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Emergency And Critical Care Unit Management

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The first purpose-built intensive care unit (ICU) in the UK opened in 1964 ICUs offer potentially life-saving intervention during acute physiological crises, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emergency And Critical Care Unit Management


1
Emergency And Critical Care Unit Management
2
  • Intensive care is a young speciality. The first
    purpose-built intensive care unit (ICU) in the UK
    opened in 1964
  • ICUs offer potentially life-saving intervention
    during acute physiological crises, with emphasis
    on medical need and availability of technology
  • ICU nurses should develop therapeutic and
    humanistic environments which help the patient as
    a whole person towards their recovery

3
The patient
  • Patients are admitted to intensive care because a
    physiological crisis threatens one or more Body
    systems, and their life. Care therefore needs to
    focus primarily on supporting failed systems.
  • Extrinsic needs for
  • dignity
  • privacy
  • psychological support
  • spiritual support
  • nurses are with the patient throughout their
    hospital stay. A fundamental role of nurses is
    therefore to be with and be for the patient, as a
    whole person

4
their relatives
  • Relatives, including friends and significant
    others, are an important part of each person's
    life, giving patients courage to struggle for
    survival
  • In contrast of the often high-tech focus of
    staff, families of intensive care patients often
    focus on fundamental aspects of physiological
    needs, such as shaving , pain relief and
    communication
  • Rather than ruminate by bedsides, afraid to touch
    their loved ones incase they interfere with some
    machine
  • relatives should be offered opportunities to be
    actively involved in care without being made to
    feel guilty or becoming physically exhausted.
    Letting relatives participate in care can help
    them psychologically

5
  • Physiological crises of patients often create
    psychological crises for their relatives.
    Holistic patient care should include caring for
    their families and other significant people in
    their life
  • Relatives may be angry. They are usually angry at
    the disease, but it is difficult to take anger
    out on a disease. Instead, anger, complaints or
    passive withdrawal may be directed at those
    nearby, who are usually nurses .
  • Relatives often experience unnecessary suffering.
    They may blame themselves, however illogically,
    for their loved one's illness

6
  • Feeling guilty and distressed, they neglecting
    their own physical needs, such as rest and food.
  • Facilities for relatives should include a
    waiting room near the unit, some where to stay
    overnight and facilities to make refreshments
  • Relatives need information, both to cope with
    their own psychological crisis and to make
    decisions. They often have a psychological need
    for hope, but with one quarter of patients dying
    on the unit, and additional post discharge
    mortality and morbidity, there may be little hope
    to offer

7
  • If death seems likely, relatives need to know so
    they can start grieving
  • Families may experience information overload, at
    a time they are least able to cope with it
  • Communication by staff is often ineffective.
    Printed information can provide useful reminders
    but should not be a substitute for discussion
    relatives need human support and contact.
  • Information given should be consistent and should
    be recorded in multidisciplinary notes

8
  • nurses should be sensitive to both their own and
    relatives' non-verbal cues, such as posture,
    eye-contact and tone of voice
  • Of all staff, nurses are best placed to meet
    relatives' needs, yet the needs are not always
    met

9
the nurse
  • Nurses monitor and assess patients, but they also
    provide care. Assessment is fundamental to
    providing care, but sometimes a excess of
    paperwork prevents care.
  • Nurses should collaborate with doctors (and other
    members of the healthcare team). Traditional
    nurse to patient ratios of 11 for UK ICUs are
    higher than in most other countries, but UK ICU
    patients are also sicker .
  • The Department of Health (2000) recommends the
    flexible use of beds for level 2 and level 3
    patients. Widely accepted nurse-patient ratios
    for high dependency are 12, which identifies
    should be the maximum number of patients per
    nurse.

10
  • Psychological stress caused or accentuated by
    intensive care
  • dehumanizing nursing can become when machines,
    rather than people, become the focus of
    attention.
  • A pragmatic solution to both economic and
    recruitment limitations has been to develop
    support worker roles. Most units employing
    support workers have found they provide valuable
    contributions to teamwork, provided skill mix of
    nurses is not reduced inappropriately

11
Stress
  • Patients, their relatives and nurses all suffer
    stress.
  • Stress is both a psychological and physiological
    phenomenon. Psychology and physiology interact.
  • Critically ill patients suffer physiological
    stress from their illness, and psychological
    stress from negative emotions such as fear

12
Breaking bad news
  • ICU staff often have to break the bad news to
    relatives and friends. Changes may be rapid and
    unpredictable, but if patients are dying their
    family need to be aware of the future grief to
    begin grieving

13
management
  • Many principles of industrial management or
    managing other healthcare areas are applicable to
    the ICU.
  • Vaughan and Pilmoor (1989) suggest that
    management is getting the work done through
    people. A good shift leader is a good team
    leader, enabling other people to do their work.

