Alwayslearnin
This is a very good post and you have made some really good points. I always had fun in triage when the pt. had "chest pain radiating, N/V, sweating". Pts v/s are stone cold by the book normal. I would ask where the pain was radiating to and watch as the patient would close their eyes and try to remember the TV commercial and then tell me "down my right leg". Wrong answer, you do not pass go and you do not collect $200 dollars. Here give me a urine sample - watch the patient bypass the bathroom and head out the door. Get call from other ER in town - had pt come in with cheat pain, their name is ******, known cocaine dealer/addict. Thanks but he just left without giving urine for drug screen. Chalk up 1 for the good guys.
On the other hand someone comes in with REAL chest pain and still very young get them to the chest pain area. I know, too young to fit AMI but a cocaine induced heart attack is quite another problem to treat and very tricky.

Oh and do not assume like 99% of ER Docs do, that women of all ages can not have a heart attack.

We had a patient in Chest pain center c/o just not feeling right. The Doc had seen her the night before in the other ER - came in and told her "I saw you last night - you were not having MI last night and you are not having one now so I am sending you home."

I had protocal and followed it and I waited on the discharge until cardiac markers came back. The numbers were through the roof. Doc had to appoligize, patient sent to cath lab and I had the satisfaction of knowing that I had keep the Doc from having a real problem and that the patient received the right treatment. Why did I not follow Doc's orders? Because her "pain" and how she presented I had a gut feeling that something was wrong.
Trust your instincts as a rule they will not let you down.

I am so glad to know that there are nurses like you that will give the care the patient NEEDS and not nessearly the ones the patient wants.
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