Published Sep 10, 2016
lhall92
7 Posts
In my ER, we see mental health patients just about daily and a fair amount of them smoke cigarettes. At some point during their stay, the question of stepping outside to smoke comes up. As a non-smoking campus, we do not allow for patients to step outside let along patients with SI. We inform them that we can give nicotine gum or patches but a good amount refuse them and threaten to walk out. Should they do so, we call the local PD to bring them back and they become EE'd (involuntary committed).
Does anyone have any tricks as to meds to help get them through a craving?
Anna Flaxis, BSN, RN
1 Article; 2,816 Posts
I don't understand. If they're not on a hold, they have the right to leave.
cayenne06, MSN, CNM
1,394 Posts
Gosh, I honestly wish there was a way to let these patients safely grab a smoke. A mental health crisis just doesn't seem like the ideal time to be forced into going cold turkey. I mean, I 100% support smoke free campuses, don't get me wrong. It's just...there is so very little ED nurses can do for patients in a severe depressive crisis. The emotional pain some of these patients are going through is overwhelming, just as real as the pain from any serious physical injury. Your usual nursing tricks of establishing trust and providing reassurance, comfort and support can be useless with some of these patients. I want to at least give them the momentary pleasure and familiar comfort of their cigarette.
TheCommuter, BSN, RN
102 Articles; 27,612 Posts
My father is a 1-pack-a-day smoker. This means he smokes a ciggie every 45 to 60 minutes while awake. The cravings come frequently, all day and night. Anyone who attempts to tell him he cannot smoke will deal with his fury...
MassED, BSN, RN
2,636 Posts
amzyRN
1,142 Posts
Get them a nicotine patch. Patients aren't allowed to shoot heroin or snort cocaine either, why should they be allowed to smoke? It toxifies the air of other people too and that's why hospitals have smoke free guidlines. I don't see a huge problem with this. Smoking should be discouraged.
PG2018
1,413 Posts
Cigarettes are an amazing product. I wish Phillip Morris was my uncle. The time dose delivery, nicotine depletion, craving... astounding.
Having said that, if they want to leave how can you keep them? When I was a cop the ER would call in a lot of AMA instances. We always asked "what do you want us to do?" In most states cops can't snatch you involuntarily without violating the 4th Amendment.
Next, I don't get smoke free campuses. Who cares if people are smoking in their cars?
When I was training in chemical dependency, the hospital had an indoor area for smokers, lol. Yes, that was POST 2010. The lungs of an agitated or suicidal or homicidal psych patient are the absolute least of our problems.
As a psych NP, I like to know how much the folks smoke because it often fortells their level of distress. If they want to quit, I'll sling a prescription, but I don't address cessation.
No, I've actually never smoked. I think it's stupid. Fascinating and definitely a profitable product. Stupid nonetheless.
Zyprexa_Ho
709 Posts
I have a SMI and I used to smoke until recently... I don't think there's really anything that can help this situation besides chemical restraint, unless you get a lucky one that will agree to being snowed out. Nictotine is a hell of a drug.
OlivetheRN, ADN, BSN, RN
382 Posts
We use the nicotine inhalers as opposed to the patches or the gum. It gives them the feel of holding something similar to a cigarette along with the nicotine. Helps with the oral fixation that some smokers have and gives some people who have anxiety something to fidget with. Just wear gloves when giving them a refill thing for it cause heaven only knows there that thing has been after you give it to them.