Published
I was tempted to call this story the 'no name story' so as to avoid being accused of misleading or creating 'click-bait.' But this time, I actually think what I'm about to tell you, has to be your worst nightmare. I also hope to give plenty of detail, so you get a clear picture.
It happened to a good friend, in the same A&E department, in a poor part of east London.
The hospital was in a poor neighborhood, and 2/3 of the patients first language was anything but English, many people were on government support, and the neighborhood was not the safest in daylight, let alone night time.
Regardless, myself and many fellow kiwis and aussies worked there as agency/temp nurses, especially night shifts, due to the regular work, as well as the large number of fellow antipodeans. On any given shift, half the staff were agency.
I'd spent 6 months working there, with a good friend Amber (not her real name) who was a very skilled, hard working nurse. She was manning the acute assessment unit - this unit ordered bloods/ecg's etc, so by the time a patient got to the doctor, they had something to work with.
So a 50yr old African man walks in with chest pain, and is sent to Amber. The pain is only on movement, no SOB, good colour, not cold/clammy/sweaty, in fact looks well. His ECG is normal, and he is in no pain when lying on the bed. The pain is left and right sided, and only returns when he moves ie got up from the bed.
It turns out he'd begun a weight training program the day before, and he'd been doing bench presses. His CK was a little elevated, but his tropinin normal (I can't remember which specific one, and I know they've got more accurate testing these days) but as the pain had begun the morning after the workout, and it was now evening, everything seemed ok.
The patient was a non-smoker, and had no previous medical hx of note.
Amber felt it unlikely to be cardiac, but of course ran the results and history past the doctor. The doctor signed the ECG to say he'd reviewed it, put a time and date, and said he could be a category 3 (which meant about a 2hr wait).
Anyway, the patient and his wife don't feel like waiting, especially as all the tests seem fine, and they ask Amber if he's okay to leave. She tell them they still need to see the doctor, as it's not her call to make.
The family wait 2hrs, only for the department to be swamped with some nasty traumas, and the doctor wouldn't be seeing them anytime soon. Amber kept checking on him, and he'd had no further pain (unless he stretched or moved a lot) and felt fine, and they decided to leave. They didn't sign a self-discharge form.
The next night, Amber and I are in resus when an ambulance blue lights in a patient, and Amber finds herself doing compressions on the man from the previous night.
'You said it wasn't his heart' screamed his wife at Amber, (which she hadn't, but you can understand the grief) while Amber had tears streaming down her face.
The man dies.
As an agency nurse, Amber didn't get support from management, so we discussed what to do. She decided to photocopy her notes, as well the ECG from the previous night.
She's called into a meeting with management the following day, and I go as her support person, and we're sitting in an office, and we hear the head doctor approaching with a bunch of big-wigs from the hospital, and we clearly hear him say 'she's done for, she messed up.'
Amber confronts him on this, and he doesn't have a reply, but they accuse her of not doing her job, and say the man did not get an ECG. We all go through the notes together and the ECG is missing. She tells them she did do one, and the doctor signed it, and gave his name, but they don't believe her.
'Well it's just as well I have a copy then don't I' she says, producing the copy of the ECG.
This action saved her. Saved her career, and saved her from a witch hunt.
She eventually was cleared of any wrong doing, although management were never confronted about the missing ECG, which would have helped them find someone to blame.
Anyway, that's one of the agency experiences that has taught me not to trust anyone.
It's difficult for me to think about being targeted to take the fall like that, but I am sure it does happen. I am just going back into hospital work. I wonder if EKGs are scanned up into the computer now. I guess I'll find out. Anybody work in a hospital that scans up EKGs and other testing copies now?
The hospital I work in does this for EKGs. A hard copy is also printed out and kept in the patient's "soft chart." The EMR we're using is EPIC, so I don't know how it works for other EMRs.
As far as I ca remember obs all fine. As part of taking bloods I've line inserted but nothing given. Was a 12 lead ECG. The assessment unit is not for monitored patients, but to decide if needs to be seen sooner. With hx and bloods plus ECG given to doctor he decides whether they can wait. So as he felt not sounding cardiac and patient in no pain or distress was simply waiting.I am surprised you think this cardiac and even more surprised you think arrhythmi as everything points to muscular/skeletal and the doctor thought so as we'll.
regardless the doctor made. The call not the nurse.
When I worked in the ED, we still watched people with chest pain, even if it appeared to be musculoskeletal. Serial EKGs and cardiac enzymes; sometimes we were surprised at the results.
When I worked in the ED, we still watched people with chest pain, even if it appeared to be musculoskeletal. Serial EKGs and cardiac enzymes; sometimes we were surprised at the results.
The guy was there for over 4 hours before they decided to leave. I can't remember all the details, but they got sick of waiting. He must have had more than one ecg, but I do remember there was more than an ECG missing. There was also some notes missing, but I can't remember the details, and when Amber produced the missing notes, things looked real bad for management. I think that's why they never did anything to her. If I remember correctly, she only photocopies her actual written notes, the ECG, and maybe something more, but not all the patient's notes, just what was relevant to what she had done.
The guy was there for over 4 hours before they decided to leave. I can't remember all the details, but they got sick of waiting. He must have had more than one ecg, but I do remember there was more than an ECG missing. There was also some notes missing, but I can't remember the details, and when Amber produced the missing notes, things looked real bad for management. I think that's why they never did anything to her. If I remember correctly, she only photocopies her actual written notes, the ECG, and maybe something more, but not all the patient's notes, just what was relevant to what she had done.
If a patient was there for chest pain for more than 4 hours and only had an initial troponin drawn then the nurse should probably have to answer why another troponin was never drawn and take some degree of responsibility.
If a patient was there for chest pain for more than 4 hours and only had an initial troponin drawn then the nurse should probably have to answer why another troponin was never drawn and take some degree of responsibility.
There may have been, but I can't remember. I do remember all tests coming back normal. That's about it.
Given your inability to remember relevant details, your story doesn't really present any significant lessons. There are too many missing pieces to be able to make a determination that this would be anyone's "worst nightmare."
Um, doing chest compressions on a patient you'd seen the night before, and who'd gone home, thinking his heart was ok, even though no one had given him the all-clear. Okay, if you can't get anything out of this, maybe some others will.
Um, doing chest compressions on a patient you'd seen the night before, and who'd gone home, thinking his heart was ok, even though no one had given him the all-clear. Okay, if you can't get anything out of this, maybe some others will.
What is there to get? Patients go home AMA. Sometimes it's a mistake. Sometimes doctors misdiagnose. It happens. How are we as nurses supposed to change our practice based on your story? Illegally copy and retain patient records every night in case they have an adverse event after they leave the hospital and administrators want to assert nurse malpractice or assign diagnosing privileges/responsibility to RNs?
nursingaround1
247 Posts
2005, and if you can't see any relevance, I guess you've missed some of the themes that this brings up, so I'll help:
Trust, confidentiality, scapegoats, risks with agency nursing, looking out for no. 1, do two wrongs make a right?, could that happen today with modern technology?, dishonest managers, who dunnit (as in who took the ECG?)
I could go on, but if you still can't see any relevance, well, I'm sorry to say, but you're beyond my help.