400 likes | 843 Views
Emergency and Disaster Nursing:. A Systematic Approach to Providing Care. The Challenges of ED Care. 1/3 of hospital care begins in the emergency department The majority of ED patients require immediate care In 2003, 114 million visits to Emergency Rooms occurred
E N D
Emergency and Disaster Nursing: A Systematic Approach to Providing Care
1/3 of hospital care begins in the emergency department • The majority of ED patients require immediate care • In 2003, 114 million visits to Emergency Rooms occurred • Since 1993, there has been a 14-percent decrease in the number of Emergency Departments nationwide. • In the 1990’s, hospitals lost 103,000 staffed inpatient medical/surgical beds and 7,800 ICU beds. • In 2004, nearly 70 percent of urban hospitals went on diversion to ambulances citing lack of critical care beds. • American Hospital Association (2006). Prepared to care: The 24/7 standby role of America’s full service hospitals. Retrieved September 28, 2009 from http://www.aha.org/aha/research-and-trends/AHA-policy-research/PreparedToCareIndex.html • American College of Emergency Physicians (2004). Report from a roundtable discussion: Meeting the challenge of emergency department overcrowding/boarding. Retrieved September 28, 2009, from http://www.acep.org/workarea/downloadasset.aspx?id=34350
5 ESI Level Triage • Level One: Resuscitation – patients require immediate evaluation and management • Level Two: Emergent – patients require evaluation within 15 minutes for potential threats to life or limb • Level Three: Urgent – patients have conditions that cause significant discomfort and should be evaluated within 30-60 minutes • Level Four: Less Urgent – patients do not require rapid intervention, but should be evaluated within 60 minutes • Level Five: Non-urgent – patients may be seen in a delayed fashion and could be referred to other areas of the health care system Prah Ruger, J., Lewis, L.M., & Richter, C.J. (2007). Identifying high-risk patients for triage and resource allocation in the ED. AmericanJournal of Emergency Medicine. 25, 794-798.
Airway • Assessed while maintaining Cervical Spine • Signs and symptoms of compromised airway • Jaw Thrust Maneuver
Breathing • Causes • Assessment • Treatment
Circulation • Central Pulse is Checked • Color, Temperature, Moisture • AMS and delayed capillary refill are the most significant signs of shock • 2 large bore IV’s with NS or LR
Disabilities • Level of Consciousness • Glasgow Coma Scale • Pupil Size
Secondary Expose – remove all clothing (special consideration for forensics) Full Set of Vital Signs Family Presence Five Interventions Give Comfort History and Head to Toe Assessment
Forensics • Trauma victims are often victims or perpetrators of crime • Work collaboratively with law enforcement • Maintain the chain of evidence
Diagnostic Tests • Blood type and cross • Blood alcohol level • Urine drug screen • Pregnancy test • What others can you think of?
Diagnostic Tests cont. • X-Ray, CT, MRI • Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage (DPL) • Abdominal Ultrasound - Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma (FAST)
Medications Blood, crystalloids –NS or LR, volume expanders - Hespan Inotropic drugs after IV fluids Dopamine, dobutamine, isoproterenol Vasopressors dopamine, epinephrine Opioids - pain control Tetanus prophylaxis Antibiotics Mannitol
Gerontologic Populations • Atypical presentations • Cognitive Impairment • Co-morbidities • Polypharmacy – Coumadin, • Beta-blockers, Anti-hypertensives Hwang, U., Richardson, L.D., Sonuyi, T.O., & Morrison, R.S. (2006). The Effect of emergency department crowding on the management of pain in older adult with hip fracture. Journal of the American Geriatric Society. 54, 270-275.
Poisonings • 1-800-POISON1 • Activated charcoal, gastric lavage, eye/skin irrigation, hemodialysis, hemoperfusion, urine alkalinization, chelating agents and antidotes - acetylcysteine • Contraindicated in AMS, ileus, diminished bowel sounds, ingestion of substance poorly absorbed by charcoal
Violence • Crosses all socioeconomic and sociocultural barriers • 1.5 million women and 834,000 men treated at ED’s have been battered by persons known to them • Make referrals, provide emotional support, inform victims about their options, ensure patient safety • Suspected abuse of elders, persons with disabilities and children MUST be reported by law. It is not an option to assume the social worker or doctor will report.
Chemical Emergencies • Release of a hazardous chemical that has the potential for harm • Biotoxins • Blood agents • Pulmonary agents • Nerve agents • Treatment depends on the chemical - some have no treatment
Radiation Emergencies • Can be incurred from handling of or exposure to radioactive materials • Radiological technicians/First Responders, ED personnel • Weapons of Mass Destruction –everyone is exposed
Mass Casualty Incident • Assessments conducted in less than 15 seconds… • System of colored tags to determine seriousness of injury and likelihood of survival • Total number of casualties a hospital can expect is estimated by doubling the number of casualties that arrive in the first hour.
Reverse Triage • Injury identification-rapid assessment at scene • Penetrating injuries to abdomen, pelvis, chest, neck or head • Spinal cord with deficit • Crushing injury to head, chest or abdomen • Major burns • Critical interventions • providing life support, immobilizing the cervical spine, managing the airway, and treating hemorrhage and shock • Rapid transport-ASAP to regional trauma center
MIEMSS A V P U A V P U A V P U Tourniquet @ _______ Extremity Splint Gauge PASG Inflated at _______________ Gross Decon. Final Decon. TRIAGE TAG Maryland Emergency Medical Services Maryland Department of Transportation HOSP NOTIFIED Triage Tag • Patient Information • Triage Status • Chief Complaint • Transportation • Peel - off Bar Codes • Transport Record • Vital Signs • History • Treatment
Chief Complaint Section Major obvious injuries or illness can be circled Indicate injuries on the human figure Additional information is added on the comments line
Pre-Hospital Care • Paramedics communicate with ED • Brief report about client with ETA • Severity of condition determines ED response • Champion Revised Trauma Scoring System
Nursing Diagnosis • Ineffective airway clearance • Altered tissue perfusion • Impaired gas exchange • Risk for infection • Impaired physical mobility • Spiritual distress • Risk for post-trauma syndrome
PTSD / Compassion Fatigue • Risk for patients and caregivers • Emotions range from fear, anger denial and shock. • May experience flashbacks and nightmares
Implications for Nursing • Recognition of our own values and perceptions • Need for evidenced based practice • Continuing education through inservices and online training • Department specific policies – no more than 8 hours in triage • Use of a different triage ranking system such as ESI where specific complaints are automatic level assignments