I have been a RN for over 17 years. I would never pass judgment on a fellow nurse without personal knowledge (not being there). Now all of a sudden, you have other RNs including your daughter, that she was negligent. This is exactly why the health care is having problems keeping good nurses. People are so sue-happy and are looking for any possible way to harass people. I agree..you will never get the real picture. The nurse didn't leave a dieing patient. She left with the only signs being a slightly higher than normal BP. She was conscious and was walking/talking. She told the nurse to leave and you in fact, told her that you would take care of her going to the ER. Your mother could have called 911 if matters got worse after the nurse left.my mother was in icu for 9 days. I'm very upset that the nurse left. I have asked several nurses and they all have said the samething, that they would not have left. My daughter is also an RN and she says that I should deffinately sue the Home Health Company. As for the nurse, her license should be revoked. I dont understand how you can say that she did nothing wrong. You should never leave a patient that needs to go to the ER by herself.
while this BP of 180/90 isn't a normal one, it doesn't make the patient unstable. You would be surprised at what lack of oxygen will do to the BP and how fast it will rise without sufficient O2. Her BP lowered after she put her O2 back on. The appropriate measures should be taken to lower a person's BP, but 180/90 short term isn't life-threatening. This patient didnt help herself by being non-compliant and having her O2 off. This entire thread is a waste of time. Let this person do whatever they choose. Its apparent that nothing they read here will convince them that they share with the fault. They just want to put the blame on a nurse who is being wrongly accused. In the end, this matter will be investigated if it goes that far, and the nurse will be cleared (IMHO) based on the info provided....end of discussion please, thanks...Lya, since when is 180/90 stable? Are you a medical professional? I missed that memo!
almost died....life-threathening......not the same?I never said that it wasnt life threatening. i stated before that she almost died. my mom had her oxygen on when I got there and she was so badly short of breath that I had to call 911. By the time she got to the hospital she was admitted to ICU due to her Congestive heart failure. even the nurses agreed she was very ill and it could have costed her her life. the reason i'm upset it because i feel that this nurse should have stayed with her or call me to tell me she was leaving.
your mother stayed 9 days probably because she is a CHF patient...probably needed to remove fluids around the heart. dont know. no telling what else she doesnt do that she is suppose to do. diet, O2, medication etc...sounds to me like she needs 24/7 care.isn't the fact that she had to spend 9 days in ICU, damage enough?
Kept my opinion out of this one thus far because I didn't get here until this thread was already on page 3. However, as another RN who deals with families on a daily basis, I just wanted to say thankyou, lya. thankyou, thankyou!!OK--I checked with a Home Health RN, MSN.
The nurse did nothing wrong and here's why:
Standard of Care requirement is to notify the physician within 4 hours of a change in condition. The RN called the physician immediately, thus meeting the standard of care.
Standard of Care requirement to notify the caregiver within the same day, which can be after the caregiver's normal working hours. The RN called the caregiver immediately.
Standard of Care requirement to recheck vital signs or condition that is changed prior to leaving the home of the patient. The RN rechecked the vital signs, which showed improved BP and improved respiratory function with oxygen supplementation.
That's it. There are no standard of care deviations; therefore, there is no act of negligence, no reason to seek revenge against the nurse. A review by any agency will support that the standards of care were met.
Furthermore, the caregiver assumed responsibility for promptly coming home to take the patient to the ER. Any delay of 30 minutes or more, not related to driving distance, places the entire burden of damages related to timeliness of treatment on the caregiver.
It is reasonable to expect an elderly, non-compliant patient to spend 7-10 days in ICU when the patient is in CHF and has not properly managed co-existing illnesses/diseases.
A review will prove that the patient's non-compliant behavior contributed to the critical status of the CHF; the co-existing illness/diseases brought about the CHF.
One must remember that Home Health services require that the patient be homebound except for doctor's appointments and religious services AND that a primary caregiver is identified and responsible for day-to-day observation for changes in condition and day-to-day compliance with medical treatments and medications.
For me, at least, now I understand more of why the original poster is so upset; it is he/she who failed in caregiving responsibilities by not insuring compliance and by not noticing that the patient was in distress. Guilt, whether justified or not, often results in projected anger.
It appears, this thread is a classic example of guilt resulting in projected anger and includes an unhealthy behavior of seeking to injure person(s) who caused no harm but whose actions saved the woman's life.