I don't think we have the " official version" of when or why Jahi went to ICU post- surgery but I would like to explain how an ICU nurse or a SICU ( surgical ICU) nurse receives a patient from surgery:
The Surgical Nurse or nurses ( usually 2) transport the patient to ICU. Upon arrival, they go to the bedside and a visual and oral report is given to the receiving ICU nurse with the CHART in hand. Specifically, the OPERATIVE REPORT NOTES which are usually hand- written by the doctor, anesthesiologist and surgical nurses are referenced and any abnormality during the peri-operative or immediate post- operative period is reported.
All tubes, lines, fluids, AND THE POST OP ORDERS are read by both the surgical nurses and the ICU nurses. IF the surgical nurses have heard the surgeon say something he wants for the patient but did not write down, they CALL the surgeon and ask for clarification. ( this is fairly uncommon as the surgeon writes the orders last thing out).
I have NEVER received a patient from surgery, INCLUDING BRAIN SURGERY, in a situation where I did not know exactly what was done, what the findings were known to be at that time, and the care that was to be rendered to the patient.
Once the patient's chart was signed by the OR nurses there, which was after initial ICU vital signs were taken and recorded on the OR or PACU sheet, they left.
The patient was then my responsibility and the responsibility of my co-workers.
I have never not known the diagnosis, or the procedures performed except in ONE CASE many years ago.
A surgeon nicked a person's spleen during an abdominal surgery, did NOT record it, and only told the patient verbally, not in writing. It was a surgical error, and was treated as one. It did not affect the care given, though, as there was already an abdominal incision, etc.
Unless you have reason to KNOW that the ICU nurses goofed or were negligent, I think it's best to refrain from casting such a wide net of blame. There may have been a problem evident during the transfer report... If so, the proper procedure would have been to get the surgeon right in the ICU immediately. The nurse or nurses should have informed the proper supervisor who would have paged/ called/ gone to OR and found him.
Their attention was to be on Jahi. Not phones or paging the surgeon, but taking care of their patient, especially if bleeding had already started. The head nurse or nursing supervisor was responsible for getting the surgeon to the bedside, or receiving communication that she was to return to the O.R. with support- resp. therapy, for example.
Thank you so much for your very excellent post! You explained much better than I. I do want to add that this is a very public case and that the nurses names are known to the family who could possibly read here. It is considered libel to imply incompetence in medical personnel who earn their living by a license and anyone can and may be sued for such. Including WS and the person who wrote such a thing.:twocents: