Violating a Code Status...

Nurses General Nursing

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An elderly female patient was admitted to the hospital with anemia, R/O GI bleed, dehydrated, c/o pain to right jaw. Admit orders were NPO, type and cross pending H and H, MRI/CT of jaw, rule out infection, d5 1/2 at 75 cc, resume current meds, mostly for DM and mild hypotension, coumadin and synthroid, pain meds ordered and place on telemetry. VS stable upon admit, patient a, a and o x 5, pain is under control. So far so good. Within 3 days she is diagnosed with Parotitis right jaw, transfuse 2 units RBC, place picc line, dc home for daily atb infusion. OK, moved to step down unit....

Day of this incident she is seen by nurse, signed consent for radiology procedure, returned at 1000, some bleeding at site but tolerated well. Spouse at bedside, patient ambulatory and requesting assist with a shower.

Nurse returns at 1210 to discover patient alone, laying on her side in bed, cyanotic, apneic, non responsive, no pulse, calls a code, which per notes happens over 12 minutes before they are able to establish both an airway and a pulse. She is transferred to ICU on vent, BP meds and ativan due to mild seizure activity. Family is notified.

2 days later, despite being on prednisone, intubated, removed from Versed for exam, neuro consult is very grim. Patient has gag reflex, dolls eyes, mild seizures and slowed brain wave activity. Patient is also at this time receiving Glucerna thru oral intubation as midline cath has infiltrated so emesis with positive CRX for fluid aspirate.

Now, upon review of this patients chart, an advance directive is found in the back which the patient and her husband had executed less then 2 years ago, both had checked off "If in the even I am found uncounscious, my condition will not improve or I am faced with artificial life support, including ventilators and advanced cardiac life support, I hereby decline and wish to advance towards a natural death without these measures". It was also in her admitting docs office charts and on file with this hospital.

It was not, however anywhere in her Kardex, anywhere in her admit notes, transfer notes or during a 24 hour chart check. 6 days she was being treated for this infection and no one saw this, nor was it mentioned. Someone finally did though, she was extubated on a Friday evening, given comfort measures, transferred to a med floor and finally passed away early on a Sunday morning.

Now, I guess we all know whom I am am taking about so issue is out of the way, but never in my years of nursing, even while covering for another nurse talking a bathroom break, lunch break, whatever, not know the code status of a patient. I have grieved and felt saddened by the loss of patients, have seen the tears, disbelief and sorrow at a loved ones passing but I always knew the code status and would never subject a patient to something they had gone out of their way to make sure would never happen to them.

People spend thousands of duckets on advance directives, wills and testiments and I am scared 3 shades of psycho to think it could be so blatently (is that conceivable) overlooked in such a way.

Well, in conclusion, always, always know your patients code status and keep your fellow nurses informed. No one should have to go thru this, especially a patient. What do ya say ?

Just a thought, but most surgical consents include a notation that your DNR IS NOT in effect at that time. If you have an event around your surgery you WOULD be a DNR.

Huh???

nvm misread post

Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.

Last fall I had a 90+ LOL with urosepsis, dehydration and ARF, plus aspiration pneumonia, Ox1. Doc had talked at length with family about hospice and DNR status, but they insisted on keeping her a full code.

Later that evening, she started talking to deceased family members, and her vital signs dropped. It was that shift's thought that it was the morphine, which she needed for chronic back pain, so they stopped it and put her on Risperdal :uhoh3:.

I assumed care at 11 pm, and it was all downhill from there. I tried to convince the doc to come see her, that she was getting worse, but he just gave me a pain med order. Less than an hour later, I was doing compressions on her thin frail chest. Another (wonderful) nurse called the family immediately, and they said they wanted everything done. But she went into asystole, nothing we did revived her, and we ended the code.

The other (still wonderful) nurse called the family for me, and they came in. They told us they had a feeling she was going to pass because she'd been talking to her deceased husband the previous evening. What I didn't get is why they still insisted on everything being done, after that? That code still haunts me.

What I didn't get is why they still insisted on everything being done, after that? That code still haunts me.

Many family members cannot bring themselves to make Mom or Dad a DNR, for fear that it means they're giving up. Letting go of a parent is so hard. If it's up to the family to decide on the DNR, many people don't want that responsibility. If their loved one was coded, no matter how poor the chances of surviving and how punishing the code is, at least there will be no guilt because everything possible was done.

Specializes in Med-Surg, Wound Care.

I recently had to go head to head with a doc regarding my father. He was a DNR. Resp 48 on 100% O2, cdiff, end stage COPD, third spacing all fluids. Even with him being a DNR AND the doc being notified that I was his health care proxy and KNEW my dad's wishes, he still gave me a hard time. I finally had to tell him, "If you are not comfortable with end of life care, then transfer dad's care to another doctor who isn't. The ONLY thing you can order is Morphine, if he's in pain". He was still ordering ABG's, when he knew we weren't intubating and CT scan of he abdomen to rule out perforation from the c-diff....belly flat with + bowel sounds. He made an already stressful situation much worse.

Dad passed away 12 hours later, with dignity.

Good for you! Not every person has family who is willing to fight like that.

Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.

In nursing school, I got to listen in as a doctor talked to a pt and his daughter and grandson about DNR status. The pt had lung cancer and end-stage COPD, and his status was deteriorating. His ABG's were ugly, but he was still fairly alert and oriented. The doctor explained to them that the pt could soon end up on a vent and that he would likely never come off and that he could choose not to be put on a vent. The patient asserted that he didn't want CPR or a vent and the daughter agreed, too. The doctor was gentle, kind and understanding with the family, and he'd had a longstanding relationship with them.

Specializes in dialysis, OR.

Where I work, it all comes down to the family and the MD. There has to be an order on the chart.

:confused: Guess what happened at my facility tonight!??!??!

DNR status was not relayed in report--just happened. But, to err is human.:smackingf Like luvpeplrn said, I would rather code a DNR than NOT code a Full Code.

's RN

Specializes in ER, NICU, NSY and some other stuff.

To clarify Tazz,

Our surgical consents have an addendum just below where the patients signs.

It states that the pt understands that if they have a DNR it is nullified during the surgical period, and postoperative period. I cannot remember the exact duration of such, maybe 24-48 hours postop.

I will look at it next time I work for the eact wording and get back to you.

They also have to sign this when they sign the consent if they have a DNR on file.

I arrived to have a procedure done at a same day surgery center and asked about my advanced directive only to be told that they did not honor advanced directives. At that point I was not about to cancel, inform the doctor, and start looking for a place to honor my wishes. I also had a planned procedure set up at a hospital that turned into an emergent procedure and was told that my advanced directive was not necessary. I don't know why I bothered to spend almost $1000 to have the paperwork drawn up. So far it has been useless.

Cali, advanced directives are inactive when it comes to planned surgeries, because the argument is then "Why are we bothering with the surgery?"

They would be honored if there were complications during recovery, but not to the letter. If you popped a clot and started bleeding say, three days post-op, efforts would be made to stop the bleeding but if you coded and initial ACLS procedured didn't work, the code might be called earlier than it would be for someone without an A.D.

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