Re: Tough Enough?
Wow! You know what? I have cried with patients and their families. I just don't see anything wrong with it. Being a "rock" for someone does not mean you can't show emotion. There is something about seeing tears well up in a person's eyes that makes me cry every time.
Let me tell you what I have noticed more often than nurses being overly emotional. I have watched them neglect the emotional aspects of holistically caring for our patients and their families. I have witnessed family members forgotten in the hall time and again and in many different practice environments.
I'll never forget the time that I was assisting a doc with a lumbar puncture on a very sick patient (bacterial meningitis) who had gone to work that meaning feeling a little poorly and had quickly developed lethargy and ultimately altered mental status. She became unresponsive shortly after admission to the ED. Right before her LP, her son left the room and was sitting around 15 feet from his mother's room. After the difficult LP, I laid the patient back and she began to vomit and seize. We ultimately intubated her and placed a central line. Her prognosis was looking very grim. This was not my patient as I was in charge at the time. The nurse was busy with her other patients. I finished with the patient, gave report to the nurse, and sat down at the desk to document all that had occurred. I looked up about 15 minutes later and saw her son sitting in that same seat - messing with his iPhone. I walked over to ask him how he was doing. He said, "I'm still waiting for them to finish the spinal tap." It was then that I realized that he had no idea his mom had taken such a turn for the worse. I gently shared with him that his mother had been placed on a ventilator and that she had experienced a seizure. I saw tears well up in his eyes and I just grabbed him, hugged him, and cried with him. I can only imagine what it must have felt like to get that kind of news and I think it was pretty insensitive that no one had talked to him about his mom, including myself. I learned my lesson and even though some may say that it is the Docs job to talk with the family, I say that it is EVERYONE's job to make sure that the family and patient are well-cared for. Period.
I hope you never ever lose your compassion and I think it is perfectly acceptable to cry with patients. I don't think sobbing or losing control of yourself to the point that you are unable to work is appropriate. Actually, there may come a time when that does happen, but you should probably excuse yourself under those circumstances. You are entering a profession like no other. Where else do you witness physical and emotional pain like we do? What other professions inflict pain on other breathing humans? This is not to be taken lightly or even something that I recommend getting used to. Trust me, the moment you think it doesn't bother you, it will come out sideways somewhere else in your life. Does that make sense?
Great question and take care of yourself!
Tabitha
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