so the other day while instructing an acls class to a group of nurses, i was asked about the medico-legal issues surrounding an RN providing acls care in the absence of a physician. i did not gave a good answer but thought i would bring this and a few other curiosities of mine up to this forum....
one of the groups of nurses worked in a hospital setting and stated "we do what we can if we get there before the docs arrive".... they described providing cpr, defib, and epi prior to the arrival of a physician.
another group who worked in a rehab/vent weaning hospital provided all acls care and ran their own codes under "standing orders" since there was not a physician in house overnight.
my question to you all is what are you comfortable allowing RNs to do under standing orders in these situations? are there legal issues with this? where is the line of scope of practice in regards to decision making, procedures, and medication delivery during resuscitation in the absence of a physician?
one of the groups of nurses worked in a hospital setting and stated "we do what we can if we get there before the docs arrive".... they described providing cpr, defib, and epi prior to the arrival of a physician.
another group who worked in a rehab/vent weaning hospital provided all acls care and ran their own codes under "standing orders" since there was not a physician in house overnight.
my question to you all is what are you comfortable allowing RNs to do under standing orders in these situations? are there legal issues with this? where is the line of scope of practice in regards to decision making, procedures, and medication delivery during resuscitation in the absence of a physician?