14
  • Drucker (1974) identifies five roles for
    managers
  • setting objectives
  • organizing
  • motivating and communicating
  • measuring targets
  • developing people

15
  • The shift leader should establish constructive
    working conditions at the start of each shift,
    enabling development of staffs' individual
    strengths and skills, while recognizing
    individual needs and limitations.
  • Managers should individually assess and
    proactively plan and respond to needs for each
    shift, rather than seek to impose their own
    schedules on staff.

16
  • Managers rely on their staff to achieve the work,
    so staff are the shift leader's most important
    resource.
  • Staff numbers are important. are there enough
    staff for patients already on the unit and
    expected/potential admissions?

17
  • abilities and qualities of staff are also
    important.
  • Skill mix' is more than simply counting numbers
    of staff at each grade.
  • Some staff need more support than others each
    has different experience, knowledge and skills to
    draw on

18
  • Specific allocation should consider
  • maintaining patient safety
  • optimizing patient treatment
  • developing and supporting staff
  • Nurses unable to safely care for a patient should
    not be allocated to their care. Each nurse is
    individually accountable for their actions, and
    should acknowledge their limitations

19
  • without gaining experience of nursing very sick
    patients, junior staff will be denied
    opportunities to develop their skills.
  • If continually denied developmental experience,
    they may become demotivated and leave or be
    unable to care safely for sicker patients when
    more experienced staff are not available

20
  • two junior nurses may safely manage adjacent
    patients when both are present, but become unsafe
    if caring for two patients through covering each
    other's breaks.
  • Nurse managers remain accountable for their
    actions unsafe allocation breaches

21
  • the shift leader also has wider moral
    responsibilities for health and safety of their
    staff and patients.
  • Fire exits should remain clear and accessible at
    all times and safety and emergency equipment
    should be in complete and in working order.
  • Emergency equipment varies between units, but may
    include the resuscitation trolley, emergency
    intubation trolley and (on cardiothoracic units)
    thoracotomy pack. Any environmental hazards
    should be minimized, and where possible removed.

22
  • The shift leader may have to assume direct
    patient care, but this causes role conflict
    between responsibility to the whole unit as shift
    leader and individual responsibility to your
    patient, and limits your availability to other
    members
  • It is recommend that the shift leader should not
    provide direct patient care

23
  • Endacott (1999) identifies four key aspects of
    shift leadership
  • presence (availability)
  • information gathering (from bedside nurses)
  • supportive involvement (e.g. attractive
    equipment, checking drugs, reassuring staff)
  • direct involvement (taking over from bedside
    nurses when they are away or unable to cope).

24
Staff morale
  • Shift leaders are responsible for enabling others
    to achieve their work, so should motivate and
    communicate
  • Maintaining staff and unit morale is therefore a
    management priority
  • loyal staff are more likely to support shift
    leaders during crises.

25
  • Democratic or authoritarian leaders use their
    power and authority to achieve goals and
    objectives
  • But healthcare is challenged with an philosophy
    of 'blame' culture, which should be replaced by
    one of 'safety
  • A safety culture recognizes that errors will
    occur, and so an openness about reporting errors
    allows potential causes to be identified and
    rectified.

26
  • An alternative approach to management is
    'Transformational' leadership, which seeks to
    transform the culture of care through
  • staff empowerment
  • practice development
  • developing other workplace characteristics

27
  • Shift leaders therefore need good interpersonal
    skills and respect for their staff.
  • Shift leaders seeing unsatisfactory practices
    should approach staff constructively, identifying
    why staff are acting that way (rationale,
    knowledge base)

28
  • Breaks from work provide a psychological coping
    mechanism. European working time regulations are
    prescriptive about working time, including the
    right to breaks every four hours.
  • Delayed, compromised or missed breaks often
    cause dissatisfaction
  • Possible conflicts with managerial duties
    (earlier) should be considered, especially if
    relieving for breaks in inaccessible areas (e.g.
    side rooms).

