ER vs ICU Nurses: What Are Their Roles? Have They Changed?
ER nurses are one of the first points of contact upon a patient entering a facility. Â
In a normal circumstance, triaging and admission would be an almost seamless process; however, this is no longer the case.Â
ER physician Dr. Gillian Salton, says “I have to discharge patients who would normally need to be admitted, but I have no place to put them, and I’m forced to tell them to come back if they get sicker.”Â
I am sure you have seen the news circulating of the patient who presented to the ER with a cardiac emergency, was transferred/referred, and turned away from 48 hospital institutions because there was no room for him, where he later died. Â
This is what our world and healthcare system are coming to; it is crumbling. Â
The roles of both ER and ICU nurses have changed, in the way their day-to-day functions and in the care that is provided to patients. Â
The patients are sicker, the staffing is shorter, and the emotional demand is higher. Â
Of course, the training and certifications vary among ER vs ICU nurses, but in times of chaos and low staffing, the situation is ‘all hands-on deck.’Â
ICU nurses do not have the time to give 100% care to 100% of the patients right now. There is without a doubt a divide in quality of care vs quantity of patients. Â
Many institutions are at full capacity, with all their ventilators in use, and ICU nurses are bearing the brunt of it as a result.
 