I was thinking that I'd be pretty pissed off if i was the designated nurse for baby B,
- Firstly, LL asks me to take on baby B as she doesn't want to because she's too upset seeing parents. I offer to become the designated nurse to help her.
- Then she arrives on shift and starts looking after baby B even though I'm supposed to
- Baby B then has a massive crash
- She then carries on looking after him hourly
- She then takes home the handover sheet for baby B (I don't know this at the time)
So if baby B had died, I'd be under review, even though I didn't actually look after him. LL did, even though she's the one who asked me to swap her for another room. And then my handover sheet goes missing and I get into trouble at the review for not knowing where it was. All the while it was with LL.
And I would have to deal with the upset parents as I was the designated nurse.
In my experience a handover sheet is a printed piece of paper containing a list of every patient on the ward with a small amount of information. (in my hospital don’t use names, just room/bed numbers and initials for confidentiality)
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I was thinking that I'd be pretty pissed off if i was the designated nurse for baby B,
- Firstly, LL asks me to take on baby B as she doesn't want to because she's too upset seeing parents. I offer to become the designated nurse to help her.
- Then she arrives on shift and starts looking after baby B even though I'm supposed to
- Baby B then has a massive crash
- She then carries on looking after him hourly
- She then takes home the handover sheet for baby B (I don't know this at the time)
So if baby B had died, I'd be under review, even though I didn't actually look after him. LL did, even though she's the one who asked me to swap her for another room. And then my handover sheet goes missing and I get into trouble at the review for not knowing where it was. All the while it was with LL.
And I would have to deal with the upset parents as I was the designated nurse.
In my experience a handover sheet is simply a list of all patients on the ward with a small amount of important info. It is updated at the end of each shift and printed multiple times for handover to the next shift.
Every nurse receives the same sheet and it wouldn’t be identifiable to a single nurse until you have made your own notes on it. Also in my hospital we don’t actually put patient names on, just bed/room number and initial for confidentiality.
You could also have an individual handover sheet containing more detailed info for your assigned patient, which tends to be handwritten by yourself when you receive the info verbally from the previous nurse at the start of your shift. This is in addition to the printed handover above.
I would also add that it is not unusual to provide care for another nurses patient, to help each other out, particularly on nights when it’s short staffed. For example if you have two tasks for two different patients due at the same time, another nurse that has a spare minute might do one for you and vice versa. It’s all part of teamwork
In addition I would say that running blood gases for another patient is quite common in our unit, again to help each other out, and more often - not everyone has access to the machine (either due to not being trained, or not having a working barcode to access the machine)
I’ve worked shifts where only one nurse has a barcode to access the blood gas machine and therefore has to run bloods for the entire ward! Not ideal but fairly standard in nhs, particularly when understaffing means people cannot be released to complete the training to use the machine!