Health Care Interview HCS 235 March 4, 2013 Dr. Robert Clegg Health Care Interview There are many components to a hospital or medical facility. All of them are necessary to have a properly functioning environment. The emergency department of a hospital is a fast paced world. You have to be constantly on your toes and prepared for whatever may come through the doors. There are many people that work in an emergency room to make it run smoothly. Techs, nurses, CNA’s, LVN’s, and doctors all work side by side to help those who are critically injured. Without all these people it would be complete chaos. Triage is usually the first step of the emergency room and helps determine severity of each patient. Once through triage, the patient …show more content…
Letting management know about any problems right away helps a lot because the issues can get addressed immediately. “Like any job, there may be that one person you do not get along with, but as long as you do your best to just do your job and avoid drama, you will be okay,” he says. Taking care of the patients is always the number one priority in hospitals. Jeff informed me that the best way to make it through the day is to be compassionate and have patience. Dealing with children can be hard, especially to those who have children of their own. “When we lose a patient, it is hard not to take it personally,” he says. That is where the compassion comes in. Losing anyone is not a happy time, but dealing with children, it is difficult to not get attached. Being patient is important because you are dealing with kids. “Sometimes the children do not understand what we are asking or why we are poking them, so being patient is very important,” says Jeff. Although there are many changes starting to roll out in health care, Jeff informed me that he has not personally experienced any of them so far. He explained that most of the changes occurring in his place of employment were in upper positions. He did mention that he thinks that technology has come a long way in the medical field and is heading the right direction. Electronic medical records have made every aspect of patient care easier and
Because patients need round-the-clock care, working hours include days, nights, weekends and holidays. Nurses spend considerable time walking, bending, stretching and standing, so they must follow proper body mechanics to guard against injury. Because of the fast-paced and variable environment of emergency rooms, ER Nurses must possess good stress coping skills and be able to relate to people of all ages and backgrounds. They must be able to work accurately around frequent interruptions. Nurses may face hazards from exposure to chemicals and infectious diseases. In addition, they treat patients that may be confused, irrational, agitated, and/or uncooperative. Along with all this you need. At a minimum for most entry-level emergency room (ER) nursing careers, applicants must have a diploma from an accredited
As an Emergency Room Nurse, You become a part of the Emergency Response Team that works together to not only provide individual care, but also to provide fast and accurate stabilizing care to individuals in a crisis situation.
I would like to give you some insight as to the daily operation of a major Emergency Department in this city. Not unlike many other “ER’s” the nursing staff is tasked with the triage or assessment of patients in order to sort by priority. The nurse is then tasked with maintaining flow of the department and ensuring the timely care and physician evaluation of patients. This requires clinical nursing judgement and expertise which is tested constantly. To explain this plainly, nurses are faced with a meat grinder which cannot stop. There may be twenty patients in the lobby with ambulances lining up. The room nurses are trying to
The role of the emergency department is to diagnose and treat acute and urgent illnesses and injuries. Patients are seen in order of medical urgency. The emergency department bases the patients urgency for treatment based on levels. Level 1 is critical and life-threatening. This is usually related to ABC’s (Airway, Breathing, and Circulation). These patients are top priority and require a lifesaving intervention. Level 2 is also considered high priority and can also be life-threatening. Psychiatric patients are considered level 2, and patients arriving to the ED with chest pain. Level 3 patients require resources such as sutures, x-rays, CAT scans, MRI, etc. Level 3 patients are provided treatment services only after Level 1 and 2 have been addressed. The emergency department at CEMC also has a trauma room and a SANE room. The trauma room is equipped with life-saving medications (such as antidotes for drug overdose) and medical equipment. The SANE (Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner) room consists of equipment used to assess a patient who has been sexually assaulted. The equipment takes pictures of the patient for the SANE nurse to later provide to law enforcement. A SANE nurse is a specialty nurse and CEMC has one on call 24/7.
