"Pit to distress..." (Rant)

Specialties Ob/Gyn

Published

I'm gonna try to make a very long story short...

I had the chief resident today give me an a** chewing because I had turned off the Pitocin of a pt who had persistent episodes of hyperstimulation. I had only turned it down a few minutes before he came in, so I had not informed him of this. He asked why I turned it off, and I showed him on the strip the pts ctx pattern. He looked at it and said, "Well, there's no fetal distress." I told him I understood that, but the pts uterus was not getting any rest between ctx. He then proceeds to tell me, "You need to call me before you do anything like this again, this is my pt." It took everything I had to keep from saying, "No, she isn't your pt, she's our pt, and it is my license on the line should something happen at your wanting to misuse the Pit." I didn't say anything though. So, I restarted the Pit, but only after I saw the pt had resting tone, and I started from the beginning, 2mu/min. She handled that okay, but when I got up to 6mu/min, she started having the ctx one on top of the other again. I pointed this out to the resident and he said, "Keep upping the Pit until there is distress, then you can back down on it." OMG, my tongue was almost bleeding by this time! Well, lucky for me, but not for the RN who followed me, this was right at change of shift, so I'm not the one having to deal with the aftermath. Which hopefully, there won't be one.

You know, I know I am new to this whole L&D experience, but when I have my preceptor and my RN educator agreeing with the actions I took, I can't help but think my actions weren't that far fetched.

I'm sure I left tons out, but I think I covered what I wanted to.

Thanks for letting me rant!

I have had docs upset with me too and then turn around and turn up their own pit...On those occasions when there is little or no resting tone I have and do turn it off and if they turn it on, I will document that I turned it off, exactly what I informed him or her of, and that they turned it back on themselves....You know these same docs will not be on your side in a court of law when the uterus ruptures and someone is irreparably injured or dies...And, usually it is not your peers who are judging you..You are judged by what you did and didn't do according to standards. I have found that many nurses think just because the doc disagreed with them and ordered the incorrect or problematic care, that they are covered. Wrongo!

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