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House, R.N.
The piece begins with a short disquisition on modern society's relationship with hair. Then it describes the patient's arrival at a university hospital with sudden, severe weakness and difficulty breathing. The piece notes that the physicians at the hospital were trained to use their "brains" and some of their senses to diagnose, but unlike in past centuries, not so much their noses. Although "the diagnosis remained obscure for the next hour as [the patient's] breathing got more labored and she became comatose," an "experienced nurse, with good sense and a Of course, the patient's "doctors wondered" how the insecticide had brought her to the "brink of death." It turned out that a friend had mistaken a bottle of the insecticide for a similar one containing shampoo. Organophosphates are highly toxic, and can even be adapted to make biological weapons, such as sarin. But "[i]n this case, the patient recovered well, after the correct diagnosis by a nurse with a sensitive nose, proper treatment with drugs and the elimination of the insecticide by balding." This is an admirable recognition by two physicians of the critical role a nurse played in the diagnosis of a condition that seemed to be about to kill a patient. Too often, physicians alone receive credit for diagnosis and treatment, not only in the media (e.g. Fox's "House"), but in clinical settings, where life-saving nursing judgments and actions are often presented to patients and families as solely the idea of physicians. We commend Drs. Zaroff and Zaroff for countering this practice. We do note their focus on the nurse's "sense" and "sensitive nose," rather than the nurse's education and skill, and the holistic approach of nursing. Nurses are trained to use all means at their disposal to assess patients and their environments, in order to make clinical judgments about their care. This odd smell is just the kind of thing a nurse is trained to notice and consider--with the nurse's "brains." We thank the New York Times for this generally helpful piece. You can see the article "CASES; Is There a Barber in the House?" from the December 19, 2006 edition of the New York Times.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2006/dec/19_nyt.html |
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