Herzing University Nursing Grand Rounds Case study

Herzing University Nursing Grand Rounds Case study

Herzing University Nursing Grand Rounds Case study

The staff development nurse is creating a series of nursing grand rounds (NGR) and reviewing an article on this topic. The goal is to make the NGR as accessible as possible because the leadership team wants maximal participation. This facility is one of four inner-city hospitals that make up a health system.

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1. The study reviewed notes that “most nurses prefer online recordings for NGR.” When the nurse implements the NGR via online recordings, a great number of nurses do not access the online recordings. How might this be explained because it is different than what the research reported?

2. The study noted that researchers did not plan to generate findings that would be generalizable. What does this mean?

3. To find out about the limitations of the research and the generalizability of the outcomes, where should the nurse search in the article?

A 63-year-old Roseville woman has sued Mercy Medical Center in Redding alleging that during a hospital stay last year a nurse brutally slammed a suction tube down her throat after telling her she was a “bad little girl” who needed to be punished. Herzing University Nursing Grand Rounds Case study

 

Suzanne Aveihle, who suffers from chronic pancreatitis, alleges that in April 2009 she was taken to Mercy’s emergency room after falling ill during a trip visiting friends in Lassen County.

 

She was sedated because she was having trouble breathing, and she was placed in the hospital’s critical care unit, her husband, Bob Rinehart, said.

 

She woke up restrained.

 

 

Rinehart, 53, said that was understandable given that groggy patients often try to pull out their IV lines or oxygen tubes attached to their bodies.

 

But he alleges that when his wife reached up to scratch her nose, a nurse, identified in court documents as Rose Smith, said something to her that terrified her, Rinehart said.

 

“She said, ‘You’ve been a bad little girl. You shouldn’t do that. We punish bad little girls who do that,’” Rinehart said.

 

Smith then violently slammed a suction tube down his wife’s throat, Rinehart said.

 

“She was coughing up blood,” Rinehart said.

Smith returned another time during Aveihle’s hospital stay, saying again that Aveihle was a bad little girl who needed to be punished for trying to touch her face, Rinehart said.

 

His wife was initially so traumatized by the experience that she didn’t want to talk about it, but later confided in her husband, who reported the incident to hospital officials, he said.

 

At least one other nurse and a hospital administrator later told the family that other patients had complained about Smith’s behavior, but they’d addressed the problem, Rinehart said.

 

The family filed a lawsuit late last year in San Francisco Superior Court.

 

 

The lawsuit names Mercy and its San Francisco-based parent organization Catholic Healthcare West.

 

In a one-paragraph e-mailed statement, Mercy medical spokesman Michael Burke declined to comment on the lawsuit or answer questions about Smith’s alleged behavior. He wouldn’t confirm whether Smith is still a Mercy employee.

 

“Complaints or problems regarding employees or physicians are taken very seriously by the hospital, investigated completely and disciplinary actions are taken depending upon the severity of the issue as appropriate,” Burke said in his statement. Herzing University Nursing Grand Rounds Case study

 

When reached by phone at her Red Bluff home, Smith said she no longer worked at Mercy, but she politely referred inquiries to her Sacramento attorney, Donna Low.

 

Low didn’t return a voice-mail message left late Monday afternoon at her office.

 

Low, a former nurse, specializes in medical law, according to her website.

 

 

Smith is listed as a licensed nurse in good standing on the California Board of Registered Nursing’s website.

Rinehart said his wife has been severely depressed since the hospital and she wakes, terrified, in the middle of the night after having nightmares about people sticking tubes down her throat.

 

“She can’t even watch these medical shows on TV any more,” he said. “She breaks into tears when she sees someone with a tube in their throat.” Herzing University Nursing Grand Rounds Case study