Visitor silencing neighboring alarms

Nurses Safety

Published

I had patient B, another nurse had patient A. Our tech sucks so I answered a call light (as she sat there doing nothing) that had been going off for 10 minutes. When I go in patient B's visitor tells me patient A's IV pump alarm was going off so she silenced it. I told her not to do it again and checked on patient A. He was very upset, asking if she was authorized to touch pumps, did she do anything she shouldn't have. I assured him no harm came from touching her pump.

15 minutes later he called saying how uncomfortable he was, wanted his wife called. We ended up calling security, patient A was moved to a private room, doctors called, and the visitor was asked to leave and banned for the night. I even had to write a statement.

The next day the visitor told the RN that she was sorry and she didn't mean any harm. She has "medical training" which is never good. They always think they know best.

I at first didn't think it was a big deal but I do get that there are a lot of what ifs. What if she turned it off instead of silencing it, what if it was a critical drip, and so on.

Have you ever seen anything like this?

I've had it happen before -- I even had a patient silencing her roommate's IV pump one time.

The visitor who touches their own family member's alarm would get a warning the first time it happened. Second time it happened would get to talk to management. Third time would be removed by security. The visitor who touches someone else's alarm -- out the door and don't come back! That is totally inappropriate!

Now about the retired nurse with a brain tumor who took the med cart and "passed meds" to half of the floor one night . . . .

Funny, but how does that happen? My assumption is the "real" nurses were just to overworked to notice.

Maybe she should have been paid for 4 hours for being the medication nurse.

A while back, while I was treated with IV antibiotics after an iatrogenic intestinal perforation, my IV pump would regularly act up and sound the alarm (often because the tubing would become occluded from slight kinks), and, rather than listening to the interminable beeping (yes, understaffing), I called the nurse and silenced the alarm. No one ever told me not to. Perhaps the nurse thought a tech came by and shut off the alarm.

That was before I had any particular medical knowledge.

The idea of touching someone else's equipment, though, is baffling. If my roommate's visitor touched my pump, I'd probably have throw a plastic bedpan at him.

Specializes in ER.

Reminds me if a time long ago in my externship where a family member with "medical training" adjusted the pump to run in quicker because "mom's dehydrated and it's not going quick enough"

Except it was k+

Caught within 5 minutes,

No harm, but she had a lesson on lethal injections

A little knowledge can be dangerous...

We'll let our parents silence the alarm IF they call us when they do. But touching someone else's? Oh H to the NO.

Those pump locks are a joke. It's not hard to figure out how to unlock them. I had the most charming guy with CF that would come in all the time. Being a frequent flyer, and a smart kid, I'd go into his room expecting to still have an hour left on his vancomycin, and it would already have run in and be flushed. I'd think I'd set the pump wrong and one of my coworkers had heard it beeping and flushed my line. Then I finally realized HE was doing it. Even when I'd lock the pump. I miss that troublemaker...

Well I had a youngish woman patient who had a central line and when she decided to get up to use the bathroom she would disconnect the line! So it did not alarm as the pump thought it was still infusing into the patient but it was infusing into the bed or wherever she left it. Then she would come back and just plug her self back up. I told her she could NOT do that and her answer was "at the other hospital they let me".

"at the other hospital they let me".

Holy smokes. Those things usually have batteries and wheels.

"at the other hospital they let me"

So why did you come here then?

I've seen it, but I only had to tell the visitor once and they understood the implications.

You followed procedure. If it is hospital policy to then ban the visitor for the night so be it.

The bigger picture here is why was the pump left alarming long enough to get aggravated by the alarm.. and why is the tech allowed to sit at the desk instead of responding to the alarm?

Only RNs can respond to alarming pumps where I work. Although I agree the tech should not been sitting at the desk.

Well this pt who disconnected her IV cental line tubing was a little "off" and I am sure she did it at other hospitals. I think she just did whatever she wanted. Sometimes it is impossible to reason with a patient. She ambulated to the bathroom but she just did not want to wheel the IV pole. I also once had a youngish patient who faked her way into the hospital (again some mental issues) with bowel obstructions and the amount of IV pain meds/anti anxiety, anti itch, etc. was a killer. I was drug pushing all night. She always said she threw up but no one ever saw it. She refused NG tubes and she had a hidden stash of food. What can a nurse do? Some people are just not mentally with it and unable to ever reason with.

Flame me if you want, but if I were visiting my child or spouse in the hospital and their roommate's IV pump was alarming *for 10 minutes*, I would silence it too. Especially when there's a little button that says "silence" so clearly marked. Imo, 10 minutes is WAY too long for a call to be left unanswered and for an alarm to be sounding.

I had patient B, another nurse had patient A. Our tech sucks so I answered a call light (as she sat there doing nothing) that had been going off for 10 minutes. When I go in patient B's visitor tells me patient A's IV pump alarm was going off so she silenced it. I told her not to do it again and checked on patient A. He was very upset, asking if she was authorized to touch pumps, did she do anything she shouldn't have. I assured him no harm came from touching her pump.15 minutes later he called saying how uncomfortable he was, wanted his wife called. We ended up calling security, patient A was moved to a private room, doctors called, and the visitor was asked to leave and banned for the night. I even had to write a statement. The next day the visitor told the RN that she was sorry and she didn't mean any harm. She has "medical training" which is never good. They always think they know best.I at first didn't think it was a big deal but I do get that there are a lot of what ifs. What if shi have turned it off instead of silencing it, what if it was a critical drip, and so on. Have you ever seen anything like this?
I have and it's infuriating....not only pump alarms but bed alarms. A visitor at a place I used to work shut of a bed alarm on the other patient's bed. This other patient was an extremely high fall risk bit instead of calling for staff she shut the alarm off because (and I quote) "it's and annoying noise and it was bothering my mother" With the supervisor behin me I informed her (after I just happened on my rounds and found Tue woman in the other bed almost on the floor) in NO uncertain terms that she had NO business silencing an alarm of any kind, that she should summon staff in the future and that my nurse's note would reflect that she had stated that she silenced the alarm because it was "annoying" so that the family would know wher to look for liability if their family member fell before we could get to her. She never touched am alarm again AND later in the evening the visitor's mother told me that it wasn't her that was bothered it was her daughter and she had tried to call us and told her daughter not to touch it but she didn't listen. It happens unfortunately and you just have to be diligent in your rounds and keeping ane eye on your patients...oh and GET THAT TECH FIRED if she is that useless....good luck

Not going to flame you and I almost agree except for one thing...if my mother is in the hospital and I don't work ther and a pump is alarming that long, I will go and raise hell at the desk, bit under NO circumstances will I touch that pump....not my facility, not covered, and I know how ****** I would be....don't come into my place and think I will he happy with you...be a good visitor...play the nurse card at the desk not in the room....not your job...notify staff I don't care how many degrees you have

+ Add a Comment