Severe Abdominal Pain Leads to Fatal Outcome Due to Delayed Intervention
A tragic post-op turn: a patient’s pain was masked with opioids instead of properly diagnosed, raising questions about nursing care standards.
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Case Overview
This case involves an elderly individual who underwent ulcer excision and repair. Following the surgical procedure, the patient began experiencing severe abdominal pain. Allegations have arisen that the nursing staff on duty failed to notify the attending physicians of the patient’s escalating pain and instead opted to administer substantial doses of opioids to manage the discomfort. This decision resulted in a lack of appropriate diagnostic workup for the source of the abdominal pain. Tragically, within a few hours, the patient progressed to septic shock, leading to cardiac arrest and ultimately resulting in death. The focus of this case is to assess whether the nursing actions met the standard of care expected in post-operative settings.
Questions to the Nursing expert and their responses
How does the timeliness of intervention typically affect patient outcomes in cases of severe abdominal pain?
Timeliness is incredibly important when it comes to abdominal surgery patients. Patients can get their bowels nicked or suffer surgical complications that can quickly become life-threatening if not escalated to the physician/chain of command.
What are the most pertinent signs and symptoms in patients who have undergone GI surgery that should be relayed to a treating physician?
Abdominal pain, tenderness and swelling to the area, tachycardia, hypotension, fever, chills, and elevated white blood cells are all signs and symptoms in patients who have undergone GI surgery that should be relayed to a treating physician.
About the expert
This expert has over a decade of experience in the field of nursing, specializing in medical-surgical, telemetry, and surgical nursing. He earned his BSN from the University of Texas Health Science Center School of Nursing and his MSN from Walden University. Today, he is a licensed registered nurse in the state of Texas. Previously, he served as a telemetry staff nurse, as a telemetry charge nurse, and as an interim telemetry supervisor at Christus Health. In addition, he served as a telemetry charge nurse and as the director of telemetry nursing at Methodist Texan Hospital. Currently, this expert serves as the director of nursing for a health system in Texas.

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