On my rural placement I was treating orthopaedic inpatients. As most of you probably are aware by now, orthopaedic inpatients are very repetitive as it follows the post op routines as per each surgeon. Anyway, I was heading into a TKR patients room to walk him for the first time to the bathroom, and had seen him the day before in which he coped well at standing. The patient reported feeling well, nil complaints voiced. He was no longer on oxygen and all attachments removed. I checked his nursing charts which showed obs stable. I thought I should check them myself to get an immediate reading and for precaution. His oxygen and BP were normal, however his pulse rate was racing at 160 BPM!!! I was surprised, all other readings were fine, the patient was asymptomatic, and in fact the pt was quite cheerful. It was a little strange. I took his pulse manually, it was definitely high.
I decided not to walk him at this stage, and informed him why. I let his nurse know immediately. The patient was later taken to ED for a couple of hours, and his meds changed. He later returned to the ward, in which I was able to ambulate him to the bathroom when all his obs were stable.
This scenario highlighted to me the importance of checking stats prior to ambulating post op patients, even if the nursing obs are normal. Also, patients may be asymptomatic, therefore relying solely on pt responses is not adequate. I also feel that, with orthopaedic inpatients there is so much emphasis on checking Hb, Bp and oxygen that pulse rate gets a little ignored. In future I will take the extra 1 minute to take current obs of a patient that is post op as I have done in this scenario.
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3 comments:
I agree, I think that it is very important from a safety point of view to ensure that the obs are checked, especially with post op patients.
Well done. It is so easy for us to just get on with what we are there for and forget the most improtant thing. You did the right thing by checking the pulse before your stood the patient. It is so important in the acute stage to check the obs when we're about to do something for the first time like walking patient. Although the nursing chart is normal, patients in acute settings can change quite rapidly in a short time. So to be safe,we should just check the obs ourselves, it only takes a minute.
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