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Food And Drink In The ER; Fuel For A Hard Job

Discussion in 'Emergency Medicine' started by Dr.Scorpiowoman, Jan 20, 2020.

  1. Dr.Scorpiowoman

    Dr.Scorpiowoman Golden Member

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    The job is hard enough without this sort of reprehensible regulation. Furthermore, if it is so wildly dangerous to have food or drink in the ED, why do we allow patients to eat? At all? Why do we provide food FOR patients if there is such a risk of infection?

    This is punitive, top-down control by administrators who have regular meal breaks and have food and drink in their offices.

    (And don’t get me started on RFID badges; a topic for another day.)

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    It’s hard to explain what we do. And so maybe, it’s hard for others to sympathize with our situations. I mean, physicians, mid-levels and nurses in emergency departments are tied to computers in often cramped work-spaces, even as they are required to be at the bedside almost constantly for the latest emergency or (in other cases) the latest bit of pseudo-emergency drama.

    If you haven’t worked there, or haven’t for a long time, it could be that this lack of understanding is what leads hospital administrations to do one of the stupidest things imaginable. What is that thing? Banning food and drink from our work-spaces.

    Now, this isn’t the case in my current job. But it is the case in all too many facilities. I talk to people. I hear things. And it’s usually justified with some unholy combination of infection control, Joint Commission and public health clap-trap, coalesced and refined, then circulated as a cruel policy.

    When it’s enacted, clinical staff have their water bottles taken away. Nobody is allowed to eat where they work. Dedicated, compassionate staff members grow tired and dehydrated and hungry. (Maybe it’s a good thing. They often don’t have time to urinate anyway and water just makes that happen more often.)

    Mind you, the water bottles are sometimes kept in a nearby room, or on a nearby shelf. It’s an act of kindness I guess. And the food? Well all you have to do is take your break and go to the cafeteria or to the break room, right?

    Those who come up with these rules don’t understand that a scheduled break is a great idea…that never happens. It’s an emergency department. It isn’t (technically) a production line, however we try to impose time restrictions and through-put metrics. It isn’t ‘raw material in/product out.’

    It’s ‘sick, suffering, dying, crazy human being in’ and if all goes well, ‘somewhat better (at least no worse) human being evaluated, stabilized, saved, calmed, admitted, transferred and sometimes pronounced dead’…out the other end of the line.

    Those Herculean efforts can take anywhere from, oh, 20 minutes to 12 hours. During which time it’s pretty hard to leave the critical patient, in the understaffed department, with the ‘five minute to doctor’ guarantee and the limitless capacity for new tragedy rolling through the door.

    That setting makes it remarkably hard for breaks, or even meals, to happen at all. As such, it’s nothing short of cruel and unusual for anyone to say to the staff of a modern emergency department, ‘you can’t have food or drink.’ Especially when it’s typically uttered by people who have food and drink in their offices and at their desks. People who have lunch meetings with nice meals or who have time to walk to the cafeteria or drive off campus. And who feel so very good about protecting the staff from their deadly water bottles.

    The argument, of course, is that the clinical staff work in a ‘patient care area.’ Even when they aren’t at the bedside but are, for instance, behind a glass wall at a desk. If this is the case, then one could argue that the entire hospital (including administrative suites) is a ‘patient care area.’

    They are afraid we’ll catch something. That it’s unsafe for us to eat or drink where we work. Of course, this is while we positively roll around in MRSA and breathe in the fine, particulate sputum of septic pneumonia patients. This is while staff clean up infectious diarrhea and wear the same scrubs all day.

    This is after we intubate poor immigrants who may well have tuberculosis and start central lines on HIV patients. This is after we wrestle with Meth-addicts who have hepatitis C. And this concern for our ‘safety ‘occurs in places where physical security, actual security against potential violent attack, is a geriatric joke which is often tabled until the next budget cycle.

    And as for our patients? Our food and drink are no danger to them. They and their families fill the exam rooms with the aroma of fried chicken, fries and burgers, eaten at the bedside (often by the patient with abdominal pain). Their infants drag pacifiers across floors that would make an infectious disease specialist wake from bacterial nightmares in a sweat-soaked panic. In short, our food or drink are no threat to them and no threat to us.

    But the absence of food and drink? That’s a problem. Because the ED is an endless maelstrom of uncontrollable events and tragedies, of things beyond our control for which we are responsible. It is a place of physical, emotional and spiritual exhaustion where we daily rise to the challenge and manage (against the odds) to do so much remarkable good by virtue of our knowledge, our training, our courage and our compassion.

    In the midst of all that, a bottle of water, a cup of coffee, a glass of Diet Coke, a styrofoam cup of iced tea is an oasis in the desert. And that sandwich, slice of pizza, cupcake or salad is the fuel that helps make it happen.
    More than that, food and drink are among the few pleasures we have time for each shift. They serve as bridges to the end of the day; small reminders of normalcy in a place where so little is normal.
    Doubtless, one day someone will take away our music so that it doesn’t hurt our ears, or offend our patients. We’ll fight that battle when it comes.

    But until then, depriving staff of food and drink proximate to where they work is of no health value and strikes me as just one more way of exerting control over the people actually engaged in the hard, grinding work of saving lives.
    And worse, it’s just mean.

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