stephend7799 said:
I completely agree with you tenesma..
I wonder who is paying silverstreaks malpractice with his, " I dont need a doctor to tell me when the svr is too high and when I need to augment the CO. The job of a nurse is just that. and inform the doctor of whats going on and it is up to him/her to make a decision . you must have a physicians order to do EVERYTHING.. you may agree or disagree all you want but you are a NURSE trying to practice medicine.. The lawyers will have a field day on you. YOU DO NOT KNOW ENOUGH TO MAKE INDEPENDENT DECISIONS. PERIOD. and the fact that you think you do scares me
Nothing I say is going to change your mind. But, I will defend myself against some of how what I have said is being interpreted. First of all, in the case of transfusing blood, I had a patient one night come over from the OR and immediately dump a huge amount out of his chest tube. This surgeon is well known for his patients not putting out much from the chest tube. We are getting stat labs and calling blood bank to tell them we need blood stat. Whole time, patient continues to bleed, bp is plummeting, neo not holding my pressure. What does he need? VOLUME! And, to correct the source of the bleeding so he will not continue to lose volume at an alarming rate. I have the surgeon on the phone within 5 minutes telling him this is what is going on. He EXPECTS I have already ordered the blood and it is on its way.
As far as knowing when to augment my CO and how, and when to decide my SVR is too high and needs to be treated. I know the principles of hemodynamics in recovering a heart, and what I am covered to do in my unit. It is always CYA, no doubt. But, I realize if I have a brady pt with a crappy bp, oh yeah maybe i should trying pacing since CO = HR x SV, hence pacer will increase my HR and increase my CO ( I am covered under my orderset to start pacer for symptomatic bradycardia, well hypotension, low UOP, and crappy CI are certainly symptomatic enough for our docs). I also realize if I have a cold patient come over from the OR with a temp of 95 and an SVR of 1800 I need to warm and vasodilate so the heart can pump against less resistance. Once I've done that and given some needed volume, I may be on some nitroglycerine later for bp control. Huh, my CVP won't stay up even though I'm giving volume and patient is not peeing that much. Maybe it is because my nitro is primarily a venous dilator contributing to my decrease in preload, so I can go to cardene, which will help control my bp without knocking out my CVP since it is an arterial dilator, help decrease my SVR and thereby increase my CO. Cardene is on my order set, so I can decide to start it if I need to, and I'm covered to do so.
And, on my standing orders, my orders read to maintain K at 4.2. Period. That's it. It's left to my discretion to decide how much to give based on how I'm managing my patient. I do have protocols to give lasix, but again, it's my discretion based on those parameters, I can but I don't have to, depends on what my assessment of the patients hemodynamics tell me.
Nothing I have posted above I am not covered to do. NOTHING. We even get a verbal for standing orders to transfuse blood, but one surgeon will tell us look at the Hgb, if he's hanging at 9.5 and needs volume, you can give the blood, or if he's stable a 9.0 and looks good, you can hold the blood. I decide. Yes, if I'm unsure I'll always call without hesitation. I am not advocating nurses who do things without an order or protocols in place. But, like it or not , believe me or not, in my unit I do not have to call to place a post op heart on a pacer when needed, call hanging drugs to reduce my afterload, give volume to help the heart contract better, give calcium, give K, or any other number of "orders" you guys think we're too stupid to know the rationale for, it's on my orders, and I decide the management of my patient to a huge degree. Now, as I said in another post,
the hallmark of a GOOD ICU nurse knows when I've tried all the things at my disposal and need to let the surgeon decide what comes next. But, if I call my surgeon at 2200 after he's been operating all day tell him "Mr. X's CI = 1.7. His CVP is 4 and his SVR is 1785, oh and his temp is 95.2, what do you want me to do?" I'll get reamed. There are too many problems in the above statement that I can fix before going to him. Now, after I have Mr. X's CVP up to maybe 10, his SVR is 1300, his temp is 97.8, he's paced at a rate of 90, and I still have a CI of 1.8, then I'm calling to say, hey you want some dob?
So, I hope you never come to work at my facility because I make DECISIONS- with guidance from my surgeons order set every day I work, and I am fully and legally covered to do so. You think what you want about ICU nurses and their experiences, but I know my stuff. Don't minimize what I'm capable of just because it takes away some of my dependence on you. I know when I need you, and when I don't. I think it just pisses you off because maybe I can go a whole 12 hours shift without bowing to your throne and asking you the correctness of every singe decision I start to make.