HSC Critical Care Collection Guide: Difference between revisions

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==[[Green sheet]]s==
==[[Green sheet]]s==
Green sheets are filled out fairly well at HSC. Collectors should always read them and enter data as necessary then place them in the confidential waste once the file is complete.The file should not be marked complete unless the collector has read to green sheet and entered any additional data.Green sheets should be labeled and the ones for discharged patients should be collected each day that the collector works.
Green sheets are filled out by bedside physician in ICU. Collectors should always read them and enter data as necessary then place them in the '''confidential waste once the file is complete'''. The file should not be marked complete unless the collector has read to green sheet and entered any additional data. Green sheets should be labeled and the ones for discharged patients should be collected each day that the collector works.


==Off-ward medicine locations==
==Off-ward medicine locations==

Revision as of 11:56, 10 April 2018

See also:

Workload balancing

See HSC ICU locations and serial number sharing.

Label forms

TISS and green sheets should be labelled a, b or d according to HSC ICU locations and serial number sharing. Collectors need to be aware of which patient belongs to which collector to avoid missing patients. Go ahead and label other collectors patients on the day you are working. This avoids confusion about which patient belongs to which collector.

Pharmacy

If patients are transferred to the wards the medication records may be in the nurses Mar binder or in a thinned chart. The ward clerks will help locate these thinned charts.

Labs

25% Albumin is often given and is often not on the intake and output sheet but will be found on the medication record. Cross reference the blood administration record.

Thinned Charts

This is a big problem at HSC. Patients are transferred to different areas often and the chart doesn't follow the patient in many cases. Notify the ward clerk of the unit the patient is located that part of the chart is missing. If it is still missing after the clerk has attempted to locate it then ask for the clerk to call medical records for any recent volumes. In some cases the chart has gone down to med records in error instead of following the patient. Patients transferred to RR5 get the whole chart sent to medical records to sorted and bound and then returned to that ward. If your patient gets transferred to RR5 you may have to wait until the bound volume returns.

TISS forms

see Sending TISS forms

Missing TISS forms

This appears to happen mainly in SICU. Collectors will try to make staff more aware of not sending the form to the wards. Trish has agreed to talk to the managers at one of the meetings.

Green sheets

Green sheets are filled out by bedside physician in ICU. Collectors should always read them and enter data as necessary then place them in the confidential waste once the file is complete. The file should not be marked complete unless the collector has read to green sheet and entered any additional data. Green sheets should be labeled and the ones for discharged patients should be collected each day that the collector works.

Off-ward medicine locations

Make sure that patients admitted from off-ward locations for wards we collect are coded as admit-from the ward where we actually collect.

See OVER#HSC_over_wards for more information regarding which locations this applies to.

STB ACCU transfers

STB ACCU is used as a bed borrow sometimes post angio and then patients are sent to HSC CCU. The only way to tell if it was a bed borrow or not is to look for a nursing transfer record or on EPR.

SICU patients in PACU

For SICU patients coming from PACU we use the time they are accepted by SICU as the admit time. For SICU patients transferred to PACU who are waiting to be transferred elsewhere we use the time they leave PACU as the discharge time. In both cases we use the overflow variable for SICU Pt in PACU.