ER Protocols in The Philippines
ER Protocols in The Philippines
ER Protocols in The Philippines
General Functions
TRIAGE – An Emergency Room Nurse helps staff prioritize care based on the critical
nature and severity of a patient’s condition. A nurse’s medical knowledge, quick
thinking, and attentions to detailed and hand towards comprehensively assessing a
patient’s needs, obtaining thus medical history and personal information and seeking
doctor’s evaluation immediately for life-threatening issues.
TAKING VITAL SIGNS – Logging vital statistics is a staple responsibility of an
Emergency Room Nurse. Taking Vital signs includes recording a blood pressure reading
with a blood pressure pump, as well as measuring pulse rate, respiration and temperature
over the course of a patients stay in the E.R Vital sign provide a bird’s eye view of a
patient’s state and alert nurse to changes in condition which might require a doctor’s
attention.
ADMINISTERING MEDICINE – Once presented by a doctor, a nurse will be the one
to legally administer medicine whether it is in setting up and priming an intravenous (IV)
infection or handling over pills for swallowing with water. Sometimes E.R patients will
already be an existing medication which needs to be administered during their stay here.
Nurse’s will confirm current medication lists with patient and family (or call on the
Hospital Pharmacist to) and acquire in hospital prescriptions from the E.R. doctor for
those medicines.
PROVIDING TREATMENT – In addition to dosing meds, emergency room nurses
may help with medical treatment for everything from sore throats to kidney infection.
Nurses may also assist with minor medical procedures as part of the treatment response,
helping to stabilize a patient and assist the doctor with everything from suturing wounds
to intubation critical – ill patients.
MONITORING PATIENTS – Nurses are responsible for overseeing follow – through
on doctor’s orders, from making sure medications are given to checking on completion
and results of diagnostic tests which are ordered. While nursing attendants typically
transport a patient in their bed to a diagnostic test. i.e an x-ray or ct scan, when staff are
short handed, a nurse maybe asked to assist. It a patients’ condition or worsens while they
are in the E.R, nurses are in charge of notifying the doctor right away. Patients and their
family may make requests for simple things like another blanket or a gown, and nurses
bear the responsibility of fielding these requests and keeping the patient comfortable.
CHARTING/ DOCUMENTATION – Emergency room nurses are required to chart all
patient medical history, contact information current condition and medications and
treatment as well as update their electronic medical record throughout their stay in the
E.R. accurate documentation in a patient’s chart gives other member of the medical team
correct information to act on throughout the patient evaluation and treatment journey.
Efficient and Vigilant charting also protects hospitals and staff team potential legal
liability down the like.
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DISCHARGE – When a patient does not require being admitted to the hospital and is
deemed ready to leave the emergency room after treatment their emergency room nurse
handles the discharge paperwork. Explaining it to the patient and their family/care givers
and answering any questions they may have. They also conform transportation from the
E.R. with the patient their destination and follow up recommendations for care and
doctor’s visit.
Emergency room nurses will also help translate complicated medical jargon from a
doctor regarding diagnosis and treatment into under stable layman’s term for patients and
their families. Upon discharge, emergency room nurses maybe called onto educate a
patient and their family about further care and treatment example how to dress a patient
wound and how often they will clean.
In addition to acute and attentive medical treatment, emergency room nurses act us
translators, advisors, educators, assistants, organizer and therapist, powerfully speaking.
As the liaison between the doctor and the patient. Emergency room nurses require
compassion; empathy and good bedside manner in their care they may need to help calm
a patient dawn, listen and answer their questions or soothe them through reactions of
shock and pain.
DOH guidelines in the planning and design of a hospital and other health facilities
The ER shall be located in the outer zone of the hospital, in the area that is immediately
accessible to the public. It is located near the entrance of the hospital.
It shall be located in the ground floor to ensure immediate access. A separate entrance to
the ER shall be provided.
There must be adequate road signs and signboards indicating the location of the ER.
It must be in an area where hospital routines will NOT be disrupted when there is a
sudden and great flow of patients to the ER.
Supportive departments such as laboratory, radiology, and operating room must NOT be
far from the ER.
DOH requirements:
Zoning: The different areas of a hospital shall be grouped according to zones as follows:
Outer Zone – areas that are immediately accessible to the public: emergency service,
outpatient service, and administrative service. They shall be located near the entrance of
the hospital.
Second Zone – areas that receive workload from the outer zone: laboratory, pharmacy,
and radiology. They shall be located near the outer zone.
Inner Zone – areas that provide nursing care and management of patients: nursing
service. They shall be located in private areas but accessible to guests.
Deep Zone – areas that require asepsis to perform the prescribed services: surgical
service, delivery service, nursery, and intensive care. They shall be segregated from the
public areas but accessible to the outer, second and inner zones.
