home     about     submit your story/contact     best of     rss


Coasting Through the Weekend
Share:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Posterous
  • Twitter

Wow. Life has been rather busy lately. I recently moved, my grandmother passed away necessitating a last-minute trip to the midwest, I’m in the process of starting a business and am chasing after a 16 month old. Oh, you want to see a picture? Ok!

3%3A15%3A08OnPhone.jpg

Work has been as busy as ever, with both the regular and overflow units open. Lots of sick people this time of year as usual. Lots of scrambling for transfer orders so that we can get more sick people in. It’s a revolving door.

Primarily working weekends, I am more attuned to the Weekend Syndrome now than ever before. This syndrome is characterized by a lack of decision making on the part of doctors who are covering their partner’s patients on the weekend. I’m assuming that the covering doctor gets a sign out from the doctor who is off (usually – sometimes not) and they round on the patient over the weekend.

Normal decisions about a patient’s care are typically made – adjusting medications and vent settings, transfer orders, that sort of thing. But if you are the patient and you are anywhere near close to death, forget it. The status quo is maintained at all costs. Is it somehow taboo for a covering doctor to make end of life decisions over the weekend? Apparently it is!

My patient, in his 50’s or 60’s had had a cardiac arrest and thus ended up with the usual trifectic sequelae of shock liver, kidney failure and ileus. Apparently he’d been in CCU for about a week. No family in the picture, and thus no one to make decisions on his behalf.

Of course he was a full code.

Perhaps it was just because I was seeing the situation with fresh eyes, but after looking at his hideously disfigured labwork, it was pretty obvious that this poor guy wasn’t going to make it. And yet 5 doctors rounded on the patient, and only one of them was familiar with his situation. The rest were covering for the weekend. Every single doctor looked at the patient, wrote a note, and went on to the next patient.

The next day when I arrived on the unit, I found that his condition has worsened. I figured that withdrawing the vent and CVVH was too lofty a goal, so I aimed to at least change his code status to “no code.” If his heart was to stop, I didn’t want to have to shock him or do CPR. People who are that sick do not come back from the dead when we code them; or if they do, they certainly don’t stay long.

As each specialist rounded on the patient, I informed them of his labs (worse than the day before), his labile blood pressure and the fact that I was needing to go up on his pressors. We were all pretty much in agreement that his prognosis was very poor.

Despite this poor prognosis, each doctor suggested getting a head CT scan. And that is what we did. I still to this day cannot figure out why we did that. Maybe it would have shown a bleed, or maybe it would have revealed that he had cerebral edema. It could have confirmed the diagnosis of anoxic or hepatic encephalopathy. But as the doctors discussed this amongst themselves, it was stated that there was no effective treatment for any of those findings. Oddly enough, although each specialist said that they wanted a head CT, not one of them would order it. It was up to the hospitalist to order it. She knew next to nothing about the patient and when I called her for the order, she could not have cared less about why the other doctors wanted it. “If they want it, go ahead and get one.”

When I asked the cardiologist about at the very least making him a no code, he pretty much came out and told me that he wasn’t going to do that because it wasn’t his patient. I asked if we agreed that the patient was probably going to die soon. He said yes. I told him that I wasn’t even asking to withdraw the vent – I just didn’t want to code the guy. He flat out told me that it was the responsibility of the patient’s usual doctor to make that sort of decision. Everyone concurred. Every time I asked about making him a no code, they all said that it would be addressed the next day… Monday. When the usual docs would be back around.

Meanwhile, my patient required frequent cleaning due to the lactulose he was getting. His blood chemistries were so out of whack that he was literally breathing over 40 times a minute. The highest rate I saw was 47. Go ahead – try to breathe 47 times per minute. See how comfortable it is before you pass out.

Because the usual doctors weren’t on, this patient laid in the bed another day. Not to sound crass, but in addition to his probable suffering (I actually don’t think he was conscious, but who knows for sure), he was using a critical care bed and his treatment required that he have one nurse to himself. Believe me when I say that many many thousands of dollars were spent on him during that day alone.

Why? Because we were waiting for family to come in from out of state so that they could say goodbye? Because one of his loved ones just couldn’t bear to let go yet? Because the doctors truly felt as though he had a fighting chance?

Nope. It was because the doctors who could make the decisions were off that weekend and no one else stepped up. If it happened here, it’s happening elsewhere, maybe many elsewheres.

Add it up.

Share:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Posterous
  • Twitter

Comments

Story of my LIFE. And here I am about to sign another weekend contract. :)

Awwww! What a cutie!

Very well said on the subject of the weekend-passing-of-the-buck. I have witnessed this phenomenon many times. It often makes me feel like I am working in the twilight zone.

PS. I am very sorry to hear about your grandmother.

i worked weekend nights in the ICU too. this is TRUE TRUE TRUE where i work. loved the post.

love your blog. new reader. I am nursing student and can’t believe the tests I see ordered…and why a “no code” is so “hard” to get….will keep reading your blog w/interest.

Hmmm, 47 bpm and blood chem out of whack? What do these docs need to get the message? I hope to heck there’s new policy there soon on DNRs. You’re right to fight for your patients.

P.S. Little Baby is adorable!

babies, they grow so fast :)
and the weekend syndrome? yes, it happens elsewhere. like in our unit.

Too often if you are unlucky enough to be admitted near the weekend that your MD is off, you will sit there and be monitored for nothing. The ones covering are too worried that something bad will happen to you and it will be blamed on them. I think that they are afraid to practice on “other people’s patients”.

If healthcare is moving toward resource management, not to be confused with socialized medicine, and 15 people are waiting in ER to get to an ICU bed… so the wait in the ER is slowly growing to four or six or eight hours… yeah man, I’ve seen it… point well taken. Frustration shared… by staff and patients and families.

Hey- awesome content. I am recently aware of how dopey nurses can look in the eyes of the public, despite being the REAL champions of healthcare and your blog gives me hope. Have you read Buresh and Gordon’s From Silence to Voice? You are doing exactly what every nurse should do- tell it like it is to everyone who will listen. Thanks for giving nurses a voice on the internet.
Sarah- RN for 7 years.

As a dialysis nurse I see the same thing at all the hospitals we go to also. They could be coding your pt and the kidney doc is telling you, if he makes it dialysize him tomorrow. Ummm okay.



So, what brought you to the hospital today?

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)

Your Progress Note



Twitter


Nursing uniforms
Nursing Scrubs
Nursing Scrubs

From $8.95
Great uniforms including Cherokee Workwear at great prices. Lab coats and nursing shoes. Buy scrubs
ScrubsGallery.com

Spam Blocked

Recent Comments

Archives




Alltop. I don't know how I got there either.






Author

  • profileI have been an Intensive Care nurse for 11 years. This blog is about my experiences as a nurse, and the experiences of others in the healthcare system - patients, nurses, doctors, paramedics. We all have stories!

Find Me

Twitter Facebook RSS

I Love to Play