Bad Experience with Nurses at hospital, rethinking my major now.

Nurses General Nursing

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I will start off by explaining that I am a nursing student. I got into nursing because I love to work hard, work on my feet, be challenged, and most importantly help others. I am planning a trip to India to volunteer at an HIV clinic, because for me it’s not about money, It’s about helping others and giving them support when the need it the most.

This weekend, a close friend of mine assaulted me. I had no idea that would happen, and it was emotionally traumatizing. I called the police, but 15 minutes later they still had not arrived. I asked my friend to drive me to the hospital because I was having vision disturbances and vertigo, and I was worried about having major head trauma.

My friend dropped me off and went back to her house to wait for the police and tell them where we were. I was alone, and taken back immediately because of my facial contusions and bleeding from my nose. The nurse who greeted me was unpleasant to say the least. The first thing out of her mouth was “Why did you let this happen? Why did they do this to you?” She began to lecture me, as I sat bleeding, dizzy, and unable to see about making better friends.

I don’t do drugs, I don’t hang out with “shady” people, this isn’t something I ever foresaw happening to me. No one who knew this person thought in a million years he would assault me. A minute later I went to the bathroom and I forgot where I was. I was extremely dizzy and began to panic. I walked out into the hallway, walked up to a staff member and said “I need help, something is wrong with me, I don’t know where I am” She shouted at me to go back to my room. I didn’t know where “my room” was, so I stood there “I can’t breathe” I said. I was having a panic attack.

She took me back to my room and said “You are in the hospital. There is nothing wrong with you. The doctor will come in to evaluate you soon. Take this” and handed me two pills. I asked what they were and she said “Calm down, Just take it!” and left the room.

5 minutes later, two nurses had an argument outside my room about one nurse who “had an attitude” they began to curse at each other, shouting about some other situation, not taking into consideration there was a terrified victim of assault three feet away, hearing all of this.

Maybe my friend should have stayed with me, but she left because she wanted to police to know where I was. She came right back with them about a half hour later. The nurse acted like my friend dropped me off and left me there because she had no respect for me. She acted like I did this to myself, telling me I needed a “new group of friends”

Just this experience is making me think maybe I don’t want to go into nursing. If I had been working, I would have told that nurse to calm down, and to talk to the patient like a person. She had no idea what my situation was, and yet she chose to lecture me when I was scared and vulnerable. The nurses fighting outside my room was just totally unprofessional. I had no idea someone who worked so hard to get this degree would act like that. I feel like if these are going to be my coworkers, then I don’t want to be in this field. I guess what I am hoping for is for someone to tell me not all hospital envoirnments are like that, and that we are allowed to be nice and caring to our patients. I don’t want to become bitter and unpleasant, like these nurses were. This whole experience was so humiliating; I wish I could have been treated with compassion.

OP I'm so sorry you went through this. I can't imagine how hard this must have been.

I second others, don't make a decision just yet, and better yet, use it to light your fire to be a great nurse. Maybe you'll get one of their jobs. They obviously don't value it, or human life and emotion for that matter.

Sending up prayers for you. :)

If nursing is your passion, keep going for it. These nurses do not represent every nurse and not every nurse is miserable in their job. I know plenty of nurses who still love being a nurse after many years. You should use this negative experience to enhance the type of nurse you know you want to be and what you don't want to be. We obviously need good nurses and you can use this experience to give yourself more drive to be one of the good ones. I'm sorry that happened to you.

Specializes in ER,m/S,tele, stepdown.

That does sound like a ridiculous situation but definitely NOT the norm. Yes nurses get stressed and yes they will argue with each other because they are human. However the way they spoke to you is inappropriate for both nurses and human beings in general. There are A LOT of annoying,dramatic,manipulative and drug seeking patients and usually I fan keep my cool. But even in the worst situation I wouldn't speak to a patient like they spoke to you. Worst come to worse I would just walk away and or have one of my co workers speak to them. In response to some other comments I don't think you will be a "wash out nurse". Sometimes people who are jaded or been in nursing too long become insensitive and forgot that the core of being a nurse is kindness caring and compassion not just robotically and militantly doing your job according to policy and procedure and forgetting others have feelings. I work in the ER where it can completely suck sometimes but my cow workers are awesome and we work as a team from physicians down to housekeeping. So in short follow your passion and use your kindness to do what you were meant to do which is help not berate.

Specializes in Home Health.
sorry, that's my initial response. note to op, nurses are people, they get jaded and cynical from the stuff that happens on the job. what you experienced are coping skills that they use. No I'm not defending them, just explaining. they aren't supported in how to handle all the feelings that are generated in the work environment. your expectations are unrealistic and you most likely will wash out as a nurse (ie, your head is so far in the clouds that your can't do the actual job)

The nurses the OP encountered in the ER were completely out of line. This OP does not have her head 'far in the clouds'.

It is a nurse's duty to treat all patients with respect and dignity and the nurse in this case certainly did not do so. Her actions are reportable and may well result in termination!

Are you a nurse?

Specializes in Home Health.

OP, I would recommend a call to the administration department of the hospital you were seen at to file a complaint.