Service Zone – areas that provide support to hospital activities: dietary service,
housekeeping service, maintenance and motorpool service, and mortuary. They shall be
located in areas away from normal traffic.
Equipment/Instruments: DOH requirements
All equipment and instruments necessary for the safe and effective provision of services
are available and are properly maintained.
Records of equipment are maintained and updated regularly.
A preventive maintenance program ensures that all equipment are maintained and/or
calibrated to an appropriate standard or specification.
There is a plan in place for essential equipment replacement.
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Staff Requirements of an ER
Physicians
Nurses / nursing aides / utility workers
Security guard
Driver of ambulance
Policies and procedures in an ER
Operations Manual
To provide order, to promote standardization, to facilitate communication, to promote
effectiveness and efficiency, and to provide a guide to present and future staff, among
other things, policies and procedures must be in place.
These must be collaborated by the ER physicians, nurses and other physician-users
through the ER committee and authorized by it and a higher office.
These must be aligned with those of the hospital.
These should be reviewed and revised periodically.
Presence of policies and procedures is a requirement for licensing by DOH, accreditation
by PhilHealth and other accrediting bodies like ISO and JCI.
There must be policies and procedures on:
Governance
Service (Patient Management)
o Clinical practice guidelines in the ER
o Clinical pathways in the ER
o ER nursing care
o General nursing care
Training
Research
In patient management, clinical practice guidelines and clinical pathways are useful in
standardization of procedures as well as in the promotion of efficiency.
For conditions other than MCI, the influx of patients is beyond the
capacity of the hospital to handle.
Confirmed/documented report of re-emerging diseases (SARS,
Human to Human Avian Influenza, Pandemic H1N1) within the
catchment area.
Human Resource HEMS Coordinator to be physically present at the hospital.
requirement for On-scene Response Team
responding to the Medical Officer in charge of the Emergency Room
Code Blue All Medical Fellows should be present
Medical Officer in charge of the Operating Room
Surgical Team on duty for the day
Surgical Team on duty the previous day
Mental Health Personnel (if available)
All Anesthesia Fellow should be present
Toxicologist/Chemical Experts (if available)
Administrative Officer or designate
Nursing supervisor on duty
All OR nurses
Social workers
Dietary personnel
Officer in charge of supplies at the CSSR
The entire security force
Housekeeping personnel
Other requirements All those mentioned in Code White plus:
for responding to Activate Hospital Emergency Incident Command System
Code Blue (HEICS).
Other needs of victims apart from medicines and supplies
depending on the disasters should as much as possible be made
available
The Executive Director of his designate should make proper
coordination with other hospitals for networking and/or possible
transfer of patients.
Incident Commander should assign a Safety Officer, Liaison
Officer to coordinate with other agencies, and Public Information
Officer to serve as the authorize spokesperson of the hospital.
Social Service section should prepare assistance to victims in
coordination with mental health professionals of the hospital, if
available, and they should lead in providing information to
relatives of victims.
Mortuary section should anticipate dead victims brought to the
hospital for proper care and identification.
The security team, in anticipation of possible influx or patients,
relatives, responders, police, press, etc. should ensure smooth flow
of traffic inside the compound especially for the ambulances. -
Should report regularly to HEMS Operation Center and as much
as possible have regular press releases or briefings.
c. Code Red Any of the following conditions:
When more than 50 (red tags) casualties are suddenly brought to
the hospital.
An emergency wherein the services of the hospital is paralyzed
since 50% of the manpower are themselves victims of the disaster.
Hospital is structurally damaged requiring evacuation and/or
transfer of patients.
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b. YELLOW – Urgent: Priority Two. Patient has passed primary survey, but
with major system injury, may delay transport to one hour. Any one of the following
conditions could place a victim into a Priority Two Category:
1. Needs to be treated within one hour; otherwise they will become unstable.
2. Severe burns; burns involving hands, feet or face (not including the
respiratory tract); burns complicated by major soft tissues trauma
3. Hospital admission is required
4. Moderate blood loss; back injuries; head injuries with a normal level of
consciousness
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Special Note: For Moslem communities, white tag will be used for dead Moslems.
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References
Emergency Department, Regional II Trauma and Medical Center, retrieved on August 19, 2020
from https://riitmc.doh.gov.ph/nursing/emergency-department/
Health Emergency Preparedness, Response and Recovery Plan, Lung Center of the Philippines,
Joson, R., (2008). Short Course on Hospital Organization and Management of Selected Clinical,
http://hospmgt.tripod.com/hosp_org_mgt_short_course_er_rj_08nov18.htm?
fbclid=IwAR1R84q4WrvR26uxdTYTASc6lGzDHnKeHCdPvtefLvK2kq_qL-CPPROidVs