Patient Privacy and Dignity Maintenance for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Included In This Lesson
Outline
Patient Privacy and Dignity Maintenance
Guidelines:
- Minimal exposure necessary
- Medically necessary commentary
- ‘HIPAA
- Anesthesia drunk
- Don’t allow family to record
- Avoid comments, even if positive
- Tattoos
- Piercings
Considerations:
- OR cameras
- Orient to see state of room, not intimacy of patient
- Particularly if VIP patient, staff, etc
- Can block with monitors, make floorwalker and charge aware
- Lithotomy covering
- Covering to PACU
- Clean
- Hallway conversations
- Patient’s family is still around!
- Few details can reach false conclusions
- Matter of fact SBAR
- Open bay pre-op or PACU!
Nurse’s role:
- Professionally receive healthcare details and protect privacy
- Utilize resources to preserve exposure of patient where capable
- Police chatter and attitude of OR
- Interview patient before procedure for details to be shared, specifically avoided, etc
- Family often given vague status updates, not medically significant
- “Asleep and comfortable”
- Family often given vague status updates, not medically significant
- On stage
Pitfalls:
- Inadvertent slippage
- OB consults
- References to patient by details, tattoos, etc
- Handoff of piercings or belongings
- OR situated for head of bed away from door
- Maximum exposure to window
Examples:
- Perineal piercing removed, charted (gracefully, without significance portrayed where possible, patient knows)
- “I’m an xyz fan too”(no go, tattoo typically not visible was not for surgical judgement-
operative site exclusion)
Linchpins (Key Points):
- The OR is a personal, exposing experience for the patient who trusts the RN to navigate them appropriately
Transcript
References
- Association of periOperative Registered Nurses. (2022). Guidelines for Perioperative Practice (2022 ed.)