Showing posts with label Pediatric Emergencies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pediatric Emergencies. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Airlines Rely on Traveling Doctors to Answer Emergency Calls - NYTimes.com

Dr. Matthew Rhoa is still haunted by one of his lowest moments as a physician. Several years ago, on the first leg of an international flight, he was just settling in for a nap when a flight attendant came on the public address system to ask, “Is there a doctor on the plane?”

Dr. Rhoa, who lives in San Francisco, didn’t push his call button. “As a gynecologist, I always waited for another doctor,” he said. “There’s never a need for a Pap smear at 30,000 feet.”

He fell asleep, only to be awakened an hour later by a second call for medical help. This time he answered, and at the back of the plane he found two anxious parents with their 18-month-old toddler, who had a cast on her broken leg and was crying inconsolably.

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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

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Monday, April 11, 2011

McDonald's Medicine: Too Impatient to Wait for Care, Time

Doctor asks, "Why did you come to the ER today?"

This question — emphasizing today is common practice in emergency departments — helps us figure out how urgent a patient's illness might be. But it's a loaded question. Rephrased, it could easily mean, "Do you really believe you are seriously ill, or is it just that you couldn't wait to see a regular doctor?"

Behind the sanctimony is a cliché: McDonald's medicine. Spend time in a busy ER and you'll hear a recurrent theme among the harried staff: patients in the U.S. want their health care like they want their food — served up speedily and made "your way." According to the conventional wisdom among medical professionals, overcrowding in the ER is exacerbated by America's culture of instant gratification. (See Healthland's 5 rules for good health in 2011.)

Click on the "via" link for the rest of the article.

With the high value we put on Instant Gratification, have to say they have a point here.

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Should Emergency Departments Turn Away Nonurgent Patients? - TIME

A few weeks ago, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) launched a campaign to derail proposed policies to reduce the use of emergency departments (EDs). ACEP's problem with the campaign is the logic that underpins it: policymakers think that ED use, in aggregate, is a costly problem and a major driver of unnecessary health care costs in the U.S. ACEP claims that rather than delivering unnecessary care, EDs treat many patients who have no alternative when they need comprehensive medical care in a timely manner; that is, EDs deliver altogether necessary care.

ACEP has challenged reports from South Carolina and Massachusetts suggesting that a high percentage of ED use is unnecessary and that reform efforts — particularly payment incentives — will reduce "inappropriate" usage. In South Carolina, a state legislator, Representative Bill Herbkersman, even recommended that special call boxes be placed in the homes of more than 3,000 Medicaid patients to give them 24-hour access to nurses who could diagnose them over the phone and reduce costly and unnecessary ED visits. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia has also increased the co-pay on ED visits from $100 to $200 and has been steering its members away from EDs to urgent-care centers and retail clinics (with the help of a Google Maps application, soon be available as an app for members' mobile phones).

Click on the "via" link for the rest of the article.

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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Organ Donation Informed Consent, Is A Single Parent's Sufficient? Nursing Malpractice Cases

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Summary:  Organ donors are in high demand.  Frequently intended recipients can wait a lifetime for the critical matching organ.  In this case, two nurses obtained a consent from a child's mother.  When the father later expressed his disagreement, the child's corneas had been harvested and it was too late.

The patient was an 11-year-old child that had died soon after an Asthma attack.

"By condition (excluding pregnancy), the five leading causes of hospitalization among children are: bronchitis/asthma, digestive disease, pneumonia and respiratory infection, otitis media and mental disorders."1

The parents were approached for the purpose of donating the child's corneas under the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act.

"What is a Corneal Transplant?

The cornea is a dime-sized clear tissue covering the front of the eye. Light rays pass through the cornea and then through the lens. The lens forms an image on the retina in the back of the eye where the optic nerve is located. Sight is controlled by the optic nerve, the only nerve of vision. This nerve activates the retina to pick up the image in view."2

The mother alone was present at this time when it was first discussed.

"The child's mother maintains that she told the nurse it "did not matter" to her."3

"The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA) of 1968 provided for the first time that an individual could donate his or her organs at death to another for medical purposes. It was adopted in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, and was a major step toward solving the organ donation problem. But new medical technologies have now made many transplant operations commonplace, and a shortage of donor organs remains."4

With this, the harvesting center was contacted and the patient's information left.  A consent form was faxed over to the hospital.  Two nurses then spoke to the mother by telephone and signed off on the form that consent had been obtained.

Individual state laws may vary in procedure for who can consent to an anatomical gift.  In Alaska for instance:

"(a) A competent person who is 18 or more years of age may make a gift to take effect upon death of all or a part of the person's body for a purpose specified in AS 13.50.020.

