Nurses Say the Darnedest Things!

One of the many zillions of trivialities that spark my hyperactive imagination late at night when I can't sleep: Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Medicalese is a language that flows as easily as our mother tongue after a few years in the business, but as I was lying in bed last night, wide awake long after sending a resident in flash pulmonary edema to the hospital, I got to thinking about the expressions we use in health care that must sound absolutely ridiculous to anyone who doesn't know the lingo.

Imagine, if you will, being an innocent bystander on a Med/Surg unit and hearing the following report on a new admit from an ER nurse: "Hey, I threw in a 20-gauge for ya and dropped an NG while Dr. McDreamy was writing orders. She's already put out 500 mils of dark brownish material, but at least she's stopped horking. Sats are 94% on 2 liters. You're gonna wanna watch her pressure, and she's pretty tachy......."

Get the picture?

How about some of these absurdities:

ICU nurse: "Look out, he's dropped his pressure!" Dropped it and broke it in a million pieces, no less! And we make it sound like it's all the patient's fault, too: "He dropped his pressure". Bad patient! bad! bad! (sound of wrist being slapped)

Report from charge nurse on new mom who hasn't voided since delivery nine hours ago: "I threw a catheter in and got 1200out right away......" If I didn't know better, I'd think throwing a rubber tube into an orifice that was designed to be an exit, not an entry, would be a mite painful for the victim....er, patient.

Call to the floor nurse from CCU: "You better check your tele patient in 215, he's tachy........" Excuse me? He may not have a lot of couth, but that's no reason to insult him.

Using the term "for me" in report, as in "Bill didn't poop for me today, but Ed had a nice extra-large BM for me after lunch." Like Ed evacuated his bowels especially to please the nurse. Bill, on the other hand, is a naughty boy who evidently refuses to perform on cue like a circus animal. MOM, coming right up!

LTC nurse to resident: "Bob, your dinner's coming, here's your clothing protector." Bob: "It's a bib." Nurse: "Well, we call it a clothing protector because it's a dignity issue." Bob: "Well, I call it a bib, cuz it keeps MY dignity offa my shirt!!"

Nurse, starting IV: "Okay, here we go, you're going to feel a little poke......." which, translated, means "I'm gonna drive a nail up your arm." Well, that's how it REALLY feels, so why do we lie to patients like this?

PACU nurse to M/S nurse on post-op TKR: "He hasn't started making urine yet." My mind's eye runs wild with this one as I envision the patient standing at a kitchen counter, emptying a packet of yellow powder into a pitcher and stirring.........

Nurse to family member: "Mr. Smith crashed and had to be put on life support." Again with the mental pictures, this one involving a fall from considerable height and the patient as a cartoon figure all crumpled up like an accordion.

Personally, I find the euphemisms we use for the expulsion of various bodily substances to be some of the silliest terms of all. Witness:

"Have you been able to pass any flatus today?" Pass what??? 'Flatus' sounds like something you do to a balloon.

Come to think of it, though, when you CAN'T pass flatus, it's like being full of hot air.........which indeed you are.

"Have you voided yet?" Voided what?? The check that I wrote to this hospital for the privilege of being poked and prodded and given drugs that made me forget who I was BEFORE they took out my gallbladder?

"Here's an emesis basin for you in case you feel nauseated." Gosh, I didn't feel that way before you handed me this pink, kidney-shaped plastic thingie, but now that you mention it....dang, it sure doesn't hold much, does it?

And the ever-popular "bleeding out." Well, where else is the bleeding supposed to go? Back IN?

I rest my case.

thanks for all the laughs today. just what i needed

susanthomas1954 said:
Oh, yeah, the written report is so much better:

Today I got : 83 y/o HM s/p lap choley, w/hx CHF,DMII, COPD, O2 dep, old CVA w/r-sided hemi. ESRD w/HD m-W-F. Orders for PT/OT/ST (BSE?) inc B &B, foley, PICC for Vanco q 12 RUE, drsg CDI, STII coccyx. A &O x1 (person) MMSE=13, SDAT, FC (that's right, full code!) Rehab potential-fair.

SDAT=== Soft Diet as Tolerated

Specializes in psychiatric, UR analyst, fraud, DME,MedB.

Thank you BJ ! :)

to k3nn3dy81

i am so glad that you have left the medical profession. first of all if you are so ****** off at the fact that nurses make more than you do maybe you should have went into nursing. until you do nursing, you have no idea what we deal with. its *******s like you that think they know everything and give health care a bad name.

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..
jag73 said:
to k3nn3dy81

i am so glad that you have left the medical profession. first of all if you are so ****** off at the fact that nurses make more than you do maybe you should have went into nursing. until you do nursing, you have no idea what we deal with. its *******s like you that think they know everything and give health care a bad name.

my hat is off to you jag73. you put it right where it belonged.

Specializes in Critical Care, Education, and Acute Care.
k3nn3dy81 said:
Good luck to all of you who think you know it all and the doctors are the smartest thing since sliced bread. Have fun with your nursing degrees and listening to idiots all your life...I'm leaving the medical field because of it!

Sounds like a great plan there Skippy! Get out while you still know it all! :yeah:

I was a paramedic for several years before I went into nursing and I thought I knew a lot. I could intubate, put in cricothyrotomy airways, start central lines, EJs, IOs, basically do whatever I needed to get the patient to the hospital while they were still perfusing. However, the first thing I learned when I became a nurse was that paramedics don't know jacks*** about much of anything except cookbook medicine. It was a very humbling experience for me. It would be a good lesson for you to learn as well.

I hope that you figure things out one day. Have a good life.

Specializes in med/surg; LTC.....LPN, RN, DON; TCU.

I made the trans from EMS to nursing and it was a challenge plus a male dealing with "men do not make good nurses". Respect works both ways people.

"SDAT"...Soft Diet as tolerated? That's my guess. I understood everything but that one. :)

It seems to me that You seem to think YOU know it all. There really isn't any need to use the "r" word when referring to anybody's level of knowledge and your whole post was offensive to many of us CARING nurses on this forum. You may have crossed a lot of below-average nurses, but there are just as many below average EMTs. You AREN'T a doctor but you like to think you act like one on the road...congrats. Go to an Ivy school...pay your hundreds of thousands, put your 6 years in AND you STILL will NEVER have the power to put nurses down!! Good luck in your career.

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..
lupan said:
i made the trans from ems to nursing.

:up: me too!

Specializes in Management, Emergency, Psych, Med Surg.

This is funny. The other day we had a sign over a patients bed that said "NO FREE WATER". She was SOOOO mad. She did not see the same sign over the bed of the other patient and thought she was being charged extra for water. Thus the importance of explaining what you are doing to the patient.

But the opposite can be true. A long time ago when I went to work in a large inner city ED in Houston I had to learn another language in order to communicate with the patients. They had slang for things that I did not understand. And it was difficult to triage them in until I got the hang of it.

I fell out= passed out

I have sugar= I have diabetes

I have high blood= I have high blood pressure

I have pressure= I have high blood pressure

I am passing clogs= clots

I am vomiking

I can't pass my seed= can't ejaculate

Can't pass my water= can't urinate

Smilin Mighty Jesus= Spinal Meningitis

There were others I can't remember right now. It was like putting a puzzle together.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

You know, that reminds me of when I was a new nurse and the older patients would ask me for their "physic". Actually, they often demanded it at the tops of their voices!

I don't hear that very often anymore, but having grown up with grandparents from the pre-Depression era, I was quite familiar with the term. Today's elderly are no less fixated on their bowels, but instead of a 'physic' they usually request some "magnesia" or a "depository". :D