What punishment should this nurse get?

Nurses General Nursing

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  1. Should THIS nurse be fired from her job

    • 24
      Yes, this nurse should be fired...no matter how excellent.
    • 372
      No, this nurse should NOT be fired, it happens...even to excellent nurses.

396 members have participated

Had an interesting situation that came up and thought I'd throw it out for discussion.

One of our staff RNs was found sitting in a chair and sleeping at the bedside of one of our ventilator patients at 7am. She tells me that the patient was very restless and they had been constantly watching him throughout the night shift because of the fear of him pulling his trach out. They found he would settle down when someone sat with him and held his hand (how basic can nursing care get?). So, periodically during the night different staff members sat at his bedside. The nurse in question says that at 5am she had caught up on all her charting and told her co-workers that she was going to sit down in the room with the patient. She sat down, took his hand and he immediately quieted down. She sat back and the next thing she knew someone was waking her and telling her it was 7am. She jumped up and worked on giving her 6am meds and ended up giving an oral report to the oncoming shift (we tape report).

A very serious decision has to be made here. This is a really excellent nurse and I'm afraid there will be no choice but to fire her and report her to the Board of Nursing. I understand that she did not intend to fall asleep and that she was helping the patient, but rules are rules, aren't they? How I wish this hadn't been reported. Our facility rules clearly state "no sleeping on the job". Our Human Resources Office and the Director of Nursing will make the final decision. What do you all think?

Rotating out was the right thing. When we are doing 1-1's other staff make rounds and check on each other. If that didn't happen then there is a real systemic problem with staffing and job design. (In some respects everyone failed on the shift.) Rotations are the righ way to do it and the staff need to watch out for each other. (I haven't read the entire thread)

Maybe there were extenuating circumstances?

Is the nurse on medication?

Had she been working a double?

Has she done this before?

Since this patient was deemed to be in jeopardy of pulling at his trach, why was he not put on a 1:1 observation or the doctor called for possible restraints?

Specializes in med/surg, telemetry, IV therapy, mgmt.

Fellow forum members! Please! You are :deadhorse . This incident occurred back in October. If you want to see the resolution and what happened to this nurse I posted it here https://allnurses.com/forums/1358660-post157.html on this same thread at post #157. The nurse was not fired. She was given a disciplinary warning. As it turned out, it wasn't even her patient, it was another nurses's patient. This nurse who was found sleeping is still working. The nurse whose patient the "sleeping nurse" was found with eventually quit as she was not working up to par anyway and making many errors--among them, forgetting to give this particular patient his IV piggybacks that morning. Many of you will be happy to know that the nurse manager really defended this "sleeping nurse" to the DON and that is primarily why she was able to keep her job. It was believed that she was sleeping for a very short period of time and it happened while she was keeping a patient calmed. Otherwise, she would have been fired because the facility had a strict policy of no sleeping on the job.

Specializes in RN, BSN, CHDN.

I aggree this thread needs to be locked it is old now. Thanks for the update

Goodnight

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