Guest guest Posted November 14, 2011 Report Share Posted November 14, 2011 Honest assessment of the physical effects on caregivers of handling physically needy patients is both necessary and rarely accomplished. No surprise, since objective examination of injury potential associated with routine patient lifting, repositioning, transferring, and generally giving assistance in movement, shows these activities to be quite risky. (According to Audrey , PhD---she wrote a very thorough guidebook on the subject called Safe Patient Handling and Movement---12 percent of nurses leave their profession each year due to back injuries!) What to do? Nurses, aides, therapists and others are frequently faced with dangerous and apparently inescapable tasks. The issue is not only weight of course, but complexity, unpredictability, cooperativeness of the subjects, environment, fitness of the caregiver, and so on. Planning for all those contingencies is difficult to say the least, and is understandably scary for hospitals and other institutions since any change from the current paradigm of caregiver lifts looks wildly expensive and time consuming. A 50-pound box-lift pre-employment screen, while more than many institutions are doing to assess risk, is just not going to cut it. And training on lifting techniques is not a panacea either. (Some believe that training can actually make things worse by creating a false sense of security.) Check 's book. And get ready to face some really tough issues and huge roadblocks to implementation of corrective measures. You can find a preview of the book here: http://books.google.com/books?id=15g4yD9yR2YC & printsec=frontcover & dq=inauthor:%2\ 2Audrey++(PhD.)%22 & hl=en#v=onepage & q & f=false Dave Milano, PT, Rehabilitation Director Laurel Health System ________________________________ From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of tbardua Sent: Sunday, November 13, 2011 7:51 PM To: PTManager Subject: Pre-employment screenings For all new hospital employees we perform a pre-employment screen. Part of this includes a lift and lift/carry section that we match the lifting requirements of each jobs physical demand form. We are looking at revamping how we perform this and I would love some input. For example, some of our nursing positions require a 50 pound lift with assistance. We usually use a small wooden box for lifting but the equipment we have for this is not really feasable to lift with two people. Also, if this is being judged as the weight of a patient it may not always be split 50-50. What type of equipment do you use for this and how do you determine how much assistance you give the employee? Also, some of the nurse managers seem to think the 50 pounds with assist is reasonable for a patient, but in discussing this with HR the question was what if a patient passes out and you are alone? How much weight should someone be expected to " manage " so to speak if they are g oing to lower a patient to the floor or bed/chair or attempt to catch them? Obviously all patients are going to be different weights and need different amounts of assistance, but for the purpose of this type of screen i would love to hear what this board thinks is a reasonable amount that an employee should be able to do. Thanks in advance, Todd Bardua Director of PT Bloomsburg Hospital Bloomsburg PA ________________________________ Confidentiality Note: The information contained in this electronic message is privileged and confidential information intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, or copy of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic message in error, please delete the message immediately and notify us by telephone. Thank you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 14, 2011 Report Share Posted November 14, 2011 Honest assessment of the physical effects on caregivers of handling physically needy patients is both necessary and rarely accomplished. No surprise, since objective examination of injury potential associated with routine patient lifting, repositioning, transferring, and generally giving assistance in movement, shows these activities to be quite risky. (According to Audrey , PhD---she wrote a very thorough guidebook on the subject called Safe Patient Handling and Movement---12 percent of nurses leave their profession each year due to back injuries!) What to do? Nurses, aides, therapists and others are frequently faced with dangerous and apparently inescapable tasks. The issue is not only weight of course, but complexity, unpredictability, cooperativeness of the subjects, environment, fitness of the caregiver, and so on. Planning for all those contingencies is difficult to say the least, and is understandably scary for hospitals and other institutions since any change from the current paradigm of caregiver lifts looks wildly expensive and time consuming. A 50-pound box-lift pre-employment screen, while more than many institutions are doing to assess risk, is just not going to cut it. And training on lifting techniques is not a panacea either. (Some believe that training can actually make things worse by creating a false sense of security.) Check 's book. And get ready to face some really tough issues and huge roadblocks to implementation of corrective measures. You can find a preview of the book here: http://books.google.com/books?id=15g4yD9yR2YC & printsec=frontcover & dq=inauthor:%2\ 2Audrey++(PhD.)