Interprets telemetry rhythm strips with documentation requirements and escalation criteria. Use when monitoring telemetry, documenting rhythm interpretations, or recognizing alarm conditions.
Cardiac telemetry monitoring is used for approximately 3.4 million patients annually in U.S. hospitals. Joint Commission NPSG.06.01.01 requires organizations to establish alarm management as a patient safety priority — clinical alarm hazards have been the #1 or #2 health technology hazard identified by ECRI Institute for over a decade. Alarm fatigue — the desensitization to alarms from excessive false and nuisance alarms — contributes to delayed response and patient harm, including death. The American Heart Association (AHA) Practice Standards for Electrocardiographic Monitoring in Hospital Settings provide evidence-based criteria for monitoring indications, lead placement, alarm parameter setting, and rhythm interpretation. CMS expects hospitals to have processes for clinical alarm management. This skill structures the nursing role in telemetry monitoring: initiation, lead placement, rhythm interpretation, alarm management, escalation, and documentation.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Required Patient Information
Indication for telemetry monitoring per AHA Practice Standards:
相關技能
Class I (monitoring recommended): acute coronary syndrome, post-cardiac arrest, post-cardiac surgery, new-onset heart failure, symptomatic arrhythmia, acute stroke, drug overdose with cardiac effects
Class II (monitoring may be beneficial): chest pain observation, post-PCI, heart failure exacerbation, post-device implantation, syncope evaluation
Class III (monitoring not recommended): low-risk post-op patients, chronic stable conditions without acute change
Baseline ECG (12-lead if available) for comparison
Current cardiac medications: antiarrhythmics, beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, digoxin, anticoagulants
Electrolyte values: potassium, magnesium, calcium (electrolyte imbalances cause arrhythmias)
QTc interval if on QT-prolonging medications
Required Equipment
Telemetry transmitter with fresh batteries
ECG electrodes (5-lead preferred for continuous monitoring)
Skin prep supplies (alcohol pads, abrasive pad if needed)
Central monitoring station staffed by trained monitor technician or RN
Step 1 — Initiate Telemetry Monitoring
Verify the monitoring order includes: indication, monitoring duration, and alarm parameters (or confirm institutional default parameters are appropriate)
Prepare the skin: remove oil, moisture, and excess hair from electrode sites; abrade lightly if needed for good contact; allow alcohol to dry completely
Apply electrodes using standardized lead placement:
5-lead system (preferred):
White (RA): right shoulder, below clavicle
Black (LA): left shoulder, below clavicle
Green (RL): right lower abdomen/rib cage
Red (LL): left lower abdomen/rib cage
Brown (V): 4th intercostal space, left sternal border (V1 position) — can be adjusted for optimal P-wave visibility
3-lead system: White (RA), Black (LA), Red (LL)
Select the monitoring lead: Lead II is the standard default (best for P-wave visualization and rhythm interpretation)
Set alarm parameters per institutional protocol or provider order:
Heart rate low and high limits (typical defaults: < 50 and > 120, adjusted per patient baseline)
QRS duration: Normal (< 0.12 seconds) or wide (≥ 0.12 seconds)?
QT/QTc interval: Measured from Q-wave onset to T-wave end; corrected for rate (Bazett formula); normal QTc < 440 ms males, < 460 ms females; > 500 ms = high risk for torsades de pointes
Monitor QTc per institutional protocol (typically baseline, then daily or with dose changes)
Alert the provider if QTc > 500 ms or if QTc increases > 60 ms from baseline
Maintain potassium > 4.0 mEq/L and magnesium > 2.0 mg/dL for patients on QT-prolonging drugs
Document QTc monitoring, electrolyte values, and provider communication
Checkpoint B — Telemetry Monitoring Review
Per-Shift Verification
Rhythm strip documented with full interpretation
Alarm parameters reviewed and appropriate for the patient
Electrode integrity checked; replacement performed if needed
Any rhythm changes documented with provider notification
Telemetry monitoring necessity reviewed (discontinue when no longer indicated)
Alarm Safety Verification
No critical alarms disabled
Alarm parameters individualized (not left on factory defaults without clinical review)
Backup alarm notification in place if primary nurse is away from bedside
Monitor technician staffing adequate for patient volume
Quality Audit
Telemetry monitoring initiated for appropriate indications per AHA Practice Standards
Rhythm strips documented per institutional frequency requirement (typically each shift minimum)
All rhythm interpretations include: rate, rhythm, PR, QRS, QT/QTc
Life-threatening arrhythmias identified and responded to within institutional target timeframe
Alarm parameters individualized for each patient
Alarm fatigue reduction strategies implemented per NPSG.06.01.01
QTc monitoring documented for patients on QT-prolonging medications
Telemetry discontinued when no longer indicated (AHA Class III — reduces unnecessary monitoring and alarm burden)
Compliant with Joint Commission NPSG.06.01.01 (clinical alarm management)
Monitor technician competency validated per institutional requirements
Guidelines
AHA Practice Standards for ECG Monitoring: Evidence-based indications for telemetry monitoring (Class I, II, III); lead placement standards; arrhythmia classification
Joint Commission NPSG.06.01.01: Improve the safety of clinical alarm systems — establish alarm management as an organizational priority; reduce nuisance alarms; ensure timely response to actionable alarms
ACLS Algorithms: American Heart Association Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support algorithms for management of life-threatening arrhythmias (VF/pulseless VT, bradycardia, tachycardia, PEA/asystole)
ECRI Institute: Clinical alarm management consistently ranked among top health technology hazards
CMS: Expects hospitals to have clinical alarm management processes; alarm-related deaths may be investigated as potential CMS violations
CredibleMeds.org: QTDrugs list — reference for QT-prolonging medications and risk classification
Scope of practice: RN performs rhythm interpretation, sets and manages alarm parameters, and responds to arrhythmias per standing orders and ACLS protocols; monitor technician provides continuous surveillance and escalates abnormalities to the RN; physician/APP orders monitoring and manages antiarrhythmic therapy
Competency: All nurses managing telemetry patients must demonstrate competency in basic rhythm interpretation, alarm management, and emergency response — annual competency validation per institutional and Joint Commission requirements