Patient Contracts Sepsis From Old Hospital IV
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Case Overview
This case involves an overweight 55-year-old woman who was admitted to the hospital with complaints of chest pain. On the same day, she underwent aortic valve replacement and coronary bypass surgery. An IV was started in her arm and remained in her arm for a week. No fluids or medications were administered to the patient through the arm IV during this time period. During this time, the patient frequently complained of pain in and around the IV. It was alleged that no measures were taken at that time to stop the pain. The patient finally requested that the IV be removed. Following IV removal, the patient was diagnosed with sepsis, allegedly due to the line. The patient died secondary to the sepsis.
Questions to the Nursing expert and their responses
What quality control standards are implemented for post-operative cardiac patients to prevent complications such as sepsis?
When an IV is placed, it is protocol for the date and time the IV was inserted to be placed on a small sticker next to the IV site. Usually the initials of the person who inserted the IV are also located on this sticker. For a basic peripheral IV, the protocol is to leave the IV in place for no longer than 3 days. If the patient continues to need IV access, then a new one must be placed. Depending on hospital policy, these IVs should be checked by the RN every shift and as needed if the patient complains of discomfort with the IV. The nurse should be looking for signs/ symptoms of infection/infiltration. If a serious infection is suspected, the catheter should be removed, and the tip should be cut off and sent to a lab for testing. In this particular case, this IV should have been removed on day 3 to reduce the risk of infection.
During a typical nursing shift on the floor if a patient complains of pain what is the standard of care for reporting and intervening on the patient's complaint?
When the patient complained, the appearance of the IV site should have been documented along with the patient's complaints. The IV should have been removed and the provider notified.
About the expert
This expert advanced practice nurse has more than 20 years of clinical experience in a variety of adult care settings. She earned her BSN from the University of Mobile and her MSN from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. The expert formerly served as a neurological ICU nurse at Mobile Infirmary Hospital, as a surgical ICU nurse at Huntsville Hospital, and as a trauma/surgical ICU nurse at DCH Regional Medical Center. She currently has served as a family nurse practitioner for a private physiatry group in Alabama, and practices at an acute inpatient rehabilitation facility in Alabama, serves as a clinical instructor for a nursing school, and rounds as a part-time nurse practitioner at the VA in Tuscaloosa.

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