Published
It wasn't a matter of getting an order, it was a matter of making sure that the patient was being offered pain medication. She was not able to participate in therapy or even get out of bed due to pain. There was a narcotic pain medication that was available q4h prn and the nsg staff was not giving it to her.
It wasn't a matter of getting an order, it was a matter of making sure that the patient was being offered pain medication. She was not able to participate in therapy or even get out of bed due to pain. There was a narcotic pain medication that was available q4h prn and the nsg staff was not giving it to her.
Was it a vague order like, "Offer pain relief solutions prior to therapy at 0900"
Or "Lortab 7.5/500 at 0900"?
That'd make a difference to me.
You need to contact the board that governs LPN practice in the state you're working in. I doubt what you did was outside of your scope of practice, but maybe your facility policies, so they can fire you based on that I'd suppose. Sorry this happened to you. Unfortunately it's part of a pattern that's been escalating for years.
There was an order for Dilaudid 2mg 1-2 tabs po q4h prn pain.Per the (verbal) direction of the NP, who specifically said to make sure we are offering the patient pain medication. The patient had so much pain, she was unable to get out of bed or participate in therapy. There was already scheduled tylenol and ultram ordered, there were no other alternatives to managing pain. Ironically, I am the nurse who does breathing/visualization techniques as conservative measures. P.S. This NP hates me.
I didn't write specifics, I merely wrote, "please offer dilaudid prior to therapies due to chronic back pain" It was flagged at 0700, 1100. It was a matter of ensuring that the staff eval her pain level. This is covered under the actual orders, because they offer specific parameters for pain - 1 tab for pain 1-5/10 and 2 tabs for pain >5, so the offering would lead to them having to ask her to rate her pain. If she was having pain, they would have followed the specific parameters in the original order.
Nursynursemn
29 Posts
Does this sound right? I was terminated for writing a nursing order in the EMAR to offer pain medication prior to therapies?
I was told that I worked beyond the scope of practice as an LPN and would be reported to the board of nursing. I've been an LPN for 18 years, I am still in shock.
FYI: There were prn pain medications available q4h prn- The goal was merely to insure that the staff were monitoring and managing pain.