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Is it the ER? ICU? In one hospital orientation we were told it was interventional radiology.
Thanks. We had an unorganized med surg code recently and I just wondered...which unit gets more practice. It isn't us for sure.
Just out of curiosity, who runs your codes? At my facility, we have 2 critical care nurses who are designated as that shift's code blue nurses. Every code blue called out (excepting ER and OR as those are handled by the department) will have these nurses respond to run the code. Although I've only had the opportunity to witness 2 of them, having the designated staff really helped things run smoother than the codes I witnessed as a student where there were no designated code nurses.
Just out of curiosity, who runs your codes? At my facility, we have 2 critical care nurses who are designated as that shift's code blue nurses. Every code blue called out (excepting ER and OR as those are handled by the department) will have these nurses respond to run the code. Although I've only had the opportunity to witness 2 of them, having the designated staff really helped things run smoother than the codes I witnessed as a student where there were no designated code nurses.
This is the first one that I've been to at this facility. An ER and ICU nurse came and ran the code. Not sure if they are charge nurses/coordinators on their units or just happened to be the available nurse.
This is the smaller hospital of this particular hospital system. 6 bed ICU (or tele/ICU), 25 bed med/surg unit. We cannot run the code even if we have ACLS per policy.
anh06005, MSN, APRN, NP
1 Article; 769 Posts
I think (as others have pointed out) the units with sicker pt's have more codes (and IR). I worked on a cardiac step down unit and we had codes on a pretty regular basis. It was still a bit of a mess but we had them enough that someone usually knew what was going on. We were all ACLS too. Lots of Rapids too. But that's usually to be expected with post MI's, cardiac drips, lobectomies, etc. They're just more fragile.