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This week we have had 7 admissions to the building....4 of whom came from the same hospital. Two of the patients were actually dirty when they arrived!!! One looked like he hadn't been shaved in a week (and, no he wasn't trying to grow a beard), and the other poor soul had so much food and dried mucous in his mouth the speech therapist couldn't even look in. What is the matter with the people working at the hospitals? As a health care professional, no wait...as a human being, I would be mortified to discharge someone that unkempt. It's bad enough that 3/4 of the people we send to the hospital come back with pressure sores, but to send someone who has dried food in his mouth is too much.
I agree with mjlrn,, and hospitals have as many poorly kempt patients coming in from NH's as they do having them come back that way. I think its best to just accept the fact that sometimes things dont get done exactly the way WE would want them done and do what we can to make the situation right for the patient. It does absolutely no good to point fingers and lay blame. We have no idea what was on someone elses plate that day, so reserve judgement until you consistently never have days when some things get done halfway.
As far as shaving goes. Until hospitals let nurses use electric shavers like they do in NH's it will probly stay that way. Maybe LTC's should send the patients electric razor with them if they have to go to the hospital? Or is there a community shaver that gets used? Let's face it there are a lot of differences in the way LTC's are allowed to do things and the way hospitals have to.
I agree with mjlrn,, and hospitals have as many poorly kempt patients coming in from NH's as they do having them come back that way. I think its best to just accept the fact that sometimes things dont get done exactly the way WE would want them done and do what we can to make the situation right for the patient. It does absolutely no good to point fingers and lay blame. We have no idea what was on someone elses plate that day, so reserve judgement until you consistently never have days when some things get done halfway.As far as shaving goes. Until hospitals let nurses use electric shavers like they do in NH's it will probly stay that way. Maybe LTC's should send the patients electric razor with them if they have to go to the hospital? Or is there a community shaver that gets used? Let's face it there are a lot of differences in the way LTC's are allowed to do things and the way hospitals have to.
You're right. There are many differences..but I think you've got it backwards. Hospitals are allowed to give IM Haldol willy nilly...use any kind of restraint they see fit for "the patient's safety". We HAVE to have a restraint assessment and an MD order and a team meeting and a family consent before we use a restraint. They are allowed to put a restraint on anyone at anytime. We HAVE to do skin checks and turn every patient at least every two hours or get a citation from the DPH. They are allowed to send people back with all sorts of skin issues from stage 2's to stage 4's with no documentation and no no chance of reprisal.
You're right. There are many differences..but I think you've got it backwards. Hospitals are allowed to give IM Haldol willy nilly...use any kind of restraint they see fit for "the patient's safety". We HAVE to have a restraint assessment and an MD order and a team meeting and a family consent before we use a restraint. They are allowed to put a restraint on anyone at anytime. We HAVE to do skin checks and turn every patient at least every two hours or get a citation from the DPH. They are allowed to send people back with all sorts of skin issues from stage 2's to stage 4's with no documentation and no no chance of reprisal.
Uh......I beg to differ! For one thing, I can't remember the last time we restrained a patient; we use CNAs as 'sitters' on a 1:1 or 1:2 basis. And when we DO apply restraints, we have to obtain an MD order within one hour, we have to use the least restrictive restraint possible, and we can't just 'give IM Haldol willy-nilly'---we don't even have it on the floor, we have to get it from pharmacy. In addition, we have to document our hind ends off as well---Q 15 min. assessment for acute restraint use (e.g. ETOH/meth withdrawal) and Q 1 hr. for medical-surgical restraints (pt. is picking at IVs/dressings or climbing OOB). We also have to release the restraints, offer food/fluids and toileting, do range-of-motion and turn them every 2 hours (try doing that with someone going through DTs or experiencing a psychotic break :stone ).
I don't know where you got your information, but it's certainly not that way where I work........and if we sent a pt. who came in with intact skin to a NH with a Stage II or worse, we'd hear about it for sure!
Perhaps you work in a "better" hospital. I would say that more than 1/2 of the patients we get from the local hospital have been given Haldol sometime during their stay. Surely they can't all be psychotic....and at least 1/2 if not more of our patients who spend more than 3 days there come back with a stage 2 or worse.
And, oh yeah, the state surveyors don't see "climbing out of bed" as a good enough reason to restrain someone.
Years ago, we used to use restraints and anti-psychotics a lot more than we do now. The federal Joint Commission, which surveys and accredits hospitals, has been tightening up on acute care facilities much like the States have with LTC, and evidently the hospital you describe either isn't accredited, or they just don't care.......I can't imagine half of any hospital's patients being given Haldol or being discharged with pressure ulcers they didn't come in with, JCAHO would yank their accreditation in a flash. Wow. :stone
Thanks mjlrn,, i was going to post similar to yours. All joint commission standards are followed in my hospital also, and i think if capecod is getting less maybe they need to report to joint commission with documentation about the hospital this is coming out of.
I still hold to my thought that we see as much awful care coming from certain LTC as they do coming from certain hospitals. Lets face it,, in our own areas we know which LTC and hospitals are notorious for poor care. To presume all are in a blanket category is competely rediculous.