(b) When persons in prior classes are not available at the time of death, and in the absence of actual notice of contrary indications by the decedent or actual notice of opposition by a member of the same or a prior class, any of the following persons, in order of priority listed, may give all or a part of the decedent's body for a purpose specified in AS 13.50.020:

(1) the spouse;
(2) an adult son or daughter;
(3) either parent;
(4) an adult brother or sister;
(5) a guardian of the decedent at the time of death;
(6) any other person authorized or under obligation to dispose of the body.
(c) The persons authorized by (b) of this section may make the gift after or immediately before death."5

The agent for the organ center came and harvested the child's corneas and returned to the center.  He had looked over the consent form obtained, initialed it to verify it had been obtained by phone and was satisfied.

"When the cornea, a thin tissue that covers the front of the eye, becomes cloudy or damaged due to disease, injury or hereditary conditions, the result is vision loss or even blindness.

To clear this window, the damaged cornea is removed surgically and replaced with healthy, transplanted eye tissue-a donated cornea. This transplant operation is successful in more than 90 percent of cases in the US. After a successful transplant, patients have renewed vision or see for the first time."6

Each individual facility must generate protocols on organ procurement and obtaining informed consent:

"Each hospital in the state shall develop procedures for identifying potential donors of gifts, requesting gifts, notifying and coordinating with eye banks, tissue banks, and organ procurement agencies, and assisting in the procurement, removal, storage, and transportation of gifts."7
 

The child's father would arrive on the scene soon after.  When approached and informed of the harvesting, he was perturbed.  He would not sign the consent after the fact and chose to take legal action against the hospital and the donor center.

In court, summary judgement was entered for the defense:

The parent's appealed.

Questions to be answered:

1. Under the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA), is the consent of a parent sufficient to proceed with harvesting of a child's organs.

2. Were the nurses negligent in their explanation of the procedure or in not waiting till the father was available?

The applicable laws stated that as long as a consent from a legally "responsible" and informed party is obtained, no liability or negligence can be assigned.  It was clear from the testimony of the nurses that they spoke to the mother and informed her of what was to happen.

In obtaining organs, time is typically of the essence.  The longer an organ or tissues remains in a body, the less likely it will be useful for the purposes of transplantation.

There was no evidence that the mother was either "coerced" or "rushed" into making a decision.  There was no documentation that she "wished to speak to her husband" before making the decision.  If more time had been needed or another family member needed to be consulted, the mother could have clearly stated this.

On the part of the nurses, a single adult guardian consent only was needed and obtained.

When the agent of the eye bank looked over the informed consent, he as satisfied that it was legitimate.  In harvesting the child's corneas, he acted in good faith and had no reason to believe a proper consent had not been obtained.

The court dismissed the plaintiff's argument that the "good faith" actions of the hospital or eyebank were "subject to interpretation."  The court was satisfied that under the conditions, the actions of the employees were reasonable and within the boundaries of existing law.

This case does point out the need for judgement and clear documentation when a consent for organ donation is obtained.  The nurses were wise to obtain not one but two witness signatures on the consent form.  The agent of the eye bank was wise to make sure the notation was made of a "telephone" consent.

Regardless of these precautions, the nurses, hospital and eyebank were still sued.  Had this lawsuit been initiated after either of the employees involved had left, the hospital may or may not have covered or defended them.

Related Link Sections:

Clinical Charting and Documentation, Nurses Notes
http://www.nursefriendly.com/nursing/linksections/directpatientcarelinks.htm

Informed Consent
http://www.legalnursingconsultant.org/legal.nurse.consultants.lnc/informed.co...

Medical Legal Consulting Nurse Entrepreneurs
http://www.nursefriendly.com/nursing/ymedlegal.htm

Organ Donation:
http://www.nursefriendly.com/nursing/directpatientcare/organ.tissue.donation.htm
 

Sources:

1. National Association of Children's Hospitals and Related Institutions.  No date given. About Childrens Hospitals - Facts on Children's Health - Illness and Injury.  Retrieved June 20, 1999 from the World Wide Web: http://www.nachri.org/abouth/facts/hlth_illness.html

2. Old Dominion Eyebank.  No date given.  Corneal Transplant. Retrieved June 20, 1999 from the World Wide Web: http://www.odeb.org/html/cornealtransplant.htm

3. RRNL 39 May 12 (1999)

4. National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.  No date given.  Why All States Should Adopt The Revised Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (1987). Retrieved June 20, 1999 from the World Wide Web: http://www.nccusl.org/whystate/uagawhy.html

5. The Alaska Legal Resource Center. No date given.  Persons Who May Execute An Anatomical Gift.  Retrieved June 20, 1999 from the World Wide Web:  http://www.touchngo.com/lglcntr/akstats/Statutes/Title13/Chapter50/Section010...

