Disney Doll said:
Having just had bothte State and JCAHO in our recent past (how lucky are we????
) I owuld have to agree that neither entity would have considered what you described (urinal throwing, IV pulling), Beans, a valid reason to restrain someone. Connecticut is the state where the child in the custody of a state insitution died while in restraints, so the State is a bit "sensitive" to the restraint issue.
Here's what I think...I think the OP had a bad day and was letting off steam. I think you took her statements a bit too literally and now everyone is all pissed off and calling each other names.
Meanwhile, we're all going to go back to work tomorrow, an no one is going to slap the snot out of anybody, no matter what we may be thinking we want to do. And those of us who consider ourselves angels of mercy will continue to float around too.
Since this thread's lost any semblance of common sense, I think we should let it die a dignified death...how about we make it a DNR?
No, OK, not in and of themselves. But a patient who is up, agitated, yelling and throwing things is different than a patient who just D/Cs their own IV...two different situations.
And how come all the agitated patients have no problem pulling out IVs and then others look at you like you're the grim reaper when you tell them you're going to take it out? Couple months ago a guy asked me, when I told him I was going to remove the catheter, "Can you stand the sight of blood?"
What we've been told is that if there is a danger to the patient, us, and/or other patients, restraints are fine. I don't know the laws inside out (and don't care...both the hospital and I have excellent lawyers...best in the world), but even on the crap we get it says that if there is danger, restrain the patient.
Heck, I recently restrained a frail old woman who kept getting out of bed. She was a wobbly one, and I worried that she'd fall.
I don't think the OP was just venting, but fine. If I DNR (do not rest) I'll be more tired than I'm going to be anyway.
This is very fresh in my mind, because I had a guy last week who had many, many problems. Heart attack, stroke +++...he kept throwing up and had tons of diarrhea, too. His nurse, from what I was told, was pretty rude to him about the vomit...kind of yelled at him for not getting his emesis basin (guy can hardly move! And he's dying!)
He was about 350 pounds, so the aides needed help cleaning him. She complained about it right there in the room, in front of him. The man had a lot of problems, but his hearing was fine.
When I was cleaning up his vomit #3, he kept trying to say something, but couldn't because of the stroke and the trach, so I handed him a pen and paper. He wrote, "Sorry." And he had tears in his eyes. I told him he had nothing to be sorry about, he was sick the one, and that's what people in the hospital do! They throw up! I wouldn't have taken this job if stuff like that bugged me in any way. He waved me down (I thought he wanted to try talking again) and hugged me and sobbed so much I had to tell him to stop, it wasn't good for him.
So, I'm pretty ticked off at nurses who don't care right now. But...
DNRing...y'all can have the last word.