A long-term care facility nurse is admitting a patient transferred from a local hospital. The facility has a least restraint policy and for the past year has not used restraints. To prevent restraint use, they also use an admission of risk assessment protocol to help staff determine an appropriate care plan including identifying interventions that address behaviours. The patient’s children who are the substitute decision makers, insist on restraining their mother for safety. They tell the nurse that if, while restrained their mother falls, they will initiate legal action. What factors should the nurse consider in response to the family’s request?
Response:
As highlighted in the practice standard, Therapeutic Nurse-Client Relationship, Revised 2006, nurses are expected to be empathetic. Furthermore, nurses use their knowledge, skill and judgment when giving nursing care. They also modify client care plans, together with clients and the health care team, as outlined in the Code of Conduct.
The nurse in this scenario also must explore the family’s needs and the request’s implications. Nurses are expected to actively include the patient as a partner by identifying their needs and wishes and making them the care plan’s basis. The responsible nurse can collaborate with the broader health care team and the patient’s family to explore alternative ways to meet the patient’s needs, including assessing risk of falls and implementing falls prevention strategies as indicated. The nurse can provide education to the family about restraint use. The nurse needs to explain there are laws governing restraint use and that the facility’s least restraint policy means the health care team must explore alternative measures first; restraint is a last resort. If non-emergency restraints are indicated to preserve the patient’s safety, the nurse takes appropriate measures to ensure key expectations of restraint use are met:
- Assessment
- Consent
- Communication
- Documentation.
After assessing the patient and determining non-emergency restraints are needed for patient safety, the nurse and health care team are responsible for obtaining consent.
The nurse also must effectively communicate the need for restraints to the patients and patient’s family. As highlighted in the practice standard Therapeutic Nurse-Client Relationship, Revised 2006, nurses use a wide range of effective communication strategies to meet patients’ needs and discuss their expectations. The standard outlines nurses ‘accountabilities for negotiating with the patient about the nurse, patient, family and significant others’ roles, and the goals identified in the care plan.
Finally, the nurse is responsible for documenting any provided nursing care, including restraint use assessment, application, monitoring and evaluation, as outlined in the Documentation, Revised 2008 standard.