Ten Tips For a Safe Hospital Stay
by Laura Nathanson, MD, FAAP
Author of What You Don't Know Can
Kill You
We’re going through a sticky patch in
hospital care. Patients and their loved ones often feel that there are too many
doctors (and you rarely see the same one twice) and too few nurses (and it’s
hard to get their attention). Worse: it’s hard to figure out just who is in
charge -- or whether anyone is. Here’s why:
Too many doctors: Many hospitals are Teaching Hospitals. That means that medical students, young
MD’s not yet licensed to practice, (Residents), and practicing doctors who are
earning a Subspecialty degree (Fellows) all contribute to patient care. And all
of them work under the
supervision of a fully qualified Specialist or Subspecialist. Many patients have
complicated conditions and a resulting profusion of doctors in various stages of
training.
All these doctors may appear at your bedside, individually or en masse. They
rotate in shifts that are shorter than they used to be; your daytime doctor is
unlikely to be your nighttime doctor. And they change crews as often as week to
week.
Nobody in charge:
If you have only two doctors, they need to communicate only with you and with
each other. If you have three doctors, there are six crosspaths for
communication. If you have six doctors, there are potentially 720 types of
doctor-doctor communication. Nobody checks that every such communication takes
place and is accurate.
Medical specialists often vie with
each other for decision-making power. Who decides if the lung abscess needs
antibiotics, or surgical drainage? The lung doctors, the surgeons, or the
infectious disease specialist?
Just to top it off, many hospitals
now employ their own Hospitalists -- physicians who are charged with being the
final decision maker at the patient’s overpopulated bedside, able to overrule a
Specialist’s and or a Primary Care Doctor’s recommendations.
Too few nurses:
We are coping as a nation with a severe nursing shortage. Even if lots more
people were eager to become nurses, there are fewer and fewer expert Registered
Nurses around willing and able to teach them.
So nurses may not only be few and far
between, but exhausted by longer shifts, higher patient loads, the paperwork
demanded by Managed Care and the Joint Commission, (a private, non-profit
watchdog for hospital standards,) and the rapid development of new skills for
them to master.
What can be done?
The fall out from these developments
can be serious: errors and delay in diagnosis, dangerous glitches with
medication and care techniques, and oversights in ordinary patient safety.
Here are my suggestions for staying
safe in the hospital:
1. Ensure that a competent adult
stays at the patient’s bedside, and goes along on trips requiring wheelchair or
gurney, as close to 24/7 as possible.
2. That adult should serve as a
Sentinel, alert to obvious deviations in care (food being given to a patient who
is supposed to have nothing by mouth, for instance); ominous changes in the
patient’s condition unnoticed by the staff (increased trouble breathing, poor
color, incoherence); and situations that are dangerous, such as an unconscious
patient who is vomiting and in danger of aspirating the vomitus.
3. The Sentinel should be prepared to
perform tasks that free up the nurse for more sophisticated patient care. Offer
to empty basins and bedpans, sponge-bathe the patient, tidy the bed, know where
vomit basins, bedpans, towels etc. are located, and how to help the patient put
on a hospital gown. The Sentinel also may have to call for, or even administer,
emergency treatment, such as suctioning the vomiting patient.
4. Ask every caregiver not only their
name, but their exact title. If you don’t know what the title means (“I’m a
first year fellow in Invasive Radiology,” for instance) then ask (“What is a
Fellow? What is Invasive Radiology?”).
5. Ask for the training credentials
of the Hospitalist. “Hospitalism” is not a specialty in itself; there are no
required credentials, no Board Certification in Hospitalism. Your Hospitalist
should be a Board Certified Specialist in the kind of condition the patient has.
If not, or if you’re not sure, call your own Primary Care Physician.
6. Every student, resident, and
fellow works under the supervision of a senior, board-certified physician. Ask
each one who their supervisor is and the nature of his or her credentials. If a
surgeon-in-training appears at the bedside to perform a procedure, make sure
that the senior surgeon knows about it and agrees to it beforehand (unless it is
a truly urgent situation.)
7. The potentially most dangerous
area of the hospital is the MRI suite. It contains an extremely powerful magnet
that acts on every magnetizable object in the room. Metal devices or fragments
inside the body can shift and damage tissue. Loose objects in the room, such as
an oxygen tank, will “home in” on the magnet at great speed, regardless of what
is in the way -- such as your head. Make sure your technician has checked on all
possible dangers. There are no “national” guidelines for MRI safety.
8. Every study or lab test performed
is ordered to answer a specific medical question. For instance, Is the bone
broken? Is the pneumonia improving? Has the heart suffered damage? If you don’t
know why a test has been ordered, clarify it and write it down. Once the test is
performed, make sure that the physician who “read” the results actually answers
the question.
9. Wear a shrill whistle on a chain
around your neck, hidden under your top, to use ONLY in the case of a true
desperate emergency.
10. As soon as possible after
discharge, obtain and review the records of the stay with an eye towards
accuracy, logic, and the credentials of the physicians. Make sure the reports of
studies answer the medical question that was asked, and that the reports of
students and doctors in training have been annotated and co-signed by the
supervisor.
If this all sounds daunting, well, it
is. But after thirty years as a physician, and sixty-seven days and nights with
my husband in four different hospitals, I can’t honestly offer less intimidating
guidance.
It is likely to be decades before we
get medical care under better control, and in the meantime it is up to us, the
Sentinels of our loved ones, to become the crucial missing member of the Health
Care Team: that is, the person ultimately in charge.
Copyright © 2009
Laura Nathanson
Author
Dr. Laura Nathanson is the
author of What You Don't Know Can Kill You
(Published by Collins; May 2007; $15.95US/$19.95CAN; 978-0-06-114582-7) and
The Portable Pediatrician, as well
as several other books. She has practiced pediatrics for more than thirty years,
is board certified in pediatrics and peri-neonatology, and has been consistently
listed in The Best Doctors in America.
For more information, please visit
http://www.lauranathansonmd.com/ |