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.

This is so funny. All the jargon is so foreign when we first start but now its all we know!! thanks for the giggles!

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i havent even started my nursing course but this was just hilarious....i cant wait to use these terms myself:yeah:

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Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.

To k3nn3dy81: Good thing you DON"T want to be a nurse; you'd run afoul of all the "Scope Of Practice" laws!

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VivaLasViejas said:
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

OMG I remember that. What the heck is a physic anyway? I mean I know it is a laxative but where does that word come from?

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

Beats me. In my grandmother's day it meant an enema or a suppository........they were pretty free with the nozzle in those times! I remember hiding out down cellar when she'd come after me with the enema bag---she believed that if you didn't have a BM every day, you had to get those "poisons" out of your system or else you'd come down with some illness or another. :sofahider

Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.

...Had a pt. who told me "the doctor said I had 'loose blood'. Never have figured out what THAT meant!

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My daughter is working in the Wichita, Kansas area and is telling us that she quit because the State has come in for the 4th time in a 6 month period. According to my daughter if the state closes the facility (an Alzhiemer's facility) then SHE will lose her certificate because they (the state) cannot prove who isn't doing their jobs so everyone in the facility loses their certificates or licenses. We think this is a bunch of malarky. Can anyone confirm this?

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

I don't know what the Board of Nursing rules and regs are in your state, but I have a tough time imagining that surveyors would make a blanket recommendation that everyone employed by a bad facility should lose their license/certification. I suspect that this threat may have just been a story told to the employees by the management at your daughter's facility to try and keep them from blowing the whistle on the poor conditions there. Just my opinion, of course, but I've worked in places like that and seen the same sort of behavior. It's a shame, but I wouldn't put it past some of the administrators and nurse managers I've worked for....they'll do anything to keep THEIR phoney-baloney jobs and throw the staff under the bus.

Best wishes to your daughter. I hope she finds a new job FAST.

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:) I actually laughed. I can see my little pics going on in my head now...

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Specializes in OB, Med/Surg, Ortho, ICU.

My favorite poem to chart (just to see if anyone notices) is " Pt agreed to take MOM in am if no BM in the PM." The nurses get a kick out of it, anyway.

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Specializes in Med-Surg, diabetes.

There is a site called "Journal of Nursing Jocularity"-check it out!

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