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."
Not in charting, but I've answered calls and was told by a family member "we gave the depository but he still didn't produce" [stool].
Also, family members pick up on things that nurses may miss (esp. in home care). A pt's wife called me once claiming his urine had a loud odor. I had never heard that one before.
I was once told that she knew her husband's sugar was high because he tasted sweet. I didn't even go there.
Often times, in termial care patients report visions of previously deceased loved ones. This is a common phenomenon, and is usually discussed with family members as a way of preparing them, sometimes giving an idea of imminent death. I was called to visit a patient once by a frantic family member. Unable to get enough valuable info on the phone, I finally went over. The patient's 23 year old grandson was scared to death, sitting out side on the front porch, refusing to accomany me inside because of ghosts, also he was demanding that we get the patient out(who was bedbound and incoherent). Poor thing. I ended up staying for 2 hours until his mom came home from work (he stayed outside the whole time-talking to me through a window.
Not a blooper, but 'cover my a**' time:
IV finished. Numerous phone calls to MD have failed to produce follow up orders re. D/C'ing midline IV catheter. Patient threatening to D/C cannula himself if nurse refuses to do so. Midline removed, cannula intact, site clear.
The patient actually had the dressing half off his arm before I finally gave in, and agreed to do it. The next day, the doctor FINALLY called, and said we could stop the IV, and pt. was to come in for a followup exam next week. Oh, yeah, the drug was vancomycin, and the doctor gave NO instructions re. having his levels tested throughout the entire 2 weeks he was on the antibiotic!
cant help but tell my little story.... i have an elderly pt (about 82yo) very sweet lady.we used tympanic thermometers in the hospital and as soon as the thermometer was in her ear she immediately said "HELLO"(she thought it was a telephone). boy, we were laughing so hard that her false teeth fell off.
QuoteOriginally posted by Jay-JayI think it's posted elsewhere on this site: the physician couldn't think of the correct name for the incentive spirometer, so he wrote: suck balls QID!
:roll Read all 14 pages this one still has me in tears.
Hubby thinks I've lost it. All I can do is point. So he reads it
He certainly likes the order
Thanks for making my day
QuoteOriginally posted by LPN2Be2004Med order for "Albuteral, IV". Seen this one a few times from the same Dr.
I'm assuming ya just hook the inhalor to the saline loc and press away? lmao
Actually, there is an intravenous formulation of salbutamol, (another name for albuterol) which has been used with great success in severe, life-threatening asthma. We run it as an infusion at least once a year in our PICU, often combined with neuromuscular blockade to decrease competition with the ventilator, and ketamine which relaxes smooth muscle. We had an asthmatic teenager in the unit this Summer who nearly died, and would have without intravenous salbutamol, so I'm not laughing.
dianah, ASN
8 Articles; 4,724 Posts
Admissions clerk note: Diagnosis: Pre-infarted angina.