Journal of Emergency Nursing
Volume 29, Issue 4 , Pages 326-329 , August 2003

An 83-year-old woman with suspected SARS: Implications for emergency nursing

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    Volunteers attach this bright red screening tool to the top of the patient's chart packet before the patient is triaged. Originally, it was going to be handed to patients while they were waiting to be

    Volunteers attach this bright red screening tool to the top of the patient's chart packet before the patient is triaged. Originally, it was going to be handed to patients while they were waiting to be triaged in, but it was yet another task for triage nurses who were too busy to do it in addition to their other responsibilities. It was intended for all ambulatory patients, but it soon became apparent that patients arriving by ambulance also needed to be screened, and so they have been distributed to the local EMS who we encourage to screen, in the field. Hospital administration has adopted this tool in other areas of the hospital, to capture other patients not coming in through the emergency department.

 For reprints, write: Cyndi Kalafut, RN, MBA, St Joseph Hospital, 5665 Peachtree Dunwoody Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30342; E-mail: CKalafut@sjha.org.

☆☆ J Emerg Nurs 2003;29:326-9.

PII: S0099-1767(03)00264-2

doi: 10.1067/men.2003.132

Journal of Emergency Nursing
Volume 29, Issue 4 , Pages 326-329 , August 2003