Bending and Breaking the Rules in Nursing

I readily admit I have either bent or broken some rules that nurses are supposed to stringently uphold. However, I hope I'm not alone when I say that some of these rules seem so cold, bureaucratic and alien. If breaking a rule will make a patient's day a little brighter, if only for one moment, I will toss bureaucracy aside and do something that is normally forbidden. Specialties Geriatric Article

I believe rules can be bent at times. Heck, I feel that some rules can even be outright broken as long as doing so has brightened someone's day.

Billie is a pseudonym for the septuagenarian nursing home resident whom I first met seven years ago when I was a brand new nurse in long term care. She was a strikingly pretty model during her youth, and even as an elderly woman with a terminal prognosis, she still maintained a whimsical cuteness and a stylish flair through tasteful choices in makeup, haircuts, clothing and jewelry.

Billie received hospice services because her physician did not expect for her to live another six months due to advanced congestive heart failure. Although she barely stood five feet tall and weighed no more than 100 pounds, her lower extremities were chronically wet, weepy, heavy, discolored, swollen, and resembled crude elephant legs. Diuretic medications did not help to pull the extra fluid off. Neither did pressure wraps, sodium restrictions, or keeping the legs elevated. Keeping her comfortable was an uphill battle.

She suffered from mild cognitive impairment, but was very well-versed regarding her dietary restrictions. One day she asked me, with the impression of defeatism stamped on her face and a sense of sorrow prominent in her tone, "Will I ever be able to eat a hamburger again?"

My dark brown eyes made contact with her pale blue eyes. I realized some of the things that I, a young and reasonably healthy adult, take for granted are small pleasures that many elderly nursing home residents will never enjoy again. Most, if not all, of these people will never take another vacation to a faraway city, state or country. Some will forever lose the ability to walk. Others will be robbed of their ability to talk after having a stroke. Still, others will never be able to enjoy a tasty meal due to dysphagia, feeding tubes, pureed textures, restrictive diets, or the notoriously bland foodstuffs commonly served to institutionalized elders.

Some Rules Were Made To Be Broken I did something I should not have done. I broke a rule. During my lunch break I visited a local fast food joint and ordered a hamburger with extra tomatoes. Since Billie spent the vast majority of her time in her room due to depression, smuggling the burger to her was an easier feat than I had expected. Her eyes lit up with joy and anticipation.

"Thank you, thank you, thank you!" she exclaimed. She kept her door closed and picked at the burger for several hours, eating the fixings individually before finally polishing the sandwich off. This was the first hamburger she had eaten in several years.

Billie died a couple of months later. She passed quietly, serenely, on her bed in the nursing home surrounded by the hospice nurse, a nursing student, and myself. She had two attentive adult children who visited frequently, but they did not want to be present during her final hour.

I broke a rule by supplying an elderly resident under my care with an unhealthy food item. But if it alleviated some of the bleakness of her existence during her final days on earth, I feel no shame for doing what I did. To every rule there's an exception.

Stupid rules are like unjust laws.... there's nothing wrong with breaking them.

Specializes in LTC,Hospice/palliative care,acute care.
HPNA.org EPERC The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization Here are some links to get you started with your proposal.
Specializes in ED, ICU, PSYCH, PP, CEN.

God bless you

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.

How ridiculous that a pt. on hospice couldn't have a food they craved because they were in a LTC. It makes you wonder if the people who come up with those rules actually think things through before they make a rule.

I think it's great that you did that. I just find it ridiculous that the facility maintained stringent dietary restrictions on a hospice patient. What could possibly be the rationale for that?

Our CMO/hospice patients can eat whatever the heck they want in our LTC facility. I can't imagine any of our MDs insisting on dietary restrictions under these circumstances. I've seen "food for comfort" quite a bit. Even in pts that aspirate. Fluid and sodium restrictions DCs, etc.

Even in non-terminal regular elderly LTC and/or dementia patients...these diets need to be as liberalized as possible. If I'm 90 in a nursing home I'm eating what I want.

I am diabetic, and when I am finally terminal, I want my doc to write for 'anything she desires to eat'. And I want my man, if I have one at the time, to get in bed with me and make love to me as much as I can tolerate!

I want to have one last orgasm just before I die!!!

So there!!!

Our hospice patients are mostly in-home but there are some we admit to LTC. They can eat and drink whatever they want. So sad to restrict things at end of life. Definitely need to educate more about palliative and hospice care.

Good for you for buying that hamburger. (I took a box of See's Candy to a patient a few weeks ago). :up:

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

I did the same thing with pizza. We had a Vietnam veteran on our long-term care floor a few years ago who was in incredibly rough shape....bilateral BKA, nearly blind, brittle diabetic, in chronic pain and on dialysis. He was only 60, but looked 80, and the poor man was FORBIDDEN to eat anything with any salt whatsoever. The facility's cooking was terrible, and he lay in bed day after day picking at food he didn't want and that no one with any taste buds whatsoever would have found appealing.

Worse, the care manager of this floor threatened to write up anyone caught sneaking food in to him (other than family, of course--she couldn't do anything about them). Well, I never was too big on dumb rules---I simply assumed that the people in those beds were grownups, and I wasn't about to dictate what they could and could not eat. One night, I ordered pizza for the staff.......poor "Larry" could smell it all the way down the hall in his room. Without hesitation I grabbed two pieces and wrapped them in a napkin, then took them to him, figuring if anyone was going to get written up, it was going to be me instead of the CNAs. I also figured it would be worth it.

I've never seen a more blissed-out expression than I saw on that gentleman's face as he savored his unexpected meal. Of course, the story got around the facility and I was indeed called into the RCM's office to explain myself. Here's where the advantages of age come in---as it happened, the RCM was considerably younger than I, and I thought she needed a couple of lessons in compassion and critical thinking. So I told her how it was, and how an occasional treat can give a chronically ill person a reason not to curse when they woke up in the morning and found that they were still here.

The write-up never happened....suffice it to say that she didn't approve of what I'd done, but she never mentioned it again, not even when she checked the refrigerator by his bed and found a piece of chocolate cake or a ham sandwich in it. ;)

Specializes in NICU, adult med-tele.
:inlove:

The Commuter & VivaLasViejas = you ROCK!

I hope when my time draws near I'll luck out and get nurses like you two!

God Bless you both.

Specializes in Medical Oncology, Alzheimer/dementia.

The CNAs on 2nd shift shared their soul food potluck with one of the residents. She had some ham hocks and peas. I came on for my night shift, and started my rounds. I went into her room, she was awake. She could barely contain herself, she was so excited to tell me about her meal she called me over and whispered, "I had a hock!". I said "pardon?" She said "I had a hock and some peas, and potatoe pie." Never saw her that happy before. It was beautiful.

Specializes in retired LTC.
I am diabetic, and when I am finally terminal, I want my doc to write for 'anything she desires to eat'. And I want my man, if I have one at the time, to get in bed with me and make love to me as much as I can tolerate!

I want to have one last orgasm just before I die!!!

So there!!!

I want to have a smile on my face when I go, too.

To OP & others - I too have 'bent' the rules at times. I think of J, an insulin-dependent diabetic with fluctuating levels. She had some dementia issues too.

I would bring DD donuts to the staff every payday, when one day J just snuck behind the desk and helped herself to one. For one donut ... she acted like a child snitch. How sad!

For the rest on my time there, on payday, I would buy J a separate chocolate chocolate donut. I then became her 'special friend' and she would follow my directions for care issues without problem because I was her 'friend". And there were no problems with her sugars, either.