experience –
Did i do the right thing?Rating: (votes: 0) You should have reported the BP to the nurse who was actually taking care of the patient.The house supervisor wouldn't know too much about the patient, this is why she asked about the pt's PRN meds. I understand the nurse manager and the house supervisor was there when you did the vital signs. If the nurse was not notified of the BP and something happened to that pt, you would have been thrown under the bus. Comment:
Yes, always report a problem to the resident's nurse. Do you know for sure that the house supervisor was relaying information to the resident's nurse or to another nurse who just happened to be standing in the hallway? And if that nurse in the hallway was supposed to tell the resident's nurse and forgot, BUT you had knowledge of the situation....well, that might not lead to a great outcome. It becomes a game of "psssst, pass it on". And trust me, that is never a good game to play because rarely does the message come through.
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ALWAYS report to the patient's nurse. NEVER rely on someone else to do it. Consider it a good lesson learned and move on.
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thanks for the replies everyone. the nurse on the hall was his nurse and as i said the house supervisor did talk to his nurse about his bp meds right after she got the numbers. and believe me after this incident every time i have an abnormal vital sign im telling my halls nurse and my supervisor XD
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I think you know the answer by now. But yes always tell your floor nurse even if you tell your supervisors first always tell your nurse so she or he is not left out in the dark. Another reason what if you didn't tell her something and she went to give a med that might need to be held and she had no clue . Remember you are the nurses eyes and ears out on the floor. Think of it as a big circle. You, Floor Nurse, Charge Nurse, Nurse Manager, ADON, DON, Admin,... Good Luck... Anthony
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I'm assuming that you took it with an automatic machine (you said "the machine"). So I'm surprised that they didn't have you retake it manually. Or even that the floor nurse didn't retake it manually, herself.
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thanks man i never thought of it that way. and i will remember that circle. i feel like shat about the situation but i guess i should look at the end result which was the resident was okay. and i learned a very important lesson
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and about the machine........i cant take it manually i know that if a residents bp is high like that on the machine we take it manually but he just had surgery on one arm and for some reason there is a restriction on taking his bp with the other so we cant use either arm we have to do it with his leg which i have not been trained to do
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I agree with one of the above posters when they mentioned taking it manually after getting a reading that high. In my personal experience, the electronic bp machine wouldn't even register a bp that high. I would have to take a reading manually to get a correct bp.Anyways, I would have reported this, personally, to the residents nurse right after I got the reading.If there is a skill you are not sure about, like taking a bp on the leg, just ask. I am sure someone would be glad to show you.
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yeah that would be a nice skill to learn. cause the machine we got is kinda crappy the cuff never stays on. and the machine even read that one of the other residents had a pulse of 192 today lol
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The supervisor and the nurse are talking about the pt. I wouldn't have told the nurse, wasn't the supervisor and the nurse discussing the prns in front of you?( or did I miss read) Why was there any questions about who you told? Another way to cya is write those numbers on a sheet of paper and hand it to the nurse. " telling" them also can easily be forgotten and your word against the nurse. If it's really busy, I as the nurse still might forget you gave me the sheet but as we talk, the paper might be a memory jogger.
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yeah you read right. after the house supervisor recorded the numbers i got she almost instantly started talking to the nurse on the hall about his prns and the hall nurse said he couldnt have anymore till 3:30(i think thats what i heard anyway) because he had gotten some bp meds from the first check this morning. i think the issue was his bp was high and the doctor wasnt notified. i had figured since the house supervisor recorded his bp earlier that morning she was the one i was supposed to tell seeing how she was standing there waiting for me to get his bp again. but at the end of the day everyone wanted to know why i only reported it to her. and it freaks me right the **** out that my lack of judgement in the situation caused so much confusion and questioning
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