feelings about double rooms

Nurses Safety

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I was curious to see how everyone feels about double occupancy in hospital rooms. I believe that single room are the best for many reasons.

1. The patient is not bothered by other patients visitors/TV

2. It is cleaner, patients have their own bathrooms.

3. Privacy is much easier to uphold.

4. Nurses are more likely to wash their hands between patients.

5. Medication errors and other errors for that matter are more easily avoided.

6. Easier to make the patient comfortable in aspects to temparture in the room, lighting... ect.

I mean i could go on and on about why i feel this way. Im sure that it is most likely that money is the factor in why there are double occupancy in hospital room which is very sad to say. How do you feel about it?????

Specializes in Med-Surg, Long Term Care.
For the most part, I favor private rooms. However, there are some patients who do better in a double/semiprivate room. I've had many patients who were actually good for each other and helped each other -- wonderful to see. Usually, private rooms work best -- patients are able to rest better, etc.

If a family member or I are hospitalized, I'll be one of "those" that request a private room -- I'll private pay, I don't care. Privacy. Able to sleep when you need to sleep/rest. Can watch tv without worrying about keeping the neighbor awake and won't be kept awake by their noise, visitors, etc.

I agree with everything mentioned here. I've worked in a hospital with all private rooms and now in one with semi-privates, and I much prefer the single rooms, and yet I've seen some really compatible patients who seemed to thrive with their roomates, and it's a great thing to see. But the Hippa issues are incredible with shared rooms. Before Hippa, a patient asked me what his new roomate was being admitted for. I said, "I can't tell you because of confidentiality, but you'll find out soon enough as I talk with him" (due to the thin curtain separating their beds. :rolleyes: )

I'm also one who will "strongly" request a private room if I'm hospitalized, or at least one in a quieter area, OR I will be asking for a room change if I have a noisy roomate. I'm a bad sleeper to start with, and it makes me very sensitive to patients with roomate or noise issues.

I agree private rooms are preferable for privacy and infection control issues. Unfortunately, I've never worked at a hospital with all private rooms.

The unit I'm on now is made up of "pods", each pod contains 2 semi-private rooms and 2 private rooms. We also have both negative and positive pressure rooms for AFB and neutropenic isolation, respectively. (I should mention here that the unit is divided into two halves and AFB and neutropenic patients would never be in the same section, for obvious reasons)

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

We have one hospital in our area that has all private beds and it has a good reputation. Personally, I would demand a private room for myself or family also. I'm a very private person and would absolutely freak out if someone knew I was ill enough to be hospitalized.

Meh, I would demand a private room also. There is such a profound lack of privacy in semi-privates, and you're already a bit off-kilter when you're ill enough to require hospitalization.

Besides, the last thing I would want is to listen to Jerry Springer at all hours of the day or to hear my roommate's whole freaking extended family visiting.

Unfortunately, you can demand all you want, but if there isn't a private room left you won't get one. I hate semi-private rooms...

Hi Everyone

Just to weigh in on this issue, my dad was hospitalized for a CABG and his roommate had undiagnosed TB (which is on the rise BTW).

He never contracted it, thankfully, but he had to have the full course of medication and now he always test positive. Great...:rolleyes:

Now, if everyone had a private room, or at least were admitted to a private room until screening tests and lab work come back negative, maybe this could have been avoided...

Just my 2 cents :nurse:

Unfortunately, you can demand all you want, but if there isn't a private room left you won't get one. I hate semi-private rooms...

Very true, Fergus. At my facility the most they can do is put you on "the list" if the census is high and no privates are available. Generally they do what they can to ensure that employees get private rooms but that's not always possible, either.

Which begs the question: if you had to be hospitalized, would you prefer to be at your own facility, or another? :rolleyes:

I don't have any feelings one way or the other, but methinks I prefer the private rooms.

"BUT DR. ____ PROMISED THAT I WOULD HAVE A PRIVATE ROOM. CALL HIM." If I had a nickel for every time I had a patient state that the doc promised a private room, I'd be vacationing on my personal island in the tropics right now. :rolleyes:

"BUT DR. ____ PROMISED THAT I WOULD HAVE A PRIVATE ROOM. CALL HIM." If I had a nickel for every time I had a patient state that the doc promised a private room, I'd be vacationing on my personal island in the tropics right now. :rolleyes:

:rotfl:

So true. "I"m sorry, ma'am, but this is the only room available right now. If Dr. Blank wants to come and construct a private room for you, that is between the two of you."

Specializes in Oncology/Haemetology/HIV.

What kills me is you put them in a semiprivate for 3-4 days without a roommate and then as soon as a roommate comes in, the first patient demands a private room immediately.

It's not like they didn't know that all that extra furniture wasn't there for a reason.

What kills me is you put them in a semiprivate for 3-4 days without a roommate and then as soon as a roommate comes in, the first patient demands a private room immediately.

It's not like they didn't know that all that extra furniture wasn't there for a reason.

:rotfl:

So true! LOL!

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