rhan101277
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85 y/o female, initial call comes out as hemorrhage - rectal bleed. Upon arrival daughter meets us at the entrance to the nursing home. Upon entering the pt room she is on the floor w/ staff performing compressions. Pt looks pale, she is pulseless, anpeic. I prepare to take over chest compressions, and I ask is she a DNR, staff report she is a full code. I take over chest compressions and the daughter says, 'stop right there, that is enough'. I ask if she is POA and she says she is. The full code paperwork was signed just a few days ago by the daughter.
Pt has extensive co morbid factors such as kidney failure, cad among others. I find out later family refused to send her out for her rectal bleed and she has been having it for two days.
I call med control they report they are unsure if a POA superscedes a full code even though the full code paperwork is signed by poa. Doctor said i won't give you a DNAR but I'll give you a time of death. Clinically the patient has was not in rigor, no lividity present. She had probably been down for 5 minutes upon arrival.
Sometimes the right thing to do isn't always clear cut, I think I did the right thing it is what the family wanted. It still bothers me though, I got a time of death.
Pt has extensive co morbid factors such as kidney failure, cad among others. I find out later family refused to send her out for her rectal bleed and she has been having it for two days.
I call med control they report they are unsure if a POA superscedes a full code even though the full code paperwork is signed by poa. Doctor said i won't give you a DNAR but I'll give you a time of death. Clinically the patient has was not in rigor, no lividity present. She had probably been down for 5 minutes upon arrival.
Sometimes the right thing to do isn't always clear cut, I think I did the right thing it is what the family wanted. It still bothers me though, I got a time of death.