Emergency Nursing
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Ateneo de Davao University College of Nursing, Emergency Nursing
Emergency Nursing: 1. Care given to patients with urgent and critical needs. 2. Care that must be given without delay. 3. Care which which involves involves constant constant assessme assessment nt and monitorin monitoring g of the acutely acutely ill and injured injured patients patients Emergency Nursing: A specialty, because it is care given in a phase when a diagnosis has not been made and the cause of the problem is not yet known. According to Emergency Nursing Association (ENA) it involves: •
Assessment, Diagnosis & Treatment of perceived, actual or potential, sudden or urgent, physical or psychosocial problems that is primarily episodic or acute.
Qualifications Qualifications of an ER nurse: •
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A BSN graduate and holder of a current license to practice nursing in the Philippines. Has had specialized education, training, and experience to gain expertise in assessing and identifying patient’s health care problems in crisis situations.
Basic Nursing Responsibilities: Responsibilities: 1. Esta Establ blis ish h prio priori riti ties es 2. Prov Provid ide e hol holis isti tic c car care e 3. Monitors Monitors and contin continuousl uously y assesses assesses acutely acutely ill ill and injure injured d patients patients 4. Docu Docume ment nt all all proc proced edur ures es made made 5. Superv Supervise ise othe otherr allied allied heal health th perso personne nnell 6. Suppor Supportt and and attend attend to famil families ies 7. Give health health teachings teachings to patients patients and their families families in a time-lim time-limited ited and high-press high-pressured ured care environme environment nt 8. Reques Requestt for for and and refi refill ll suppli supplies es 9. Prot Protec ectt sel selff and and oth other ers: s: Use universal precaution on body fluids Use masks and gloves •
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Nursing in Disaster Condition: Disaster – – is a catastrophe which may be natural in origin or manmade, whether produced accidentally or by design. Stages of Disaster: 1. Threat Threat Stage – when when situation situation has a potential potential of of creating creating crisis crisis but does not show actual actual conditi condition on of peril 2. Warning Warning Stage – it is more more specific specific than the the stage of threat threat and almost almost assures assures the reality reality of disaster disaster 3. Impact Impact – when when the the disaste disasterr is manifeste manifested d full-bl full-blown own 4. Recovery Recovery – when the assessment assessment of the disaster disaster effects effects is made, the injured injured are rescued, rescued, and rehabilitati rehabilitation on of people and their lives is begun. Disaster Management Plan is a community-wide, hospital-wide, or emergency department plan to handle mass casualty incidents that may occur anytime. Types of Disaster: A. NATURAL FLOODS EARTHQUAKES STORMS TORNADOES / HURICANE EXTREME HEAT OR COLDNESS BUSH FIRES EPIDEMICS •
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B. MANMADE STRIKES RIOTS MASS SHOOTINGS HOSTAGE TAKING TERRORISM DEMONSTRATIONS •
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C. TECHNICAL VEHICULAR ACCIDENTS MAJOR INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT BUILDING COLLAPSE HAZARDOUS CHEMICAL INCIDENTS FIRE INCIDENTS •
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Disaster Nursing Management: 1. Critical thinking is Important. Nurse should remain calm Rapidly Assesses Situations •
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Consider Options
Enact Emergency Response Plan Ability to TRIAGE 2. Collaboration with other Agencies •
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Communication
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Delegation
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Coordination
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Negotiation
Components of Emergency Nursing: Establish priorities (Triage and Nursing Assessment) •
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Health History and Complete Head-to-toe assessment Formulate Nursing Diagnoses Planning/Implementation Nursing Documentation Patient Transport
Triage: • •
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Comes from French word “trier” meaning “to sort” Used to sort patients into groups based on: – severity of their health problems – immediacy with which these problems must be treated Classification of clients presenting to the ER for the purpose of prioritizing treatment Looks at medical needs and urgency of each individual patient Sorting based on limited data acquisition Also must consider resource availability
Categories of Triage: 1. Emergent – those conditions that require immediate care and intervention, increased risk of mortality (death) or threat to life, limb, or vision. 2.
Urgent – those conditions that require care ASAP, generally within 1 hour and have the potential for causing deterioration of health state if not treated immediately.
