ER vs ICU Nurses: What Are Their Roles? Have They Changed?
ER nurses are one of the first points of contact upon a patient entering a facility.
In a normal circumstance, triaging and admission would be an almost seamless process; however, this is no longer the case.
ER physician Dr. Gillian Salton, says “I have to discharge patients who would normally need to be admitted, but I have no place to put them, and I’m forced to tell them to come back if they get sicker.”
I am sure you have seen the news circulating of the patient who presented to the ER with a cardiac emergency, was transferred/referred, and turned away from 48 hospital institutions because there was no room for him, where he later died.
This is what our world and healthcare system are coming to; it is crumbling.
The roles of both ER and ICU nurses have changed, in the way their day-to-day functions and in the care that is provided to patients.
The patients are sicker, the staffing is shorter, and the emotional demand is higher.
Of course, the training and certifications vary among ER vs ICU nurses, but in times of chaos and low staffing, the situation is ‘all hands-on deck.’
ICU nurses do not have the time to give 100% care to 100% of the patients right now. There is without a doubt a divide in quality of care vs quantity of patients.
Many institutions are at full capacity, with all their ventilators in use, and ICU nurses are bearing the brunt of it as a result.
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