A few minutes later the medical team strolled in to see the patient chatting to us in bed and asked why the emergency button had been pressed. We explained the situation but they were unable to comprehend the seriousness due to the patients normal appearance. For all of us that had experienced the situation we were extremely angry that the medical team were not able to see the seriousness of the incident that had just happened. For me as a student i was amazed at how something that is so routine can change so quickly, dizziness and nausea post surgery is very common and it is impossible to have picked the situation unfolding this way. My supervisor assured me i had done nothing wrong the patient was stable prior to the intervention, dizziness is normal could have done nothing to prevent the situation from occuring.
This was a huge situation to show how routine this environment can become for everyone, the medical team strolling in demonstrated their casual response to a medical emergency. As the ward is in a secondary hospital where there are very rarely complications, people are slow to react in an emergency. There was no crash cart, people finished what they were doing and then slowly made their way to the room where the alarm had sounded, everyone was on autopilot.
This situation has made me realise that no matter how comfortable you are with what you are doing and how routine it becomes, each situation needs to be treated as a separate experience. It has show me the dangers of autopilot.
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