Dec 8, 20169 yr Can a patient be alert and oriented but drowsy? More Like This NICU, Neonatal Anyone dislike NICU during orientation, but grow to love it? 2 Replies Active 05/10/2026 05:07 PM Nurse Residency Programs MOUNT SINAI ORIENTATION - NEW GRAD NURSE 2 Replies Active 04/06/2026 03:11 PM
Dec 8, 20169 yr Can a patient be alert and oriented but drowsy?I'd typically use "drowsy" in place of "alert" if that were the case.
Dec 8, 20169 yr Lethargic is one of our charting options and I usually make the comment "sleepy" attached to it in the free text area.
Dec 8, 20169 yr A drowsy person isn't alert. A person driving while drowsy is dangerous, a person driving while alert is not.Are you having trouble with how to chart someone who is lethargic?
Dec 8, 20169 yr Depends on what you mean by drowsy. Sleeping when you entered the room, they wake up with little stimuli, answer all questions and participate in assessment, and then fall back to sleep when you are done? Or are they falling asleep the moment you stop talking? Are the falling asleep during conversation? I know I've charted many, many times(for our charting system it was AWAKE, alert and oriented as WNL) "Patient sleeping upon entering room. Awakens for assessment, answers questions appropriately, patient states "I'm tired today, didn't sleep well last night" fell asleep following assessement, will continue to monitor." There are just too many factors to determine if "drowsy" is the correct term
Can a patient be alert and oriented but drowsy?