We do not allow them at all, with the rare exception of a true medical emergency.
Lisa
_____________________
Lisa C. Dutton, MSN, RN, AMB-BC, NE-BC
Professional Development Manager, BWH Department of Ambulatory Nursing
Co-chair; MGB Ambulatory Nurse Council
Clinical Director, MGB Nurse Hotline
Operations Lead, MGB COVID Outpatient Therapies
Brigham and Women's Hospital
75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115
M: 603-479-7468 T: 617-525-7789
brighamandwomens.org

The information in this e-mail is intended only for the person to whom it is addressed. If you believe this e-mail was sent to you in error and the e-mail contains patient information, please contact the Mass General Brigham Compliance HelpLine at https://www.massgeneralbrigham.org/complianceline .
Please note that this e-mail is not secure (encrypted). If you do not wish to continue communication over unencrypted e-mail, please notify the sender of this message immediately. Continuing to send or respond to e-mail after receiving this message means you understand and accept this risk and wish to continue to communicate over unencrypted e-mail.
Original Message:
Sent: 11/21/2024 6:02:00 PM
From: Jennifer Edwards
Subject: Verbal orders in ambulatory clinics
Hi, what is your stance on having nurses take verbal orders in a busy clinic to help with throughput and clinic flow? Do you allow them, or do you have parameters as to when they can be used?
------------------------------
Jennifer Edwards (Mindala)
BSN, RN, OCN, LSSGB
RN Clinical Services Director
Clinical Services | Navigators
Banner University Medical Group-Phoenix at Banner University Medical Center Phoenix
Jennifer.Edwards9@bannerhealth.com
------------------------------