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.

LOL at all the posts, but for some reason, this one popped into my mind.......answering the phone at home "ICU, this is Mary, may I help you". Like I was at work, or taking an order for take out :nurse:

1 Votes
Specializes in ER.

That was great! It is kinda funny when someone asks us about something and it is almost like we have to slow down our thoughts to "translate" and not scare the crapola out of the patient or their family....being a nurse is great:yeah:

1 Votes
Specializes in MedSurg/Ped Vent/Geriatrics/Rehab.
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.

Shame is I understood all of it...except bse and mmse. What was that??

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

MMSE=Mini Mental Status Exam

BSE=breast self-exam, but must have some other meaning here.:specs:

Specializes in MICU, SICU, CRRT,.

BSE..maybe bedside eval?? just a guess since it was preceeded by PT/OT/ and ST. And reading these before going into a 3 day long ICU stretch was just what i needed :)

1 Votes
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.

can you please translate this one i know some medical acronyms but some are outrageously funny and i dont know how to translate....:bowingpur

I started to type this out but it is lengthy. What don't you understand? Stage 2 decub of coccyx, hemodialysis, incontinent of bowel and bladder? MMSE and SDAT are the only two I have not seen. Related to activity and fall risk perhaps? AT is usually as tolerated. MM is sometimes movement, movement and strength evaluation = 13 maybe? They gauge each extremity as out of possible 5 so 13/20? Therapists use a lot of odd acronyms too, and they are not always the same from PT to PT, depending on where they went to school.

1 Votes
Specializes in Surgical, quality,management.
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.

83 year old ?haematemisis and malena, surgical past history of laproscopic cholycystectomy, with a medical history of congestive heart failure, diabetes melluitis type ii, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, oxygen dependent, old cerebral vascualr accident with a right sided hemipalagia. end stage renal disease with haemodyalsis monday, wednesday & friday. orders for physiotherapy, occupational terapy and ?speech therapy bed side evalutation. including ?b&b foley catheter, peripherally inserted central catheter for vancomycin every 12 hr ? rue, dressing ?cdi , stage ii(2) pressure sore to coccyx. alert and oriented x1 to person (confused as to time and place) mini mental state exam 13/30 ?sdat for full resuscitation. rehab potential fair.

i think i have got most of that right but i have never worked in the us so some of it may be off. what i don't know i put in red! and so that i didn't get flammed i wrote oriented not that we irish and australians use the word -- we use orientated!

1 Votes
Specializes in med surg.

I am a nurse and don't know the abbrev. PIG can you enlighten me?

1 Votes
Specializes in NICU, Infection Control.

I would translate 83y/o HM as 83y/o Hispanic male, but not sure about a lot of the rest. RUE means Rt upper extremity to me, but the Acronym Finder had some other abbreviations, the most appropriate of which is "Ramp Up Exercise".

Bottom line: WTH?? ;)

I have NO idea what a PIG is. Percutaneously Inserted Gastric tube??? That could work!

1 Votes

No that would be a PEG tube. You have to look at it in context- sometimes PIg is a labtest. Use it in context to decipher it.

Abbreviations tend to vary by specialty, the one described is a lot of the things we use in home care and also rehab:

" 83 y/o HM (year old hispanic male), s/p lap choley (status post laparoscopic cholecystectomy), w/hx ( with history of) CHF,DMII( type2), COPD, O2 dep (dependent), old CVA w/r-sided hemi (with right sided hemiplegia or hemiparesis). ESRD w/HD m-W-F (end stage renal disease with hemodialysis). Orders for PT/OT/ST (BSE?) (therapies to evaluate), inc B &B (incontinent bowel and bladder), foley, PICC for Vanco q 12 RUE (PICC line is in right upper arm), drsg CDI (change once a day), STII (stage 2 decubitus) coccyx. A &O( alert and oriented) x1 (person) MMSE=13 (movement and strength evaluation? score), SDAT (?sit? stand? daily as tolerated?), FC (that's right, full code!) Rehab potential-fair".

1 Votes
Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
cxg174 said:
I started to type this out but it is lengthy. What don't you understand? Stage 2 decub of coccyx, hemodialysis, incontinent of bowel and bladder? MMSE and SDAT are the only two I have not seen. Related to activity and fall risk perhaps? AT is usually as tolerated. MM is sometimes movement, movement and strength evaluation = 13 maybe? They gauge each extremity as out of possible 5 so 13/20? Therapists use a lot of odd acronyms too, and they are not always the same from PT to PT, depending on where they went to school.

MMSE=Mini-Mental Status Exam. Dunno what SDAT is....?