A Patient Made Me Cry Today

My skin is really thick. I've seen a lot of things between being a nurse and a paramedic. I've seen abuse, neglect and death before. Today, IĀ got a patient from the emergency room with a massive infarct. The report I got never could have prepared me well for this patient. He truly broke my heart. Nurses Relations Article

When he arrived to the floor, I couldn't honestly tell if he was breathing. His gaze was fully deviated, he was contracted to one side, and had incredibly shallow, labored mouth breathing. I pulled him from the stretcher to the bed, got down to his eye level, held his hand and said "I'm allison, I'm going to be your nurse today." he pulled his hand away from me, completely frightened, and yelped out. I asked him a series of questions, but he had no answers. Just a wide eyed, terrified, deviated stare.

He was 88 years old and he looked like he was a survivor from auschwitz. He was so emaciated, he may have weighed 80 pounds soaking wet.... Upon assessment, I could actually see his guidewires from his pacemaker bulging through his skin. His skin turgor was so poor and he was so dehydrated that we were unable to place a peripheral line... And after two sticks from me, I gave up. He had been hurt enough.

His body was covered head to toe in bruises, in various stages of healing. They looked like palm prints and hand prints. His skin was totally ecchymotic and he had so many skin tears it took 12 pages of wound photos to document them all. His skin peeled back like the skin on a banana just by touching it... And on his back and his shoulders, a purple hand print that was probably very fresh.

I turned him over to assess his back. He yelped out again. His orifice was excoriated and bleeding and was probably the size of an apricot or small plum... It appeared that something was forced in it. He shook in fear and moaned loudly as the cna and I gave him a good bath, combed his matted hair, put him in a clean gown and applied lotion to soothe his dry skin.

I called the abuse hotline. I never intended to point a finger of blame... But someone had forgotten to treat this man like a human being. Social services came and did their own assessment and took lots of photos. He continued to moan, louder and louder. He pulled away every time we touched him as if we were going to hurt him. What happened apparently was he was at a nursing home until his medicare ran out... But made too much for medicaid, so he had been paying a "caregiver" to see to his needs at home. I didn't see this caregiver.. And I'm glad I didn't.. Because I may have said something very bad.

Lab called.... His troponin was 17. His infarct had spread to over 4 leads. His bp was dropping and his urine output was 0. I chased the doctor down to the icu to get a hospice referral and a dnr. I was not about to have to call a code on this man. The least I could have done was to get him a comfortable death. Paperwork was signed and hospice came to see the patient and agreed to take him at the end of my shift this evening.

I documented and documented. I turned him every hour, swabbed his mouth, made sure his skin was clean and dry, and went and sat for just a minute by the bed, to make sure he knew that if I he wanted to go, I would be there to sit with him. I didn't want him to die alone, not like that.

The paramedics came to pick him up and bring him to the hospice home. I signed his papers and helped them place him on the stretcher. He just kept moaning, and letting out these yelping noises. I walked them to the elevator and grabbed his hand and said "they are going to take you to the hospice house, so you can be cared for and comforted. It's ok to let go now." his eyes didn't move, but I knew he knew I was there.... Because tears started rolling down his cheeks.

And without saying a word for 12 hours, my patient made me cry.

May god bless him. I hope his ending is peaceful and that he is moved on to a much better place than was ever provided to him here. Today, I remembered why I became a nurse.

Specializes in EMS, ER, GI, PCU/Telemetry.
Allison: out of curiosity, did this elderly gentleman come from home? Or, was he sent to your hospital by a nursing home?

God bless you for your compassion and caring.

apparently, according to his case manager, he was at a nursing home until his medicare SNF days ran out... but did not qualify for medicaid, so he kind of fell through the cracks... and thats where this "caregiver" came along.

i saw his obit in the paper yesterday... and i actually had a big feeling of relief for him...i just know he is in such a better place now and is not alone and suffering anymore!!

Specializes in ER, TRAUMA, MED-SURG.

