Published Dec 10, 2013
Morainey, BSN, RN
831 Posts
Okay, so when I'm in charge I know that I am supposed to take admissions. That does not mean EVERY SINGLE admission. That also means that yes, I deserve a lunch break too! It also means, if we get two admissions at once, guess what, you just might have to do your own admission!
Can we please break away from this idea that having a charge nurse means staff RNs are off the hook for admissions?? I work really hard to make everyone's day a little easier but I can't do back-to-back-to-back admissions all day! And especially not two or three admissions at the same time!
Lev, MSN, RN, NP
4 Articles; 2,805 Posts
On my unit (not for much longer woohoo!), I run charge with a full load of patients....If you are charge nurse, enforce your role and give people admissions. If they don't accept ask if they want to talk to the nurse manager.
KelRN215, BSN, RN
1 Article; 7,349 Posts
Can we please break away from this idea that having a charge nurse means staff RNs are off the hook for admissions??
Where is this the idea? It certainly wasn't the case anywhere I've worked.
krisiepoo
784 Posts
I'm not a real nurse yet, but every floor I've done clinicals on (3 different hospitals) the nurses did their own admissions
applewhitern, BSN, RN
1,871 Posts
When I was charge on a med-surg unit, I had a full load of patients, with 2 LPN's. In my state the LPN cannot give IV push meds, cannot do initial physical assessments, and can't do a skin assessment, can't give anything thru a central line, PICC, can't give any blood products. So, guess who got stuck doing every admission, plus all the other stuff I mentioned. I would end up with 7-8 patients of my own, plus their stuff. Got tired of that real quick.
classicdame, MSN, EdD
7,255 Posts
I always hated mulitple admits too. Used to thik ER had a "Free Beer" sign on their door then saved up a bunch for our unit and sent them all at once. After working in ER a while I learned that is not so, but still----
Swellz
746 Posts
I don't understand how it would be an expectation for a charge nurse to do that. If I'm busy when they come up, a charge nurse will check on an admission for me and maybe get vitals/weight if we don't have a tech that day, but nothing more.
Is this a common practice?
Not_A_Hat_Person, RN
2,900 Posts
I've heard of facilities where charge nurses did all admissions, but they were considered "resource nurses", and didn't have a patient load.
ArtClassRN, ADN, RN
630 Posts
Okay, so when I'm in charge I know that I am supposed to take admissions. That does not mean EVERY SINGLE admission. That also means that yes, I deserve a lunch break too! It also means, if we get two admissions at once, guess what, you just might have to do your own admission!Can we please break away from this idea that having a charge nurse means staff RNs are off the hook for admissions?? I work really hard to make everyone's day a little easier but I can't do back-to-back-to-back admissions all day! And especially not two or three admissions at the same time!
This doesn't happen everywhere.
THANK YOU! I was beginning to think I was unreasonable and crazy!!
And yes, on our floor it is an unspoken expectation that charge nurse will take all admissions. And then, if the charge nurse doesn't, people gripe about having to do an admission.
blondy2061h, MSN, RN
1 Article; 4,094 Posts
We rarely get unscheduled admissions, but if we do, the nurse taking the patient does that admission and if the charge nurse isn't busy she or he may help with the care plan or med req or something like that.
Been there,done that, ASN, RN
7,241 Posts
It means you are in control of the flow of the unit.
YOU decide how many admissions you can safely process.
This is NOT about you, it's about managing the incoming.