experience –
work overloadRating: (votes: 10) What was the LVN doing when she wasn't passing meds? What was your CNA doing? 3 of you for 10 patients is a pretty good ratio. Are you satisfied that the work was delegated well? I worked on a stepdown where we had 10 patients and an LVN to help us. We had to do all the assessments and IVs just as you. The LVN did all the oral meds and also did a substantial share of patient care--she wasn't sitting on her butt when her med pass was completed. Comment:
I don't know what the legal nurse-patient ratio is in an LTAC hospital.I do know that most facilities of all kinds have forms where we can document our objections if we feel we are being given an unsafe load (patients we aren't trained for, too many high acuity patients, etc.). Filing the form with a supervisor gives us a little bit of coverage if the assignment is allowed to stand and that results in a bad outcome. It also puts the facility on notice that their allocations have been legally documented as being considered unsafe. The obvious downside of filing such a form is that it makes management get angry at the nurse submitting one.On a somewhat related note: I changed units recently, and was amazed to realize that one of the main reasons that some of the other nurses had time to chat, while I was constantly running my tail off, is that I was the only nurse on the floor actually observing our high risk fall protocols. The rest just give a patient on the commode a call light and tell them to push it when they are done. I feel very sure there are other less than ideal short cuts being taken by those who spend most of their time talking or net surfing. Ick.Yesterday, I was given a fresh transfer patient from the ICU ... 5 minutes before report. I wanted to get him settled in, and vitalled in, before I gave report. Turns out that I had to run around searching room to room to find a replacement for the missing oxygen tree in his new room, AND make another search for the cord that connects the B/P cuff from the patient to the telemetry monitor. Was the next nurse grateful that I'd taken the time to get the patient SAFELY settled in? Nope, instead she was way ticked off that I hadn't been there to give her report on the dot. Somehow, no matter where we work, if we are committed to giving high quality care, we end up hugely pressed for time. Recent health care budget cuts will only lead to increased pressure to do more with less. Nurses get burnt out from the constant pressure to do 'better than their best', and in response they leave or end up sick ... making the workload go up again. Its a challenging part of the job, for sure. I definitely feel for you, in trying to do everything when there isn't time for it all.
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