Month: May 2021

Recognizing the Approaching End of Life

When I first started working in the field of hospice, my clinical manager told me (I’m paraphrasing), one day you will be able to walk into the room, and without getting a single vital sign, just by visual observation, be able to tell that the person is dying or will be shortly dying. That was about three years ago. Today, it’s almost chilling for me (as it is both a blessing and tremendous responsibility) to be able to share she told the truth, and that over time — if you give yourself patience and grace and take the time to listen, observe, and remember — you too will learn how to tell when someone is close to or otherwise is dying. Please allow me to share some of my insight as to how I know a person has less than a month left to live, and often far less. First off, let’s go into the important discussion you should have with the family, friends, and the patient themselves that provides an overall background to the prognosis. That discussion should be centered around what types of decline (downward, negative) changes have been taking place in the patient’s life over the last six months making note as to whether the decline is minor, medium, or major and the frequency (once a month, once a week, etc.) of those changes.
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Properly entering doctor orders

You are in with a patient with whom you believe will benefit from a treatment/medication. You call the provider who either goes with the recommendation you made as part of the SBAR (situation, background, assessment, nursing recommendation) or otherwise adjusted it to better fit the situation. Most EMR (electronic medical record systems) now requires you to enter a doctor (provider) order. For visiting staff, most EMR systems will send an electronic communication to the doctor to “sign” the verbal order over the next 24 hours (some systems, the next business day). Can you imagine how many orders the provider must sign in a day? How do you protect your patient and your nursing license in the written documentation of the doctor’s order you enter into whatever system you are using?
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