Athletes who wonder what the effects of a certain contact sport they are playing should learn the risk that are involved with the certain contact sport. Athletes need to learn about ALS which stands for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and how it attacks their fatal organs and their muscles that allow them to walk and move. They should also learn about CTE, which stands for chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and how it attacks the patient's brain and nothing else. The research being done to find more reasons about why ALS and CTE is being more apparent in athletes is something athletes need to do research on or to ask a specialist in brain diseases. Concussions can rock a person’s
While working in the emergency department for my clinical this week I could see the staff members that help in the emergency department. There are RNs, EMTs that have different certifications like BLS or ALS, a nurse practitioner, and doctors. In the emergency department, they have staff members from different parts of the hospital to assess the patients. Radiology comes down to get X-rays on the patients for a closer look at their heart. The patients who come into the ER with shortness of air, chest pains, numbness in the extremities and dizziness with signs of fatigue are ordered an X-ray. The lab can come to draw the patient's blood or the nurse will draw up the patient's blood and then send it to the lab. More patients come in with chest pains or shortness of air while in the ER,
The emergency department of a hospital will require the professional to work closely with registered nurses and physicians in stabilizing patient conditions, giving medical equipment as required, and following up with any order that the superiors issue. The various other CNA job duties, include:
I think that the biggest change in the health care industry will be that everything will be electronic, from the medical records to the how patients are taken care of and there will be no need for Nurses or Medical Techs to help the doctors with medical care. With this change occurring there will also be less medical buildings needed as well as being built because the physicians will not have go into the offices unless patient care is needed. I also feel that by having everything electronic not only will this affect the nursing staff but some physicians’ may be cut as well because there will be nowhere for them to
The emergency room is a stressful place to work, but I love it. It keeps you on your toes and everyday is different. You can not let the stress get to you or someone could lose their life. When you are the only one in the household working that is the stressful part. Getting sick is not an option. I can not call out if I get sick as I will lose twelve hours of pay. Being the only person in the house working you can not afford to take a sick
As a healthcare worker, there’s a possibility your patients could have some health related emergencies. After all, part of the reason you’re working in a facility is to assist in the well-being of your patients' health, including the chance of them needing immediate assistance.
Introduced into Australian hospitals some time during the 1970’s, triage is defined in Merriam-Webster as “the assignment of degrees of urgency to wounds or illnesses to decide the order of treatment of a large number of patients or casualties” (Merriam-Webster Online, n.d.). Known today as the Australasian Triage Scale (ATS), five categories outlining descending levels of clinical urgency are used to facilitate prioritised yet equitable access to emergency health care services (Health Policies Priorities Principal Committee, 2011). This synopsis will briefly explore the Australian triage protocols, the service delivery performance of national hospital emergency departments, and how their performance affects the outcomes of patients presenting
The intake interview and assessment is carried out to begin the process of establishing the client/counselor relationship as well as acquiring information specifically related to the client (Freeburg & Van Winkle, 2011). They state the importance of learning the skills necessary for a detailed and accurate intake interview. Consequently, due to the abundance of differing personality types, the assessment is essential for forming a treatment plan with the client, making a diagnosis if needed, and for all involved in the client’s case. Freeburg & Van Winkle (2011) indicate all student counselors should become familiar with the fundamentals of the initial assessment so that they can establish an ease and competence for the progression and method
The world contains a wide variety of many wonderful things such as different types of lands, animals and especially humans. The unique thing about humans is that not a single one of us are exactly the same and are all different somehow. Being different can also mean that each of us have the capabilities of being special. We all have traits that make us unique in our own way and to the people that are close to us such as family and friends. These traits can include our background, hobbies, accomplishments and future goals that make us who we are. Our comp II class is filled with the same variety with special kinds of people. Our unique group consists of Valerie, Tiffany and Quentin.
Most people go through their whole lives hating emergency rooms and hospitals. The white-washed halls remind them of death; the sterile scent that cling to the nurses' uniforms a stark reminder of impending goodbyes; the billowing white coats and clipboards of doctors a bad-news waiting to be delivered on a cold tray.
The emergency departments see thousands of patients a year. In today’s societies, most emergency cases are due to the fact of the growing chronically ill