Thanks mjlrn,, i was going to post similar to yours. All joint commission standards are followed in my hospital also, and i think if capecod is getting less maybe they need to report to joint commission with documentation about the hospital this is coming out of.I still hold to my thought that we see as much awful care coming from certain LTC as they do coming from certain hospitals. Lets face it,, in our own areas we know which LTC and hospitals are notorious for poor care. To presume all are in a blanket category is competely rediculous.
Where there is lack of proper staffing, lack of education and lack of follow through there will be lack of proper care. I get told that I am a nitpicker for wanting my residents to have proper AM and PM care. If I see someone left in poor hygienic condition I report it and clean them up. It's sad to see such apathy on the part of the people that are providing the bulk of the direct care. I make a point to educate and follow up with my nurses aides and my peers.
And yet, LTC facilities are the ones with the bad reputation. I send one of my residents to the hospital with an acute process and when they return they have bedsores, and don't look (Or smell) like they have had a bath the whole time they were gone. But yet LTC nurses aren't 'Real Nurses' Makes my blood boil!
You're right. There are many differences..but I think you've got it backwards. Hospitals are allowed to give IM Haldol willy nilly...use any kind of restraint they see fit for "the patient's safety". We HAVE to have a restraint assessment and an MD order and a team meeting and a family consent before we use a restraint. They are allowed to put a restraint on anyone at anytime. We HAVE to do skin checks and turn every patient at least every two hours or get a citation from the DPH. They are allowed to send people back with all sorts of skin issues from stage 2's to stage 4's with no documentation and no no chance of reprisal.
i've witnessed (too often) what you describe.
and the 3 hospitals i've dealt with are all jcaho accredited.
so maybe it's just in massachusetts that hospitals can randomly use restraints, chemical or otherwise?
and so many stage II's (minimum)....
yes, i acknowledge that it works both ways.
but all i'm saying is using restraints in a snf is a HUGE deal.
fortunately, the hospice unit i worked in (which was attached to a snf) was hypervigilant in preventing decubs and no restraints unless it was an emergent issue; and that order is good for only 24 hrs.
evidentally p&p's/regulations vary from state to state.
leslie
Ah,yes...the lovely state of Massachusetts...the mecca of medicine where there are more regs for LTC than for the Nuclear Power Plant in Plymouth! At my 142 bed facility, we currently have only 8 restraints...3 of which are Merry Walkers (who came up with that name?!?). We only use restraints as a last resort after meeting with the team which includes nurses and the rehab people. We have a restraint meeting once a week and get rid of them as we can.
As far as pressure sores, the company just spent more than $100,000 buying new beds with pressure relieving mattresses. Everyone in the building now has an electric bed with a beautiful GeoMattess. Our rate of acquired pressure sores is extremely low...3 in the last quarter and we resolved 2 of them within 2 weeks. We do skin checks on everyone weekly, and have "skin rounds" once a week with the skin committee to monitor any wound in the building.
Ah,yes...the lovely state of Massachusetts...the mecca of medicine where there are more regs for LTC than for the Nuclear Power Plant in Plymouth! At my 142 bed facility, we currently have only 8 restraints...3 of which are Merry Walkers (who came up with that name?!?). We only use restraints as a last resort after meeting with the team which includes nurses and the rehab people. We have a restraint meeting once a week and get rid of them as we can.As far as pressure sores, the company just spent more than $100,000 buying new beds with pressure relieving mattresses. Everyone in the building now has an electric bed with a beautiful GeoMattess. Our rate of acquired pressure sores is extremely low...3 in the last quarter and we resolved 2 of them within 2 weeks. We do skin checks on everyone weekly, and have "skin rounds" once a week with the skin committee to monitor any wound in the building.
I hear what you're saying about the regulations in LTC.......I worked in the field for several years, as a charge nurse and then as a manager, and there were more rules than you could shake a stick at. However, it sounds like your facility is one of the better ones........regulations or no, a great many LTCs have neither the staffing nor the $$ to provide the kind of care you describe. Your residents are very fortunate; given the amount of money they (or the state) have to pay for their care, however, this level of service should be standard, not exceptional.......alas, in many NHs residents are lucky to be turned, toileted, and offered fluids half as often as their care plans call for. :stone
Antikigirl, ASN, RN
2,595 Posts
One of our hospitals does this too a T! AND I LOVE THEM! But sadly the nearest hospital does not follow up all the time if at all. I use to get RN to RN calls but for some reason those aren't coming in as much (must be a staffing thing). But I asked for the originals and a fax before discharge so we can get things rolling before the resident returns..but sadly I get to find the info from this hospital from the EMT's or w/c van at the door on carbon
. But we do our best.
I too worked hospital, ER and Neurovasc...I know that end too (luckly I worked in the one that does communicate!).
We have brought up our greivences to the admin of the hospital in question, and encouraged other LTC's to do the same so we can all resume a teamwork atmosphere :).
But mainly I don't blame the nurses as much as the chicken scratch MD who is in a hurry to discharge between patients and sends me some cryptic message and no DX!