6. Medical Eye Bank of Florida.  No date given.  Anatomy of the Eye. Retrieved June 20, 1999 from the World Wide Web: http://www.castlegate.net/mebfl/anatomy.htm

7. The Alaska Legal Resource Center. No date given. Requests By Hospitals For Anatomical Gifts. Retrieved June 20, 1999 from the World Wide Web: http://www.touchngo.com/lglcntr/akstats/Statutes/Title13/Chapter50/Section014...
 

The Uniform Resource Locator (URL) or Internet Street Address of this page is
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Send comments and mail to Andrew Lopez, RN

Created on Saturday May 23, 1999

Last updated by Andrew Lopez, RN on Monday, February 28, 2011

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Friday, April 1, 2011

Cuts Leave Patients With Medicaid Cards, but No Specialist to See - NYTimes.com

Eight-year-old Draven Smith was expelled from school last year for disruptive behavior, and he is being expelled again this year. But his mother and his pediatrician cannot find a mental health specialist to treat him because he is on Medicaid, and the program, which provides health coverage for the poor, pays doctors so little that many refuse to take its patients.

Michael Stravato for The New York Times

Dr. Rachel Chatters, right, with Ana Smith, says she begs specialists to see Medicaid patients.

Michael Stravato for The New York Times

Ms. Smith said she has tried for more than a year to find a psychiatrist to treat her son Draven, 8, who is on Medicaid.

The problem is common here and across the country, especially as states, scrambling to balance their budgets, look for cuts in Medicaid, which is one of their biggest expenditures. And it presents the Obama administration with a major challenge, since the new federal health care law relies heavily on Medicaid to cover many people who now lack health insurance.

“Having a Medicaid card in no way assures access to care,” said Dr. James B. Aiken, an emergency physician in New Orleans.

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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Harmed in the hospital? Should you sue? - CNN.com

Ryan Jeffers finds it hard to believe his daughter, Malyia, went from being a perfectly healthy 2-year-old who loved to dance, sing and entertain to an amputee facing a lifetime of medical care.

"I can't believe something so small turned into something so big," recalls Jeffers, who noticed that his daughter had a fever one Sunday in November.

Malyia's fever continued to climb, and unusual bruises appeared on her cheek; her parents say they rushed her to the emergency room near their Sacramento home. But things did not go as they expected.

The family says that they couldn't get a physician to examine Malyia and that the five-hour wait in the emergency room nearly killed her. Her septic infection worsened as she waited to be seen.

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Many Emergency Department Visits Could Be Managed At Urgent Care Centers And Retail Clinics — Health Aff

Americans seek a large amount of nonemergency care in emergency departments, where they often encounter long waits to be seen. Urgent care centers and retail clinics have emerged as alternatives to the emergency department for nonemergency care. We estimate that 13.7–27.1 percent of all emergency department visits could take place at one of these alternative sites, with a potential cost savings of approximately $4.4 billion annually. The primary conditions that could be treated at these sites include minor acute illnesses, strains, and fractures. There is some evidence that patients can safely direct themselves to these alternative sites. However, more research is needed to ensure that care of equivalent quality is provided at urgent care centers and retail clinics compared to emergency departments.

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Saturday, February 5, 2011

Kids with allergies can die in school, responding to criticism, KevinMD.com

Like many other parents of kids with allergies, I was very dismayed to see this article, titled, Allergic boy, 7, suffers two heart attacks after teacher hands him chocolate nut in class, last week.   It seems a boy of 7 was accidentally given a chocolate candy containing a hazelnut, to which he is allergic.  After biting into the candy, he realized immediately that he shouldn’t have it and spit it out.  Despite quick treatment with an EpiPen after symptoms started, he ended up in pretty bad shape on life support after suffering a couple of cardiac arrests.

I read with interest the comments that the public left on that article.  As I’ve seen before with other peanut allergy articles (namely those that discuss banning peanuts on airplanes), this issue was very polarizing.  The teacher and child were equally blamed.  People even blamed the mother, who wasn’t even there until right afterward and did exactly what she was supposed to do.

I am almost positive that I would be one of those people saying, “What’s the big deal?  Just don’t eat peanuts” if peanut allergies didn’t affect my life in a huge way – my 4 year old son is severely allergic to peanuts.  He’s had 3 exposures, all accidental.  The last one saw us end up in the Emergency Room needing IV’s, oxygen, and several medications to treat his anaphylactic reaction.

L
Click on kevinmd.com link for the full article:

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