Published
Hey all new to the board, thought we could share some strang encounters in triage......
...as the 24yr male entered triage I asked what's wrong today? He replies my "ovories" hurt...... there is a time for pt education and there is a time when it's not....this is clearly one of those time its not.....
Whats yours?
JBL:sofahider
Nurse: " What brings you to the ER today?"Pt:" Something going on down there"
Nurse: "Down where?"
Pt: "Down there" Pointing below the counter
Nurse: " Mamam, where down there?" (Pointing for effect)
Pt: " You know down there where I heat hotdogs"
Nurse: "What?"
Pt: " I warm hotdogs for my babydaddy down there and I think one is stuck and stinking"
:barf01:
OH MY GOD! I am working an ER rotation, only my second ever, tonight, and this both humors and scares the crap out of me.
A friend works in an ER a few counties over, and the had a lady come in complaining of a yeast infection a few months back. Come to find out she had rotted strawberries stuck down there. With maggots.....
I liked reading about the triage note that took 3 minutes to read.
My little incident was amusing as well. I got the triage slip and started towards it when I could see from afar that it was filled! It was only the front but it was a spiral of words starting at the bottom and going around the entire paper
I thought oh yeah....this triage process is going to be fun!
Had a little old lady yesterday who stated "I stopped breathing for 3 seconds last night"...um, if you are waiting 3 seconds between breaths, you are breathing 20 resps/min...??!?!?
Okay, I'm being obnoxiously pedantic here :icon_roll, but...
With a 'standard' respiratory cycle of 3 seconds (RR of 20), we have a usual ratio of about 1:2. One second inhalation to two seconds exhalation. Genuine pauses are from end-exhalation, and don't count as part of that cycle. No matter how you count those, however, if her exhalation (plus pause?) is three seconds, then any inhalation time means a respiratory rate less than 20. If she's doing 1:3, then the rate is about 15. If her inhalation side of the ratio is less than 1, then the RR is a little higher. If her inhalation is more than 1, then the RR is even less than 15.
I know, pedantic. Sorry! But when you go to set up or manage a vent, the cycle and ratio do become relevant...
Either way, of course, your position is correct. A 3 second pause doesn't qualify as apneic episode.
Now, how did she know how long she'd paused? Hmmm....
Medic2RN, BSN, RN, EMT-P
1,576 Posts
Complaint: "Clob Boob"
I called the patient back and asked him what he wrote. He had no idea.
"Did you write this?"
Pt: Yes Maam
"It looks like you wrote 'clob boob'. Is there something wrong with your boob?"
Pt: No
Ummm, okay, so why did you come here today??