Giod bless all of you RTT members. Saved my life in Houston Texas st St Luke's heart hospital on 12 19 22 . Very professional and very beautiful ❤️. I owe you all my life 💖.
As a Rapid response RN or StAR nurse, we also have lab paged in addition to the ICU/CCU RN, House RN Supervisor, Respiratory Therapist, Pharmacist. If the patient is stable enough to stay on the floor, by the treatment received, they are put on a shared StAR list, so the next StAR Nurse can make rounds.
What hospital has this kind of staffing? In my ~220 bed urban trauma center one rapid response RN covers the house. Sometimes a SWAT RN ( who might be the rapid RN tomorrow) is available to assist. We get our own vitals, draw our own labs, start lines, medicate, boils, write orders for what we do (under rapid protocols) and monitor as necessary. We will call the ICU Fellow if we think the patient needs to be evaluated further. We then stay with the patient until an ICU bed is available (sometimes 8+ hours). RT helps out on request. The nursing supervisor handles everything by phone and floor charge and ICU charge have a full assignment just like all the rest of the floor and ICU nurses. Pharmacy only comes when we call a code. I want to work in this paradise.
+Erika Eloff I have worked in 2 hospitals in Central WA state, and we staff like the video. BUT! We always have a doc present as well, usually a hospitalist or the ED doc.
Wow! Nobody uses a binder chart in NH. The patient's chart is computerized so when the nurse enters the room, he or she just logs in and all of the patient's info is there.
We at the San Juan VETERANS HOSPITAL in Puerto Rico have an awesome RAPID RESPONSE TEAM I was transferred from a Municipal Hospital to the VETERANS HOSPITAL IN SAN JUAN PUERTO RICO in a Type 3 Ambulance. As soon as I was in the Veterans Hospital emergency room the receiving Doctors starting examining me and immediately called the RAPID RESPONSE TEAM they ran lines into me and the whole works. I was taken to the ICU and later that evening I coded. Fortunately everything that happened was on video since the ICU has video cameras in every room.
I was curious if the primary nurse working alone because basic intervention like giving oxygen (since the patient complaint of chest pain & can't catch his breath) and get the IV access ready while waiting for the RRT to arrive would have been done. Amazingly I did not see any BP machine to show the current vital signs
Great video showcasing calmness and assignment of roles. But a pt coming in with chest pain becoming symptomatic needs an EKG above everything else once airway is considered stable. The EKG results will determine the next course of action whether emergent or not.
@Erica Foods LLC Nope, just super basic training at the ED level that every medical professional working in the ED would know. If you go to an ED or medical institution that does not perform an EKG while patient is showing signs of decompensation, you need to leave that hospital ASAP.
The PT should have already had IV access established in the ED before being admitted. The bed should at this point be down and flat unless the PT states it is easier to breath with the head up a bit but no more than 35 degrees. Otherwise this video shows great leadership and staffing levels. I really think healthcare bean counters should watch this and notice that today's staffing levels are critically low.
Giod bless all of you RTT members. Saved my life in Houston Texas st St Luke's heart hospital on 12 19 22 . Very professional and very beautiful ❤️. I owe you all my life 💖.
As a Rapid response RN or StAR nurse, we also have lab paged in addition to the ICU/CCU RN, House RN Supervisor, Respiratory Therapist, Pharmacist. If the patient is stable enough to stay on the floor, by the treatment received, they are put on a shared StAR list, so the next StAR Nurse can make rounds.
Due7eye7ee6ee
LMFAO I always throw paper planes when I don't know what to do...WTF!?
GREAT video!!! HEY, at 2:27 at 2:27 was that music from a Stryker inTouch bed?
What hospital has this kind of staffing? In my ~220 bed urban trauma center one rapid response RN covers the house. Sometimes a SWAT RN ( who might be the rapid RN tomorrow) is available to assist. We get our own vitals, draw our own labs, start lines, medicate, boils, write orders for what we do (under rapid protocols) and monitor as necessary. We will call the ICU Fellow if we think the patient needs to be evaluated further. We then stay with the patient until an ICU bed is available (sometimes 8+ hours).
RT helps out on request. The nursing supervisor handles everything by phone and floor charge and ICU charge have a full assignment just like all the rest of the floor and ICU nurses. Pharmacy only comes when we call a code.
I want to work in this paradise.
+Erika Eloff I have worked in 2 hospitals in Central WA state, and we staff like the video. BUT! We always have a doc present as well, usually a hospitalist or the ED doc.
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Kaylee
I know right? Those paper planes though....
Wow! Nobody uses a binder chart in NH. The patient's chart is computerized so when the nurse enters the room, he or she just logs in and all of the patient's info is there.
Lisa Mercado I mean pretty much everywhere ..the video does seem a little dated
We at the San Juan VETERANS HOSPITAL in Puerto Rico have an awesome RAPID RESPONSE TEAM
I was transferred from a Municipal Hospital to the VETERANS HOSPITAL IN SAN JUAN PUERTO RICO in a Type 3 Ambulance. As soon as I was in the Veterans Hospital emergency room the receiving Doctors starting examining me and immediately called the RAPID RESPONSE TEAM they ran lines into me and the whole works. I was taken to the ICU and later that evening I coded. Fortunately everything that happened was on video since the ICU has video cameras in every room.
Good Video, but I keep noticing the bed is still up instead of dropped
I was curious if the primary nurse working alone because basic intervention like giving oxygen (since the patient complaint of chest pain & can't catch his breath) and get the IV access ready while waiting for the RRT to arrive would have been done. Amazingly I did not see any BP machine to show the current vital signs
Great video showcasing calmness and assignment of roles. But a pt coming in with chest pain becoming symptomatic needs an EKG above everything else once airway is considered stable.
The EKG results will determine the next course of action whether emergent or not.
@Erica Foods LLC Nope, just super basic training at the ED level that every medical professional working in the ED would know. If you go to an ED or medical institution that does not perform an EKG while patient is showing signs of decompensation, you need to leave that hospital ASAP.
I would like to inquire re copyright and using this clip within education.
Just out of curiosity, where is there no physician on the RRT?
what's with the paper planes???
P
Jacques Tan your profile matches to your comment
Yea lol that was funny af
2:27 I Believe that music was from the Sound/Media Therapy of a Stryker inTouch bed. I don't know, but I THINK IT WAS!!!!!
really? paper planes?
The PT should have already had IV access established in the ED before being admitted. The bed should at this point be down and flat unless the PT states it is easier to breath with the head up a bit but no more than 35 degrees. Otherwise this video shows great leadership and staffing levels. I really think healthcare bean counters should watch this and notice that today's staffing levels are critically low.
hospital bed card coverage
I know you’re gonna do a 12 lead before a bolus and nitro. 🥴
Chaos part not funny. Why nurse must remain calm, cool, and collected.
treatment
nErs hospital
3
I’m an epileptic and I’ve had a team that were throwing paper planes when I coded not giving a f@$( just like that.. Medical system has failed us