Originally Posted by JacelRN
My question is regarding "pain med seeking" behavior in hospice. Do you get it often? I have the least amount of compassion for these types of patients. That is one of the main reasons I wanted to work at hospice-working with patients who have true need of pain relief, who need me to advocate for them in case they cannot, etc.
I kinda thought if patients say they have pain, they have pain, and we are supposed to treat them, not second guess them. If it's ordered and they ask for it because they have pain, who are we do judge whether they are sufficiently sincere in their need? Aren't we supposed to treat the pain before it gets very bad, so that it
doesn't get very bad?
Originally Posted by JacelRN
Please understand my term "pain med seeker" to be someone who is obviously timing their meds. I know we are to treat each patient as their pain is real to them, but in reality, much abuse is present in the current hospital setting.
I don't know about abuse in a hospital setting. If someone is in hospital, they are likely uncomfortable. Do you truly want to be responsible for making a judgment call on a patient's comfort? What about the "truly needy" patient who is aware enough of time and spacing and understands aggressive pain management, and thus asks for pain medication when they feel they need it, not waiting until the pain hurts? Aren't they doing what a responsible patient should do, taking an active role in their own care?
I would worry about a nurse taking care of me in my terminal illness who might have some issues with whether or not she felt my pain was severe enough to justify medication--or if I was "seeking pain meds."
We learned a lot about the separation of our own issues from those of our patients, when we were in school. It came under the topic of "ethics." We are not here to control the patient's behavior, we are here to help the patient meet their needs, and when they cannot, to meet those needs for them.
I thought "nursing" wasn't about deciding the patient's needs, I thought it was about assessing their needs. How do you assess pain? We were taught to ask.