Published
I would start looking from the perspective that, as a Nurse, you should not be focusing on "preventing" an issue (e.g you administer coumadin to reduce the risk of developing a thrombus....not prevent). You provide nursing care directed at "reducing the risk" of acquiring or experiencing an issue.
Think of it this way....to "prevent" is an absolute term. It either occurs or it doesn't...by "reducing the risk" you still may experience or not experience an issue but you did not commit yourself to a dedicated performance.
Yep. The anesthesiologist ought to have used a smaller needle. The best thing you can do for the patient now is advocacy: get the anesthesiologist to come do the blood patch now. Not tomorrow morning before rounds, not after dinner, not let it go for three weeks because it will close on its own by then, NOW. It's one of the two worst headaches you'll ever have in your life, prevents people from getting up (think: complications of bedrest) and makes you miserable. Blood patch takes two minutes to do, twenty minutes of rest to work, and ... done. (Been there, done that.)
sjmagri
49 Posts
I am researching this for a Perioperative assignment and I cannot find the answer from the Nurses perspective. Thank you in advance!