MissTrish- I was once beating myself up for the outcome of a pt. An OLD (yep, I said it... OLD as in over 40) Medic looked at me and said
"Is there anything YOU could have done different that may have changed the outcome of the patient? No, then stop being such a sissy!"
Now, I am not calling you a sissy....but the point he was so delicatley making was, the patient is dead. She did it to herself. Its called Lifestyle choices. There are consequences.
I don't tend to dwell on my patients outcomes. I have only gone back and checked on less than a handful of patients. I just move on. One of my very best friends, MUST go back and check on patients. I have accompanied her to the ME's office while she found out what made a patient, who was CAOx4, code in front of us. It helps her to have her "closure."
You have to find out what works for you. Exercise, play with your kids, take a long nap, stand in a field and scream, talk to your partner, get a couselor if you have to. If you are going to make it any length of time, you have to find your coping mechanism.
Yesterday 04:36 PMfirecoinsI am sorry but I was presented with a valid DNR.
You see.... the problem is.... Your DNR is not valid for me. Sorry. Haven't had a code or intubation in a while, I'm jumping all over the next chance I get
I don't care how many codes you have worked, how long you've been in Emergency Medicine or what your pedigree is. This is the most callous insensitive load of smoke I have ever heard from anyone in healthcare. In the absence of a DNR, regardless of the present response to therapy, you work them til the end with your full attention and ability PERIOD. You do not lose your focus and you darn sure dont relax.
Why not relax? Would you rather the provider working on your mother/father/sister/brother/whatever be wound so tight they could turn coal to diamonds? A code is a code. You do compressions, you bag them, treat the rhythms as they present. You can still talk to the people around you, giving direction, finding out information, ect and still be effective.
If you are relaxed while doing it, and not stressed out and wound up, it will go smoother. Even if you work it and call it on the patients living room floor with family standing there.