Published
All,
Does anyone know if in the state of PA it is within a RN's scope of practice to push anesthesia meds such as propofol. I am posting this question for my boss so if anyone knows the answer please reply. Thanks for the help. It will gain me some extra points with the boss. :) siobhan
The following is from the Pennsylvania Board of Nursing:21.17. Anesthesia.
The administration of anesthesia is a proper function of a registered nurse and is a function regulated by this section; this function may not be performed unless:
(1) The registered nurse has successfully completed the educational program of a school for nurse anesthetists accredited by the Council on Accreditation of Education Programs of Nurse Anesthesia of the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists.
(2) The registered nurse is certified as a Registered Nurse Anesthetist by the Council on Certification or on Recertification of Nurse Anesthetists of the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists.
(3) The certified nurse anesthetist is authorized to administer anesthesia in cooperation with a surgeon or dentist. The nurse anesthetist's performance shall be under the overall direction of the chief or director of anesthesia services. In situations or health care delivery facilities where these services are not mandatory, the nurse anesthetist's performance shall be under the overall direction of the surgeon or dentist responsible for the patient's care.
(4) Except as otherwise provided in 28 Pa. Code 123.7© (relating to dental anesthetist and nurse anesthetist qualifications), when the operating/anesthesia team consists entirely of nonphysicians, such as a dentist and a certified registered nurse anesthetist, the registered nurse anesthetist shall have available to her by physical presence or electronic communication an anesthesiologist or consulting physician of her choice.
(5) A noncertified registered nurse who has completed an approved anesthesia program may administer anesthesia under the direction of and in the presence of the chief or director anesthesia services or a Board certified anesthesiologist until the announcement of results of the first examination given for certification for which she is eligible. If a person fails to take or fails to pass the examination, the person shall immediately cease practicing as a nurse anesthetist. If the applicant, due to extenuating circumstances, cannot take the first scheduled examination following completion of the program, the applicant shall appeal to the Board for authority to continue practicing.
(b) For purposes of this section, ''cooperation'' means a process in which the nurse anesthetist and the surgeon work together with each contributing an area of expertise, at their individual and respective levels of education and training.
Source
The provisions of this 21.17 adopted October 22, 1976, effective October 23, 1976, 6 Pa.B. 2677; amended September 16, 1983, effective September 17, 1983, 13 Pa.B. 2827. Immediately preceding text appears at serial page (81100).
Notes of Decisions
Willful Violation
The provisions of 49 Pa. Code 21.17 (relating to anesthesia) are wilfully violated even though a physician is present at the time the anesthetic is administered if the nurse administers the anesthetic without the physician's direction or awareness. McCarl v. State Board of Nurse Examiners, 396 A.2d 866 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1979).
Mobeeb,
Thank you for the information. You got me the points. Siobhan :)
begalli
1,277 Posts
Come to think of it, on occasion we do push the neuromuscular blocking agents during intubations. Not all the time but we do. In preparation for intubations, we also find out from the doc which drugs they prefer and draw the med up for them and label the syringe with the drug and concentration - if we're feeling generous that is, we don't have to do that.
I almost always do though.
The drugs we use most often for intubations are etomidate and succs.
pricklypear - in what kind of ICU do you work?