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RN to Pt ratio-- Stepdown

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What is your nurse to patient ratio on your stepdown unit?
3-4:1

Comment:
What I was told when hired? 3:1 with occasional 4What happens in reality? ALWAYS 4:1 with occasional 5NOT safe.

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4-5 on days (I usually got 5), 4-6 on nights (I almost never stayed at 4 all night). We did not have vents or many drips, but I still felt 5 was too much for dayshift.

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I don't consider 4:1 on stepdown unsafe per se, but all step-downs are not created equally! Some are ICU-like - others are basically just telemetry units.

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Worked at one hospital where is was 6:1 with titrating drips. Didn't stay too long at that hospital. I was in management there and felt terrible about the staffing ratios.Sent from my iPhone using allnurses.com

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There is a maximum of 3:1. My unit does not take any vented patients.

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Quote from kylee_adnsThere is a maximum of 3:1. My unit does not take any vented patients.

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"step down" has various meanings depending on the facility. A true "step down" level of care is between ICU level care, and progressive care/telemetry level of care, although many facilities have nothing in between ICU (1:1 or 1:2) ratios and progressive care which might have a 4:1 to 6:1 or even 7:1 ratio depending on their patient population.If by "step down", you're referring to drips, but not pressors, post open heart patients usually POD 1 or 2, active infarctions, 'heavy' floor patients, no vents, then that is more of progressive care, which is usually 4:1 with heavier patients, or 5:1 or 6:1 if at least a couple of them are "walkie-talkies". Of course Nurse to patient ratios mean very different things depending on the level of CNA and other support.

Comment:
Quote from MunoRNIf by "step down", you're referring to drips, but not pressors, post open heart patients usually POD 1 or 2, active infarctions, 'heavy' floor patients, no vents, then that is more of progressive care, which is usually 4:1 with heavier patients, or 5:1 or 6:1 if at least a couple of them are "walkie-talkies". Of course Nurse to patient ratios mean very different things depending on the level of CNA and other support.

Comment:
Quote from kylee_adnsThis is the type of patients that my unit gets. We do get open-heart patients as soon as POD 1. We pull a lot of sheaths. We run gtts but no pressors. My unit is called a Progressive care unit. We always have a 3:1 ratio on days, PMs and NOCs. Days and PMs each aid has 9-10 patients. On NOCs each aid has 15 patients. If a nurse has even one PCU patient, they cannot have more than two "floor overflow" patients. My unit is split PCU/tele & the max ratio for a regular tele nurse is 6:1 NOCs and 5:1 days/PMs.

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Ours is 4:1. I worked it for 5 years, with no nursing assistant. It was horrible. I never sat down, ate, or anything else. I am back in ICU now, and believe it or not, the patients are much easier to take care of in ICU.
Author: peter  3-06-2015, 18:32   Views: 416   
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