Wednesday, November 9, 2011

We Promise

Here is an interesting article in the Boston Globe about "alarm fatigue".  It details the problems behind having so many monitors on so many patients .  This results in nurses who are constantly dashing to see patients for overly sensitive warnings.  Why so many alarms?  Lawsuits and CYA.  There is a risk to the patient’s safety if they made the monitor less sensitive but there is also a risk of desensitizing the nurses.   So what is the answer?  Get ready: 

A new “we promise’’ campaign requires a nurse or technician to ask a patient every hour whether they have pain, need a drink, or require help using the bathroom — a program intended to reduce falls but that nurses on LaRocca’s floor said also has reduced bed alarms and call button alerts. The cardiac unit has hired a monitor technician who sits at the central nurses’ station to help triage the alarms.


I understand the need for better systems to improve patient care and safety but look at what they did.  They added more responsibilities to already overworked nurses.  Also, you will see the word "technician" used twice in the above section.   Can you see a trend?  Why not hire more nurses so they have less patients to care for?  Then you wouldn't have to pay a consultant, form three committees, create two action groups and hire three new administrative positions to oversee this issue.  You would have enough nurses who just care about people that they would naturally do their job and do it well.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is awful news. They are going to take the nurses away from their charting? How on earth will all those boxes on the computer get checked off?

Pat said...

Exactly! When even small hospitals have to spend annually in six figure-multiples to satisfy all the good work required by damn JCHAO and CMS, there is no place for the temerity of suggesting those funds instead go to nurses.

But the blame most of all still should reside with those patients, families, (enabling) doctors, academic nurse PhD's, politicians, and all the other toadies and crap merchants who insist that health care be low-cost and risk free. Of COURSE the nurse should live at the bedside, but how then could she or he chart that they had spent all that time at the bedside?