The Doctor oncall told me not to call him

Nurses Safety

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I want to know if anyone can help me handle this situation. I work in a small 3 bed ICU where I am the ONLY nurse. I recently had two critically ill patients. One had been on the floor (I had worked there one night and had her) and been transfered to the ICU with CP and ekg changes prior to my arrival that night. The cardiologist said the changes were not new, nor indicative of an MI.Her orginal DX was Vomiting and diarrhea. Upon arrival to the unit, I noted the patien's LOC was decreased and told it was because she had been given ativan for confusion and aggitation. I noted her adbomen was large, distended and hard, she was tachycardic and her BP was much lower than her baseline (noramally hypertensive.) I called the Md and reported these findings. Her H&H was WNL, but she was pale, grey and cool. I requested an NGT, but was told to "continue to give dulcolax as she had an ilieus and he wanted to get her bowels moving." The patient continued to deterioate and I called him to inform him there was no UOP over the past hour. He ordered lasix. I ended calling him at least 6 times as it was fairly obvious I had a GI bleed on my hands and I needed orders to take care of this patient. I kept the shift supervisor informed, but they were short on the floor and he had patients and told me I would just have to keep calling the Doctor. IV access was lost 4 people attempted to restart to no avail, Lab was unable to get blood from anywhere, including fingersticks, and I needed a central line and could not get anyone to come in and place one. And her left hand turned purple and pulseless over the course of the shift, a fact I reported everytime I called. The next night, I was told by the shift supervisor that this doctor was oncall again and had said I was not to call him that night for any reason as I had kept him up all night and he was sleep deprived. He said I was to write orders for anything I pleased and he would sign them in the morning! I got in trouble the next day because the patient's BP dropped into the 40's and I called HIM at 2300! I can't believe this. The is no protocol in place that would have allowed me to write an order for Dopamine and this patient was a full code.

Here, the resident's take call at night/weekends, and you better believe that any time a resident repeatedly won't call back, throw's a temper tantrum, or says 'don't call me', the attending gets called next. And the first person to get screamed at is the resident..... not the nurse!

I have had the on-call MD forbid me to call him again (and this was in the daytime!) The pts BS had plunged to 18 and our facility standing orders were gluctose po; unfortunatelt she couldnt swallow. I called the on-call MD about some IV D50. He gave me the order and told me not to call him back until the pt expired. Needless to say, I called at 12am to update him on her BS level (just to be spiteful) and again at 430am when she passed away. If you dont want the calls then dont accept on-call.

It never ceases to amaze me how being a good nurse is often in direct opposition to being a "good employee."

Youda - I just have to say that this is so well put. I feel this way many times at my place of employment and wonder how much longer I can continue as such. We only want what is best for our patients/families - and administration only wants to keep the MD's happy and the $$$ rolling in...

If he/she is going to crash in house I would do my best to oblige.

If it is one of these little 30-50 bedders in the country, I'd call him/her every 90 minutes.

I'm Louie

I feel for you. I would look into another job. However I would definately call him as much as needed and address your concerns with the medical director/chief of staff. Do not forget you have a license which you need to protect.

Its absolutely unacceptable to be left alone in an ICU with 2 or 3 patients. If one patients goes bad who'll watch the other/s? It's simply unsafe. If nobody else understands this then its time to go packing. There'sa lot of places out there with higher standards.

There have only been a few times I was told 'Don't call me back again'.On those occasions I've consulted with my supervisor and she has had the pt evaluated by the ER MD..and then HE would call the on call doc..they didn't really like this..but oh well..the pt was taken care of..that's our job yanno :)

Call, call, call, Document, document, document!! Then on your day off, look for another job. I drive is not worth worrying about when the situations you describe could mean your license.

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