3. Non-urgent – those conditions that require routine care that can be delayed for greater than 2 hours without the possibility of deterioration Critical Qualities of a Triage Nurse • Expert Assessment Skills • Non-judgmental Communication • Excellent interviewing techniques Coding of Triage 1. Emergent: Red, Priority I: life, limb, eye threatening that needs immediate attention, monitoring is continuous. • Chest pain • Cardiac arrest • Severe respiratory distress • Chemicals in eye • Limb amputation • Trauma • Acute neurologic deficits 2. Urgent: Yellow, Priority II: needs treatment in 20 minutes to 2 hours, monitoring is every 30-60 minutes. • Fever more than 40C (104F) • diastolic BP more than 130mmHg • kidney stones • simple fracture • abdominal pain • asthma without respiratory distress 3. Non-urgent: Green, Priority III: can wait hours or days, monitoring is every 1-2 hours. • Sprain • Minor laceration • Cold symptoms • Rash • Simple headache 4. Dead: Black (sometimes still with life signs but injuries are incompatible with survival) Priorities of Treatment: 1. First Priority – individuals needing immediate attention to save life • Any wound interfering with airway or causing airway obstruction. • Sucking chest wounds, tension pneumothorax and maxillo-facial wounds in which asphyxia is present or an impending threat. • Any wound requiring immediate pressure for bleeding • Shock due to major hemorrhage, to wounds of any organ systems, fractures, etc. 2. Second Priority – individual needing early surgery • Visceral injuries including perforation of GI tract • Wounds of the biliary and pancreatic system • Wounds of the GU tract and thoracic wounds without asphyxia • Vascular injuries requiring repair and/or in which the use of a tourniquet is necessary • Closed cerebral injuries with increasing loss of consciousness 3. Third Priority – patients who require surgery but can tolerate a delay • Spinal injuries in which decompression is required • Lesser fracture & dislocations • Minor injuries of the eye • Soft tissue wounds in which debridement is necessary, but in which muscle damage is less than major • Maxillo-facial injuries without asphyxia Priorities for patient with an emergent or urgent health problem: 1. Stabilization 2. Provision of critical treatments
3. Prompt transfer to the appropriate setting (ICU, OR, General Care Unit)
Why Should Planners Plan For Good Triage? 1. Helps in resource planning and allocation. 2. Provides an objective framework for stressful and emotional decisions, helping rescue workers to be more efficient and effective. TRIAGE MOTTO: 1. Daily Emergencies: “Do the Best for Each Individual” 2. Disaster Settings: “Do the greatest good for the greatest number. Maximize survival” Components of ER Nursing: 1. Establish Priorities: by using triage and accurate assessment. 2. Formulate Nursing Diagnoses 3. Plan/Implement 4. Documentation 1.
Establish Priorities: by using triage and accurate assessment. I. Primary Survey - The rapid initial assessment of the client’s presenting symptoms. A - Airway B - Breathing C - Circulation D - Disability •
It determines the presence of life-threatening conditions while simultaneously intervening. • Purpose – to immediately identify any problem that poses a threat, immediate or potential to life, limb or vision. • Procedure - information is gathered primarily through objective data. • If abnormalities are found, immediate interventions such as CPR and ACLS must be instituted to aid in preserving the client’s life, limb or vision. A – AIRWAY: Maintain patent airway a. e.g. head tilt/chin lift, jaw thrust, suctioning, oropharyngeal or nasotracheal intubation or tracheostomy b. Cervical spine immobilization should be maintained B – BREATHING a. Provide adequate ventilation, employing resuscitation measures when necessary b. Application of oxygen via mask or bag-valve mask device c. Assisting in chest tube insertion or endotracheal intubation d. –Covering of open chest wound with occlusive dressing C – CIRCULATION a. CPR b. Evaluate and restore cardiac output by: controlling hemorrhage preventing and treating shock maintaining and restoring effective circulation • • •
c. Control hemorrhage and blood/fluid loss by: applying direct pressure (external bleeding) insertion of IVF, fluid volume replacement with NSS, Blood Transfusion, etc.
D – DISABILITY a. Deformity-Open Wound-Tenderness-Swelling (DOTS) b. Determine neurologic disability by completing a brief neurological assessment c. Determine baseline functioning, potential life threatening complications. d. Check LOC using GCS or RLS II. Secondary Survey –
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