Well, Allison - that man was sure blessed to be cared for by you while he was still here with us. I just wish he could have found a sweet compassionate soul to help him before his situation became what it was.

I would consider myself fortunate to have you care for my family member. Like I said in an earlier post, I shudder to think what had been going through that poor man's mind when all that had been happening. No one should have to go through that. No one.

Anne, RNC :yeah::yeah:

Specializes in Cardiac Telemetry, Emergency, SAFE.

Flightnurse,

I hope I can be as compassionate and caring as you one day.

Thank you for doing what was right and human and decent. :loveya:

I also got misty eyed...:sniff:

Alison this man is watching over you now...

To the OP: You are proof that there are angels on Earth.

Specializes in Trauma/Burn ICU, Neuro ICU.

Thank you, Dear Allison, for posting this story, and God Bless you!:redbeathe:angel: You're an Angel.

This story just brought tears to my eyes. I don't understand how anybody could be that cruel to someone. Thank you for bringing that man some comfort in his last moments.

Specializes in Psych, LTC, M/S, Supervisor, MRDD,.

THANK YOU FOR POSTING THAT STORY.......HE WILL NEVER KNOW BUT HE HAS TOUCHED THE HEARTS OF MANY. I DON'T EVEN KNOW HOW THAT STUFF CAN HAPPEN!! :cry:

i have been crying on and off since i got home (and i don't think i can blame this one on my hormones). i really am just kind of haunted by it right now. i just feel awful. i am not much of the type to take work home with me... but my god that poor man, i can't even imagine what kind of horror he had lived through.

thanks for all the encouragement, i needed to let it out. i tried so hard to hold it back at work, because i had 7 other patients, and i kept pawning of my red eyes on my allergies.... but i honestly am really shaken over this patient.

i was just on the phone talking to my mom whose been a nurse for almost 30 years... and she said that it makes you remember, that when you have those patients who get on your last nerve, who just want the extra minutes of your time, etc... you could be the last person to ever care for them and love them.... something that i think i from time to time forget, because i'm so busy with charting and medications and this and that and the other thing.....

somebody loved his man once. i hope he sees them again when his journey is over.

i need to go to bed.

Hi

My name is Teri. I live in Florida and I'm a CNA in a LTC and I start my LPN class on July 23rd. They say there are angels here, on earth. I just met one.

The really important things we learn can never be taught in a classroom....we learn them from simply living. And, it's obvious that you learned to be a caring, compassionate person from your Mom.

One of the saddest things I've learned is how cruel one human being can be to another. But I'm sure that's why God sent angels like you....to care for the vulnerable and to inspire the rest of us to take that one minute and "just be there" for someone who needs us.

Whenever I have a difficult patient to care for, (or I'm really pressed for time and rushing around) before I walk into their room, I close my eyes and tell myself "This is someone's child...at some point this person was a baby who someone loved very much...take care of that person's child the same way I would want someone to take care of my kids someday when they are old and/or sick". It helps.

You took really good care of that poor man and, somewhere, there is a Mom and a Dad who are blessing you for it.

Sounds like elder abuse at its worse. I hope they focus on his 'caregiver'.

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..

Allison:icon_hug::redpinkheI truly pray that that dear old man you cared for will remember you, and how kind and gentle your tender loving care for him was that day. God bless you dear heart. You are what real nursing is all about.

VENGENCE IS MINE SAYS THE LORD. THE ONE WHO ABUSED THAT DEAR OLD MAN WHO WAS UNABLE TO DEFEND HIMSELF WILL ONE DAY HAVE TO ANSWER FOR WHAT THAT PERSON DID TO HIM.

I'm a nursing student. In saying that, I mean just starting.

I am so very appreciative of you sharing this very moving incident. My heart was breaking as I was reading this, truly this poor man was not being taken care of. It's such a shame, and we can go on forever pointing blame.... But your actions were no less than an angel to this man. If that was my family member (I would not have let him gotten that way) I would be so honored that you were with him. How comforting to him that you were by his side. I aspire to learn from your experience.