Found in the History and Physical section of a patient's chart who had experienced visual hallucinations while ill:
Quote"Patient vehemently denies any auditory, tactile, or old factory hallucinations."
This isn't exactly a blooper, but I thought it was rather funny. A peds resident had written a consult for one of our ED attendings:
"Your help with IV access for this child on long-term antibiotics. I tried X3 and failed. Can you help us out?"
The attending's reply read:
"I tried.
I succeeded"
Knowing the attending, I can hear him saying it out loud before he wrote it!:roll Reading this made the hour-plus it took me to wade thru the chart well worth it.
QuoteOriginally posted by boobaby42I have a bad habit of spelling pus or puss, oh heck, which ever, wrong. Everybody gets quite a jolt reading my notes decribing an infection. Pus filled or puss filled. You decide.
Ummmmm.......how you spell it could mean a difference in the location of the infection......(get it? )
QuoteOriginally posted by LilgirlRNI took care of a bedbound patient once who was just a litttle bit eccentric. She was perfectly well groomed, no bedsores, had round the clock sitters but wouldn't let anyone touch her feet. The H&P ended with this line..."And she has the longest toenails I've ever seen in my whole life"
LMAO! I don't know why, but of all these entries, this one made me spit my pop laughing!
These are great!
nursemartha
7 Posts
I review medical records all day and have come across some really wierd ones.
"from both flebitis" (thrombophlebitis?)
"very close veins" (varicose?)
"patient is matching his eyes and his nose" (I's & O's?)
" no evidence of libido on lower extremities" (livido?)
"paralyzed with the neck team" (Anectine?)
"ptosis given @ 2 mu for induction of labor" (Pitocin?)
But I guess my all time favorite is "two lane hospital" (Tulane)