Specializes in Home Health.
I am going to comment just once and let this go.....

Really?:eek: You can't possibly be serious......that's all you have to say? Wow......:cool:

I don't think it's possible that the poster you responded to is a real nurse! Doesn't have a clue.

Please take the time to file an unemotional, factual complaint with the hospital. They should be made aware of unprofessional behavior. Being professional means being a professional. As far as it deterring you -- please be reminded every profession and area of work has wacky people, and we can't judge a profession by the behavior of one individual.

Specializes in Infectious Disease, Neuro, Research.

There are unprofessional professionals in every profession.;) Don't let it bother you. Its not about what they are, but what you will be.

Fair warning, I'm not big on "theraputic/reflective communication". If I'm using it, I'm probably lying to you.

In a couple of weeks, and after talking about the incident with some good friends, come back and re-evaluate things. People will try to harm you, physically, emotionally, what have you, especially in a closely interpersonal field such as nursing (or the secretary at a front desk, the girl behind the counter at Mcdonald's, etc., etc..) There are no "unpredictable" assaults, though they may be unforseen.

You did not do anything wrong. However, something in your learning process told you that something dangerous wasn't, when it in fact was.

I would suspect that there were some warnings that for a variety of reasons, your unconscious decided to ignore, either because the person was "fun", there was a party, there were other friends, etc..

Rule of Stupids (not saying you're stupid, but before you do something, ask, is this...?)

1) Don't do Stupid Things (get drunk, do drugs, street-race, run with scissors...)

2) Don't hang with Stupid People (people engaged in #1)

3) Don't go to Stupid Places (where #s 1 & 2 meet)

My wife considers me extremely boring and vaguely paranoid. I've also worked lots of stabbings, shootings, muggings, beatings, etc., coming from fairs, partys, and various social gatherings. My "hobbies" are psychology and risk assessment related to learning and behavioral theory, so...:D I also have 3 grown daughters who will say, "Yeah, yeah, I know, the Rule...!" Everything in life is a risk balance of some sort.

You're alive, you'll soon be healthy again. Don't let this impede you, but absolutely learn from the event.

God bless and stay safe, young lady.;)

Specializes in MS, Hospice, LTC.

Wow! I can't believe this happened to you. OP, you experienced something horrible, and then insult was added to injury when you went to get necessary treatment. I'm so, so, so sorry that you had such an awful experience.

I completely understand feeling tired, stressed, and overworked, but that's no excuse to treat someone the way you were treated. Not only were you physically wounded, but emotionally. I wouldn't wait to write a letter of complaint if I were you. Nurses are professionals who should know better, and nurses like the ones you described make the whole profession look bad. People that are responsible for taking care of someone else do get worn down, and emotionally drained. That said, I'm a firm believer that a sick day should be used for a mental health day if you can't check your issues at the door when arrive to work. Patients and their families, and fellow coworkers shouldn't have to deal with someone elses issues like that- we're already stressed enough. Now, I'm not saying I haven't had to step off the floor, or even go sit in my car and have a good cry- but I don't/ won't let myself bite off the heads of my coworkers or patients. If I do, I want them to hold me accountable. We all have to be aware of how we come across.

I worked as a PCT in the float pool of a teaching hospital while I was in nursing school. I saw nurses of all sorts- mean, rude, and unprofessional to some of the best examples of professional, caring, compassionate nurses that I've ever seen. I was so turned off by the negative nurses until I chose to focus on the positive ones. Let the positive nurses motivate you.

Actually, you probably will not experience the kind of thing you did in your dental job as a nurse, much. You may if you work in plastics or closely with another type of surgeon.

Somebody else might better explain. This is really, I believe why nursing can turn out to be exactly opposite of what people go into it for to begin with.

You are right to reconsider. Take it all in, what you have experienced. After all you did experience what nursing is to some extent, although that was pretty bad, I do not believe it was a "zebra". You are seeing things you need to be aware of.

sorry, that's my initial response. note to op, nurses are people, they get jaded and cynical from the stuff that happens on the job. what you experienced are coping skills that they use. No I'm not defending them, just explaining. they aren't supported in how to handle all the feelings that are generated in the work environment. your expectations are unrealistic and you most likely will wash out as a nurse (ie, your head is so far in the clouds that your can't do the actual job)

You were the nurse assigned to her that night weren't you???

In all seriousness, you are the kind of person who makes people scared to enter this field. I dont ever want to turn out like that, but like other posters have stated, these stories will help me make sure I don't.

Every job can leave people 'jaded', it is not an acceptable excuse. I really hope your not scheduled to work today.... :down:

That experience should motivate you even MORE to become a nurse because you would want more compassionate and dedicated nurses out there, not those nurses who lost their desire in serving people.

There are many dedicated nurses out there. I'm going to start working at a unit that I have been in for Management and Administration and they are AWESOME. They inspire me to continue working with them in providing the best care for their patients. They are warm and willing to teach me. You will encounter nurses like this too! Not only nurses that you encountered in the ER.

Good luck in your nursing career! You will be a great nurse since you love to serve others! :-)

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