax and they look more peaceful to me. I take this as evidence that they are in pain.
I work nights and the night coverage is VERY hesitant to add any type of medication orders because our intensivists freak out when they do. Is this normal? To have a restrained, intubated patient on sedation only?
I personally think this is barbaric and it haunts me. This is my first and only ICU job so I am not sure how things are done elsewhere. I would love to hear from others!
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I work in an SICU. It is common that I will receive a pt. who is intubated and on propofol or versed and has either nothing at all ordered for analgesia or what is in my opinion very skimpy pain med orders i.e. tylenol or 1 5/500 hydrocodone. Every once in a while I might luck out and find an old order for morphine 2mg Q 6 hours or if I am really lucky the PACU orders that have not been d/ced yet.
Very few of the other nurses give these meds at all. They question why I feel the need to give them, but I have found that when I do give pain meds consistently I can often turn the sedation down a little bit and the patient does not buck the vent as much. Also their foreheads relax and they look more peaceful to me. I take this as evidence that they are in pain.
I work nights and the night coverage is VERY hesitant to add any type of medication orders because our intensivists freak out when they do. Is this normal? To have a restrained, intubated patient on sedation only?
I personally think this is barbaric and it haunts me. This is my first and only ICU job so I am not sure how things are done elsewhere. I would love to hear from others!