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Thompson said one study of San Diego area emergency
departments showed an average of one 350-pound patient
visit per week. The study prompted Kaiser's San Diego
facility to install a gurney in its ER that can handle
a 650-pound patient and a mechanized bed for someone
weighing up to 1,000 pounds.
The lift team concept and procedures for handling morbidly
obese patients was developed in a labor-management partnership,
and the results have been outstanding, Thompson said.
"We've seen a 46 percent reduction in nursing
staff injuries in the second quarter of this year, so
the lift teams have had a tremendous effect, and I think
we can do much better."
SizeWise Rentals, a Kansas City, Mo., company that
provides bariatric rehabilitation equipment rentals
nationwide, is expanding to meet the demand for beds,
lifts and wheelchairs that can handle weight capacities
of up to 1,000 pounds.
Susan Gallagher, MSN, CNS, RN, a clinical nurse specialist
who does educational outreach for SizeWise, said she
encourages hospitals to develop protocols and competencies
for handling obese patients. At the forefront should
be preplanning for a bariatric patient's arrival, based
on the patient's weight, degree of immobility and pain,
the need for special IV procedures and other factors.
"The equipment is great because it helps prevent
clinical complications and reduces injuries to nurses
and other caregivers doing patient transfers,"
Gallagher said. "But this is just the beginning
of what is needed for effective bariatric care."
Skilled nursing homes that provide long-term care can
find themselves stretched thin by having a bariatric
patient, said Cindy Forbis, MHA, RN, administrator of
The Bluffs in Columbia, Mo.
An example is a 68-year-old woman who weighed 275 pounds
when admitted to the 120-bed facility three years ago
and now tips the scales at 385 pounds. She requires
a private room, a full-size bed instead of the typical
twin and an extra-large shower chair. An electronic
lift is also needed for transfer purposes.
"We've had employees injured working with obese
residents. If someone 375 pounds starts to fall, there's
no way you're going to stop them. If you try, you're
going to get injured, and we've had that happen."
Nurses' and health aides' injuries have included back
strain, shoulder strain and a foot injury when a lift
tipped over.
Because most nursing home patients are Medicare recipients,
reimbursement rates don't adequately cover the cost
of care for most residents, let alone those who are
morbidly obese, usually elderly and often immobile,
Forbis said.
As a result, the admissions criteria for the facility
are being revised to exclude patients who weigh more
than 350 pounds, Forbis said. "This is unfortunate,
but we can't pull from the resources of all the other
residents. If there were better reimbursement, we could
justify having bariatric patients."
At Providence Hospital in Southfield, Mich., emphasis
is placed on treating medical conditions related to
obesity-breathing problems, apnea, lung disease-and
in assessing the risk of patients becoming immobile.
Nurses also are trained annually in the mechanics of
moving heavy patients, said Diane Wehby, MSN, RN, director
of critical care and respiratory therapy at the 459-bed
hospital. Although the facility has no formal lift teams,
coordination and teamwork are key in handling a patient
weighing more than 250 pounds.
"There's a lot of peer pressure within the nursing
group to be sure there's adequate help before moving
someone," Wehby said. "One thing that's a
quick career stopper is a back injury."
Before her role at Providence, Wehby had worked in
weight management and helped develop a bariatric surgery
program at Sinai-Grace Hospital in Detroit. She emphasizes
the need to help overweight people retain their dignity
and to have them move about as much as possible to prevent
pneumonia, blood clots and infections from being immobile.
"We need to get patients up and moving, and we
need to do that safely," Wehby said. She said the
hospital has mechanized beds for those 350 pounds or
heavier that will allow patients to stand up and walk
directly off the beds so they don't lose their balance.
Wehby said there's a social stigma to being morbidly
obese that prevents many people from seeking treatment,
including bariatric surgery. She would like to see this
change now that being overweight is becoming a national
health crisis.
"Americans are getting bigger and bigger, and
obesity will kill you or lead to premature death,"
Wehby said. "The tendency to get obese is one of
our most important health issues."
Kay McVay, RN, president of the California Nurses Association,
said the union's bargaining committees are asking for
the establishment of lift teams similar to Kaiser's
in every new hospital contract negotiation.
"I don't think I know of a nurse who has worked
more than five years who hasn't had a shoulder, neck
or back injury of some kind-it comes with the territory,"
McVay said. "I've worked in nursing 47 years and
have had them all."
She said the CNA also is drawing attention to the need
for special pressurized beds that rotate so the patient
doesn't have to be physically turned and that redistribute
weight to prevent skin breakdown. Mechanized beds also
can move heavy patients from a prone to an upright position
so they can stand up more easily.
Although some changes to accommodate obese patients
are expensive in the short term, they pay off over time,
McVay said.
"It takes between $40,000 and $60,000 to bring
in a new nurse and get them up to par, so you don't
want that nurse hurt." McVay said. "The better
a hospital takes care of its RNs, the more profitable
that facility will be."
Contact John Leighty at johnsan@aol.com
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