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Hello All!
I'm an Ohio LPN who's been working agency for almost 3 years now. (Just 1 agency) What started as something I would be doing as I transitioned looking for a staff job, turned into my only job.
Along the way I've been really lucky to only have less then a handful of "problems" When I say problems, I mean, being so bad that I've had to call my employer and ask them to please never send me to "x" facility again.
The agency I work for is almost strickly nursing homes. I've never worked for a hospital and my only hospital "experience" was clinical.
The perks of Agency work for me has always been not getting involved with facility drama. You go in, do your job and then you go home. If you ever return to the place, great, if you don't, then you don't.
Here is my problem (I'm going to be as vague as possible. I do not want to give away any information which will connect any agency to any facility or to me either.)
I've been working at "x" facility for just about the entire time I've been employed with my agency. It was something I did occasionally since they only needed staff here and there. Changes occured with the management, and as expected, a ton of staff quit (or got fired) My agency was staffing this "x" facility almost 24 hours a day for months now. They only have about 5 regular staff.
They are not a regular facility as all the residents are completely private pay and they are not considered a nursing home.
When I would work 3rd shift.. I would be the only licensed person in the facility. They do not require their nursing assistants to be state tested. I was responsible for approx 45 people upstairs and about another 20-30 downstairs.
(I know this is getting long I'm going to cut it short now, I'm awaiting a call from my agency to find out if I'm going to be fired)
A resident that is on hospice.. He has cancer. He has a doctors order for two minor narcotics for pain. I talked to him almost nightly and he was always complaining of the inability to sleep. A doctor prescribed him a sleep aid. Hospice did not want him to have it. Even though there is an order, we are not to give it per hospice.
When I went to work Monday night, there was a note in the communication book from a staff nurse relaying info from the hospice nurse.
Hospice stated they wanted us to give him water instead of giving him his pain medication. (Not give him water and say it's his pain medication-rather-deny the man his pain medication and give him water instead) Hospice stated he's taking his pain medication for sleep.
I wrote a note in the communication notebook that the man specifically calls me and asks for "x" medication for his cough or "x" medication for his cancer pain. He does not call and say can I have "x" for sleep, nor does he ask just for a pain pill.
In hindsight, I can understand why my words were taken the way they were. One of the gals I work for told me on Tuesday that I completely offended the hospice nurse. The facility had called my boss to say I had no business writing in their communication book. Again, after it's been a few days, I do fully admit that I probably got carried away while I was upset.
Since writing in the book, and never having, in almost 3 years, a problem or complaint at that facility... They dnr'd me. My employee policy states getting a dnr is an automatic termination.
I understand what I did wrong. I should not have written in their notebook. Although I do stick by my feelings on the issue.
It just seems like an ethical dilemma. I'm sapposto be the patients advocate.. but I'm just an agency nurse, not a nurse for the facility..
Although doing what I did probably just cost me my job.. I'm coming here to ask you guys for the future... What do you do when a question of ethics comes up? Do you call your employer? Do you turn the other cheek? Do you call the heads of the facility you're working for?
Becky