%22 & hl=en#v=onepage & q & f=false Dave Milano, PT, Rehabilitation Director Laurel Health System ________________________________ From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of tbardua Sent: Sunday, November 13, 2011 7:51 PM To: PTManager Subject: Pre-employment screenings For all new hospital employees we perform a pre-employment screen. Part of this includes a lift and lift/carry section that we match the lifting requirements of each jobs physical demand form. We are looking at revamping how we perform this and I would love some input. For example, some of our nursing positions require a 50 pound lift with assistance. We usually use a small wooden box for lifting but the equipment we have for this is not really feasable to lift with two people. Also, if this is being judged as the weight of a patient it may not always be split 50-50. What type of equipment do you use for this and how do you determine how much assistance you give the employee? Also, some of the nurse managers seem to think the 50 pounds with assist is reasonable for a patient, but in discussing this with HR the question was what if a patient passes out and you are alone? How much weight should someone be expected to " manage " so to speak if they are g oing to lower a patient to the floor or bed/chair or attempt to catch them? Obviously all patients are going to be different weights and need different amounts of assistance, but for the purpose of this type of screen i would love to hear what this board thinks is a reasonable amount that an employee should be able to do. Thanks in advance, Todd Bardua Director of PT Bloomsburg Hospital Bloomsburg PA ________________________________ Confidentiality Note: The information contained in this electronic message is privileged and confidential information intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, or copy of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic message in error, please delete the message immediately and notify us by telephone. Thank you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 14, 2011 Report Share Posted November 14, 2011 Dave, thank you for the reminder on encouraging safer patient handling practices, even with regard to pre-employment screens. As per NIOSH, 35 lbs is the identified safe lifting limit for patient care handlers, in an ideal patient handling situation, many of which are not. Those who design pre-employment screens for nursing staff do have a challenge in being able to adequately capture the multiple and varied components of mobilizing patients. One thing to consider in the design is integrating the use of patient lifts, especially for facilities that already have safe patient handling policies in place. Thus, for these facilities, integrating the lifts during pre-employment screens would be a better reflection of the job demands, as well as a more consistent message of their patient handling practices. Marissa Pentico, MS, OT/L Ergonomics Coordinator Duke Occupational and Environmental Safety Office From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of Milano, Dave Sent: Monday, November 14, 2011 10:18 AM To: PTManager Subject: RE: Pre-employment screenings Honest assessment of the physical effects on caregivers of handling physically needy patients is both necessary and rarely accomplished. No surprise, since objective examination of injury potential associated with routine patient lifting, repositioning, transferring, and generally giving assistance in movement, shows these activities to be quite risky. (According to Audrey , PhD---she wrote a very thorough guidebook on the subject called Safe Patient Handling and Movement---12 percent of nurses leave their profession each year due to back injuries!) What to do? Nurses, aides, therapists and others are frequently faced with dangerous and apparently inescapable tasks. The issue is not only weight of course, but complexity, unpredictability, cooperativeness of the subjects, environment, fitness of the caregiver, and so on. Planning for all those contingencies is difficult to say the least, and is understandably scary for hospitals and other institutions since any change from the current paradigm of caregiver lifts looks wildly expensive and time consuming. A 50-pound box-lift pre-employment screen, while more than many institutions are doing to assess risk, is just not going to cut it. And training on lifting techniques is not a panacea either. (Some believe that training can actually make things worse by creating a false sense of security.) Check 's book. And get ready to face some really tough issues and huge roadblocks to implementation of corrective measures. You can find a preview of the book here: http://books.google.com/books?id=15g4yD9yR2YC & printsec=frontcover & dq=inauthor:%2\ 2Audrey++(PhD.)%22 & hl=en#v=onepage & q & f=false Dave Milano, PT, Rehabilitation Director Laurel Health System ________________________________ From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> [mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>] On Behalf Of tbardua Sent: Sunday, November 13, 2011 7:51 PM To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> Subject: Pre-employment screenings For all new hospital employees we perform a pre-employment screen. Part of this includes a lift and lift/carry section that we match the lifting requirements of each jobs physical demand form. We are looking at revamping how we perform this and I would love some input. For example, some of our nursing positions require a 50 pound lift with assistance. We usually use a small wooden box for lifting but the equipment we have for this is not really feasable to lift with two people. Also, if this is being judged as the weight of a patient it may not always be split 50-50. What type of equipment do you use for this and how do you determine how much assistance you give the employee? Also, some of the nurse managers seem to think the 50 pounds with assist is reasonable for a patient, but in discussing this with HR the question was what if a patient passes out and you are alone? How much weight should someone be expected to " manage " so to speak if they are g oing to lower a patient to the floor or bed/chair or attempt to catch them? Obviously all patients are going to be different weights and need different amounts of assistance, but for the purpose of this type of screen i would love to hear what this board thinks is a reasonable amount that an employee should be able to do. Thanks in advance, Todd Bardua Director of PT Bloomsburg Hospital Bloomsburg PA ________________________________ Confidentiality Note: The information contained in this electronic message is privileged and confidential information intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, or copy of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic message in error, please delete the message immediately and notify us by telephone. Thank you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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