Question: Hello, I am a nurse and this question is about a patient I had recently, admitted for nausea and failure to thrive. He was admitted from a nursing home after being nauseous for days with no appetite. He was found to have severe protein-calorie
malnutrition but refused a PEG tube and frequently had no appetite or had nausea/
vomiting after eating. Past medical history: R
leg amputation, stage 4 sacral pressure ulcer (surgically debrided during his hospitalization), urostomy, and
ileostomy. On my shift he was on a clear
liquid diet but still was not able to keep much down. His abdomen was slightly distended with normal bowel sounds and no
abdominal pain. By the end of my shift (12 hours) his ileostomy had not put out much, only about 100ml. I didn't report this to the MD because the MD had just been in to see the patient and patient was not in acute distress. I did chart it and report to next nurse. She said he remained the same over night but the next day his abdomen became more distended and painful and the nurse called the doctor for an NG tube but he refused and ordered a KUB to be done the next morning. That night around 3 am the pt complained of severe bloating and pain, and night nurse called for NG tube again but MD refused and said stop all narcotics and he would see the pt in the AM. The pt ended up vomiting, aspirating, and coding, then passing away in the ICU after his BP dropped and he coded again. I am wondering if I should have reported the low ostomy output and vomiting to the MD and if this would have caused earlier intervention and saved the pt. I didn't feel the pt's condition had changed drastically as he was admitted for nausea and vomiting, but I would like a
second opinion for peace of mind; I am hoping I didn't miss an obstruction developing. Thank you!