29
  • The ICU work is unpredictable workload will
    sometimes exceed resources, so shift leaders and
    staff should identify priorities, accepting that
    some lesser priorities are not always achieved
  • Ideally, staff should take breaks away from their
    workspace, but busy shifts may sometimes prevent
    this. If full breaks cannot be taken, providing
    refreshments at bedsides (this task could be
    dele- gated) may help staff function safely, and
    maintain morale

30
Staffing levels
  • Staff levels should be individualized to
    patient/unit needs .
  • If shift leaders consider unit, patient or staff
    safety is compromised through inadequate staff
    (or any other problem they are unable to
    resolve), they should inform senior managers, who
    have (higher) responsibility for the unit.
  •  

31
During the shift
  • Staff need to feel confidence in their
    shiftleader.
  • While shift leaders usually have more experience
    and knowledge than their staff, each member of
    staff has potential to contribute knowledge,
    experience or values, and shift leaders should be
    prepared to learn from, as well as guide and
    teach, their staff.

32
  • Shift leaders may be pressurized to accept
    patients 'because there is an empty bed, there
    appear to be enough staff or because' patients
    need the ICU.
  • the pressure cannot always be relieved by
    admission to other wards. While medical staff
    must decide whether patients require ICU
    admission, shift leaders must decide whether
    patients can be safely nursed on the unit. This
    decision includes
  • imminent shifts
  • dependency of patients already on the unit
  • skills of staff available

33
  • Good shiftleaders may inspire loyalty in their
    staff, but being in charge can isolate
    shiftleaders from other support mechanisms.
  • Shiftleaders also need their breaks a stressed
    shift leader is less likely to be able to support
    their staff.

34
emergency
35
Triage
  • Triage (pronounced /'tri??/) is a process of
    prioritizing patients based on the severity of
    their condition.
  • This rations patient treatment efficiently when
    resources are insufficient for all to be treated
    immediately. The term comes from the French verb
    trier, meaning to separate, sort, sift or select.

36
  • There are two types of triage simple and
    advanced. The outcome may result in determining
    the order and priority of emergency treatment,
    the order and priority of emergency transport, or
    the transport destination for the patient, based
    upon the special needs of the patient or the
    balancing of patient distribution in a
    mass-casualty setting.

37
  • Simple triage is usually used in a scene of a
    "mass-casualty incident" (MCI), in order to sort
    patients into those who need critical attention
    and immediate transport to the hospital and those
    with less serious injuries. This step can be
    started before transportation becomes available.
    The categorization of patients based on the
    severity of their injuries can be aided with the
    use of printed triage tags or colored flagging

38
  • Triage separates the injured into four groups
  • 0 The deceased who are beyond help
  • 1 The injured who can be helped by immediate
    transportation
  • 2 The injured whose transport can be delayed
  • 3 Those with minor injuries, who need help less
    urgently

39
advanced triage
  • In advanced triage, doctors may decide that some
    seriously injured people should not receive
    advanced care because they are unlikely to
    survive. Advanced care will be used on patients
    with less severe injuries.
  • Because treatment is intentionally withheld from
    patients with certain injuries, advanced triage
    has ethical implications. It is used to divert
    scarce resources away from patients with little
    chance of survival in order to increase the
    chances of survival of others who are more likely
    to survive.

40
The triage categories (with corresponding color
codes), in precedence, are
  • Immediate The casualty requires immediate
    medical attention and will not survive if not
    seen soon. Any compromise to the casualty's
    respiration, hemorrhage control, or shock control
    could be fatal.
  • Delayed The casualty requires medical attention
    within 6 hours. Injuries are potentially
    life-threatening, but can wait until the
    Immediate casualties are stabilized and
    evacuated.
  • Minimal "Walking wounded," the casualty requires
    medical attention when all higher priority
    patients have been evacuated, and may not require
    stabilization or monitoring.
  • Expectant The casualty is expected not to reach
    higher medical support alive without compromising
    the treatment of higher priority patients. Care
    should not be neglected, spare any remaining time
    and resources after Immediate and Delayed
    patients have been treated
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