If You Give a Patient a Cookie

I am under the impression that it's impossible not to take pleasure in at least a little bit of dark humor as a nurse. It just comes with the territory. Much thanks to the original children's book this story is a satire of. Also to my coworker who noted that answering call lights is often like this book. Give a patient something little, and they just want more! Gotta love 'em. Nurses Humor Article

If you give a patient a cookie, they'll want a glass of milk.

If you give them a glass of milk, they'll probably need to go to the bathroom.

They'll be too weak to get out of bed so you'll have them use the bedpan, but they won't be able to go in that.

So you'll bladder scan them and see they have 900ml's of urine in their bladder, which you will promptly proceed to straight cath.

When you stick the catheter in, you'll probably meet resistance, but with a little elbow grease, you'll soon strike gold. However, it will only be later when the patient has a temp of 38.5 that you realize you accidentally contaminated the catheter and caused a UTI.

For this you'll certainly hang some antibiotics. Unfortunately this will probably cause the patient to have some major diarrhea. By the third complete bed change you'll realize that this patient would benefit from a rectal tube for which you'll get an order and go to place. However, the patient will probably vasovagal when your padded finger penetrates his rectum a little too forcefully, which you'll then report to the doctor.

The doctor will then consult neurology, cardiology, endocrinology, PT, OT, ST, and a chaplain for good measure. They'll likely all take turns calling your mobile phone while you're elbows deep in doodoo. You'll answer their every wild question from memory, phone sandwiched between cheek and shoulder.

By now though, the patient will be in pain, which the doctor will kindly order acetaminophen 81 mg Q Day for. You'll be forced to try to remember those non-pharmacological interventions for pain that they taught you in nursing school. You'll try showing the patient the beautiful landscapes on the screensaver to your portable computer, attempting to sooth him with guided imagery. His pain will probably rise to a 10 out of 10 with this intervention, so you'll have him close his eyes for some progressive muscle relaxation.

When you tell him to open his eyes again, he won't. The bedside monitor will then start dinging that his O2 sat is 82% and rapidly declining. You'll sternal rub him and shout "Mr. Velasquez! Emilio!!! Abre los ojos!!!!!" to which he will not respond. You'll call a staff assist which will bring 60 people to the room. The patient will be intubated, sedated, and paralyzed. His new diagnosis will be urosepsis and he'll need a central line and an art line placed.

However, when the intern overconfidently attempts the central line, he'll accidentally puncture the lung and cause a pneumothorax, adding a needle decompression and chest tube insertion to the impressive roster of procedures he's done now that he's finally a doctor.

While turning your patient every 2 hours in attempt to prevent him from getting bedsores, the shift in intrathoracic pressures will probably compress his vena cava to the point of cardiac arrest. You will promptly begin high quality chest compressions, advise someone nearby to activate the emergency response system, and apply an AED, but to no avail. The code will be called and the patient will be dead.

After finishing his post mortem care, you'll sit down to mount the heart rhythm strips to his chart. Another nurse will proceed from your other room to say, "I answered Mr. Jones' call light while you were in that code. Can he have a cookie?" You'll look up at the clock and realize that the next shift comes in in 10 minutes. "Yeah, sure," you'll reply, "but he'll probably want a glass of milk with it too..."

if-you-give-a-patient-a-cookie.pdf

That was great :cheeky:

Very relatable. Especially now with my dad just having surgery and then being in icu with everything possible happening (including rectal tube) and now on telemetry. Praying that we are on the road to recovery now. It's been a long road with lots of bumps so far. Praying for no more bumps!

Specializes in Rehab; Women's and Children's.

This is a great story. I am glad to run into Mully once again and see that he is doing well. :up:

Moral of the story: steer clear of that hospital!

Specializes in critical care, LTC.

Did he have a problem with gluten or perhaps an allergy to the peanut butter or chocolate in the cookie? Will the lawyer say you should have checked the chart before giving said cookie? Is it possible he aspirated the milk? Did you do a swallow screen first? I'm sure it was all the nurses fault. The hospitals insurance will cover their malpractice while kissing your butt bye bye!

Specializes in Peds acute, critical care, Urgent Care.

if you give a patient a cookie....

they will ask for a hit of Dilaudid to wash it down. O did I type that?!?! I meant morph- MILK MILK> I honestly meant MILK. :)

Specializes in Hospice.

Is this book in print??? Because I'd seriously buy like 10 copies...

Is this available in a hard copy to purchase??? I thought it was so creative... and true! I wanted to give a copy to my instructors before our pinning ceremony. Or do I have permission to print it? I would give full credit to the authors of course. Thank you for sharing!

I think we've all had one of those shifts.... yep... here comes a tear with the chuckle.

Specializes in Rehab, Med Surg, Home Care.

See, now I thought it was going to go something like "you'll have to do a fingerstick, and his glucose will be high, and you'll have to get the lab to verify it, and you'll need to call the MD for extra insulin coverage, etc, etc...

Silly me ;)