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I usually start off with 5 patients on days and eves. Usually get a admission or post-op. On ights I have had up to 8 patients. I work on a med/surg/ortho unit. We are supposed to have 1 CNA per nurse, but usually have 2-4 CNA for the floor which is 33 patients. Isn't there laws for ratios in every state? Hmmmmm......
I usually start off with 5 patients on days and eves. Usually get a admission or post-op. On ights I have had up to 8 patients. I work on a med/surg/ortho unit. We are supposed to have 1 CNA per nurse, but usually have 2-4 CNA for the floor which is 33 patients. Isn't there laws for ratios in every state? Hmmmmm......
If only there were in every state! I know there is in CA...anywhere else?
In the CCU I work in, it's 1:2. I've seen 1:3 max, and that is only if one is waiting to go up to the floor. Oftentimes it's 1:1 for CVVHD or hypothermia.
If you all are talking Critical care, not step down, then YES, many states do have laws, go to your local library to look them up.
NJ-----maximum 3-1, unless acuity precludes it, and there are more specifics for post OHS, etc. Must have acuity in place to determine if 1:1, 2:1 appropriate
NJ telemtry---6:1
Med-surg--no state law
Just curious....on my unit its 4/5 nights. Sometimes it gets pretty hectic.
We're also usually 1:2, often 1:1, and rarely 1:3 (usually when the tele floor is full and preventing txfr). We can have 2 nurses on 1 pt if they're extremely ill.
I don't see why staffing in an ICU should change depending on shift (nights)? The acuity of pts doesn't vary by time of day in critical care. It's not uncommon for us to have pts decline in the middle of the night.
steu
17 Posts
Just curious....on my unit its 4/5 nights. Sometimes it gets pretty hectic.