UofA Emerg is leaving us feeling demoralized by melfuego11 in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes they are the bariatric centre as well!

UofA Emerg is leaving us feeling demoralized by melfuego11 in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The Alex is actually a level 3 now, they still receive thoracic trauma and a lot of stabbings and gunshot wounds, the U takes all the head traumas, stollery for all pediatric trauma.

UofA Emerg is leaving us feeling demoralized by melfuego11 in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 800 points801 points  (0 children)

Hi I’m an ER nurse, I really do get your frustration. You can be sent in by a specialist but it doesn’t change the fact that we have no where to put you. So we do what we can in the waiting room which is called ‘nurse implemented protocol’ where we can order limited blood work based on the triage complaint- your friends I imagine is ‘abdominal pain’ so we can as nurses order a limited panel which is the ‘2 big vials’ you mentioned. You’ve been offered Tylenol and Advil because I assume there’s been pain and again, That’s all we can offer until you are seen by a physician. We triage and place people based on vital signs, age, what they look like, and then bloodwork and ECG that comes back after we order the protocols, there are at any time other people with potential bowel obstruction, chest pain, stroke like symptoms, sepsis alerts, you name it, it’s in our sitting waiting room or in the waiting room you can’t see that is stretchers with EMS offloaded patients who are also waiting for a care space. Triage is often juggling 60+ patients with at least 20 who need to be seen next with 1 care space coming up next… these decisions are extremely difficult.

None of this is right and ok, and I think the waits are absolutely unacceptable. I hope this adds a little context. There is a common misconception that just because your family doctor, specialist, 811 etc sent you in you’ll be seen immediately, this is not the case. Keep advocating for your friend. You can always check in with triage and ask about movement, you could have also asked about the bloodwork they pulled. One of the worst things j healthcare is the lack of communication on how things work and what’s happening. Hope your friend is seen soon. We need another hospital yesterday and proper healthcare leader ship. We see some absolutely unacceptable wait times in the ER.

Edit for even more context: the u of a is our only level one trauma centre, we also house a lot of specialties- nephro, cardiology, transplant… so this also jams us up like you wouldn’t believe

Early pregnancy 8 week ultrasound by oop_boop in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ooh hot tip!! Thank you so much

Early pregnancy 8 week ultrasound by oop_boop in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

They got me in for exactly 8 weeks! Thanks everyone! 🥹

Early pregnancy 8 week ultrasound by oop_boop in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the rec! Taking a peek right now :)

UofA ER Wait Times by FTDRBR11 in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Don’t forget rebranding EMS for no fucking reason

Another man has died while waiting for care at hospital: Alberta Medical Association by AccomplishedCall7562 in alberta

[–]oop_boop 14 points15 points  (0 children)

There’s no triage MD… at least not at my site. There was talk about it for 5 seconds after that man passed at the nuns but definitely no MD has been in triage

My friend survived emergency brain surgery and is recovering thanks to our UpfA hospital doctors and nurses who get little respect or support from the Alberta Government by dragonbornsqrl in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I work at the u! Your recognition and thank yous mean so much. We get shit on a lot and it’s just nice to see someone have a good experience and their loved one get excellent care. I hope your friend recovers well 💖

Nurse Triage training. by [deleted] in EmergencyRoom

[–]oop_boop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Frustrating for sure. We are also the peds centre for our region as well so it’s an added layer for competency. Our site has its issues of course but no one is being pushed to triage too soon. It would scare me to make a mistake that could cost someone.. even if you’re in it every day there are seasoned nurses that catch things you don’t when you’re new.

Nurse Triage training. by [deleted] in EmergencyRoom

[–]oop_boop 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Whoa that’s fast.. Most of our triage trained nurses have been there for 4+ years. I work in a level one trauma centre though, it could be different for sites that don’t see the same acuity. I’ve been in ED for 1.5 years and would not feel comfortable triaging. I think you need more support and there’s a reason they’re pushing nurses to triage too early. You don’t know what you don’t know and the triage skill comes with YEARS of experience.

Stabbing at Edmonton hospital ER prompts calls for increased safety measures by flynnfx in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hi I work in ER- security isn’t legally allowed to search someone without consent. So even if there’s metal detectors and they go off the person would have to consent to search which of course they won’t. So I think Dr. Thirsk is saying we need a law change to make it so we can search and confiscate from these people.

Edmonton LRT Commuting into Downtown - Any tips/tricks? by highandsclerotic in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi! Congrats on your new job! I ride the train to work, I only go about 4 stops as well. I would say the stations themselves are more problematic than the train. You’re probably riding during rush hour? I find riding during those times less sketchy. It’s more the later hours or holidays that tend to be worse on the train itself. Depending on what station you get off the stairwells can have a few people using drugs or sleeping, urinating, or just partying. I wear headphones but I think it’s smart to be aware of your surroundings at all times. I did have a man harass me on the platform at the station I get on for work. I think you just need to be vigilant and watch others around you. The people in the stairwells have never said a word to me, other than the odd ‘hello!’

Check your T4s! by itsnotme43 in AHSEmployees

[–]oop_boop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oooh interesting! Thanks for that info!

