EMS - EC handoffs - ER Hallway patients.
Krin135 at aol.com
Krin135 at aol.com
Sat Mar 3 22:28:51 GMT 2007
In a message dated 3/3/2007 4:17:19 PM Central Standard Time,
marty_munro at yahoo.ca writes:
Although this is normal that patients will sit with EMS crews for hours at a
time around the area that I work in, most other areas find this to be unheard
of. With the aging population and the hospitals being overcrowded, the
problem is probably going to increase. One of the other problems that I have
encountered is that the ER staff will use the paramedics as extensions of the
emergency room. I am not just coming up with this on my own, I have been told by
E.R. nurses outside of work that they do this on purpose. They say "why
would I want to give your patient a bed and make one of my nurses have to attend
to them when they are in your care and you can attend to them?" Clearly, it
is not understood that although we would love to be of assistance to the E.R.
staff, we have a job to do in the community. I think this would be an issue
for hospital management and EMS management to discuss.
One lever that is not used enough in the US (not applicable for our
neighbors to the North) is the 'on campus' provision of EMTALA...problem being that
not enough EMS administrators are willing to submit documentation to the
appropriate authorities because of possible repercussions...
One of the main problems that I have seen in big city hospitals is that the
hospital administration is not willing or able to staff sufficient floor and
intermediate (monitored care) beds to relieve the crunch on the ED and
critical care units. This causes the ED to loose active beds and tie up nursing
staff providing care to patients on 'bed hold' status instead of being available
to see new patients.
I can do something about that in the smaller hospitals I normally work at,
but the big city ED directors that I've interviewed with don't seem to have any
way to overcome the institutional inertia causing this problem.
ck
Charles S. Krin, DO FAAFP
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