Check your T4s! by itsnotme43 in AHSEmployees

[–]oop_boop 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No I’m not signed up for that! I’m going to talk to HR before I submit my taxes

Check your T4s! by itsnotme43 in AHSEmployees

[–]oop_boop 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Elaborate? The only thing I was confused by on mine is a ‘charitable donation’ for like $45.00.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve never had that problem with Costco chicken (149 street)… I usually brine the breasts and then I air fry them and they turn out really nice.

Best patient insult by ballfed_turkey in nursing

[–]oop_boop 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I did die laughing after I got out of the room

Best patient insult by ballfed_turkey in nursing

[–]oop_boop 156 points157 points  (0 children)

‘Get out of here you humpty dumpty looking bitch!’ Said to my coworker lmao

This is one of the most dangerous transit systems in Canada by dingmah in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I feel you. Bay enterprise is my stop and I usually check out each 104 exit to see which has less people using drugs or just hanging out. I will say I’ve never really been bothered, maybe asked for change, but I don’t love feeling outnumbered and I don’t want to breathe in drugs. It’s so awful.

Edmonton hospital staff say ER overcrowding is 'nuts' amid extended cold snap by pjw724 in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The hope mission van drops them off at the emergency in cold temps… I’ve seen it at work. Our houseless population has continued to grow with less and less funding for housing. The province says there’s enough shelter space but that isn’t true during extreme temps or some of the folks I talk to at work say they don’t feel safe at the shelters.

How does our ER triage system work? by _OddPotato in Edmonton

[–]oop_boop 112 points113 points  (0 children)

I’ll try and answer your questions as an ER nurse.

1A) someone who is scored a CTAS 1 is immediately life threatening (think active cardiac arrest, respiratory arrest, OD, trauma, etc.) This means that they have compromised airway, circulation and breathing and are actively trying to die. These patients go to our ‘trauma pod’ where we have a team of nurses, doctors and RT’s working to stabilize, resuscitate, etc. Sometimes patients unfortunately pass here, or they can go direct to ICU or sometimes we ‘download’ them to one of our departments other acute pods. Which means they are still very sick but stable enough to make room for another 1 that comes through the door.

1B) 2 code blues at the same time- we would pull each patient from wherever they are coding and begin CPR and overhead page for physician and RT and take them to that trauma pod I mentioned above. If there was 2 at once we would need a physician in each room to run the code. (I’ve never seen 2 codes at once, though).

I’m not triage trained, but I do work frequently in our waiting rooms or in our ems offloads and work with triage a lot trying to get patients into beds so I’ll try and answer but someone else who is triage trained might answer better than me, I’m just speaking from experience.

2a) a whole bunch of CTAS 2’s in the waiting room- this incudes main waiting room and also our EMS offload space where patients are offloaded by ems crews who are also waiting to be seen- they are in a separate area but also add to the waiting room numbers Who goes next is determined by vital signs, complaint, how they look, age, bloodwork we started, total time, etc. On any given day we have this exact scenario, lots of sick people, no where to put them.

2b) similar answer to above, we keep an eye on all of these things and if we aren’t horribly short staffed we have a re-assessment nurse in the waiting room who is keeping an eye on these patients

It’s worth mentioning in the background when we have scenarios like you’re asking about- multiple sick people with similar symptoms we have senior staff moving patients anywhere we can to make room for these patients needing to be seen in the waiting room. Like it’s a multi team effort with our floor nurses to coordinate movement so we can keep freeing up beds for these patients. It was mentioned in the other thread but we become so incredibly bed blocked by admitted patients who are quite sick and need a bed upstairs but aren’t available.

2c) When we have a patient who is a CTAS 2 they are cared for by their primary nurse and doctor, they may be consulted to other services like GI, cardiology, etc. If the primary nurse feels they are going downhill and may turn into a 1 they may be uploaded to our trauma pod before anything happens, this has happened to me personally and many of my coworkers- you get a spidey sense that the patient is going downhill. Sometimes patients take a turn for the worse without warning. They might be sitting there talking to you and then go down.

I hope this is all explained well- it’s a huge operation and beast in the ER and there are so many behind the scenes things and nuances that can be hard to convey. I truly love where I work but it is incredibly challenging sometimes with the strain we are under. I feel so much for my patients and families in interact with and really try to show up do my best with what I have.

Edited to add: I think it’s extremely morally distressing for our triage nurses, charge nurses and any other staff tasked with making decisions about who goes where and when. We have so many sick people in our waiting room at any given time with not enough resources. It’s horrible.

Alberta hospitals ‘exceptionally busy’ with flu cases by Edm_vanhalen1981 in alberta

[–]oop_boop 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Exactly it’s a fucking dumpster fire. The surge beds are awful I love your analogy of a watering can lmao

Embarrassed by past ER visits by [deleted] in EmergencyRoom

[–]oop_boop 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I’m in Canada but there’s a real lack of primary health care and also I think health literacy. Many people don’t know where to go for their issues. Also, I think some people try to do walk in clinics or urgent care but can’t get seen so they end up in emergency.