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 is from a chart of an elderly lady from one of our "Higher Learning Centers" who had had a mastectomy, has alzheimers, and is a bit combative:
.....left breast still missing (they grow back??), I was beat off before I could get a good listen (that may be too much information)...
This same doc has also written diagnosis as "Pork Chop enteritis." and has asked patients if they want a pine box or treatment..
I do medicare charting and we frequently write "staff to assist pt with meals, ADL's" and etc.. Anyway I had just finished a 6 week course of Micro HELLLLL ,I went to work one weekend looking over my charting and instead of writing staff I had wrote STAPH on every chart....... :rotfl: :rotfl: . MY whole unit laughed for weeks however the big boss didnt think it was that funny!!!!:rotfl:
Here are some of my favorites:
1. A patient had died and was found in this unfortunate condition by her physician during early morning rounds. The primary nurse charted: "Dr. X walked into room and patient's heart stopped." :chuckle
2. Actual entry of a staff nurse that we were assigned to during clinicals: "Pt. expelled a large green turd."
3. We coded an elderly man briefly one night a little after 2 o'clock in the morning. The ER doc said the patient was too stiff--rigor had already set in--obviously a lost cause. Unfortunately, the nurse taking care of him had already finished his charting out and had a 6 o'clock entry that matched all the other entries timed from midnight on: "Pt. asleep, resp. eupneic, no s/s distress."
My own mistakes.......
As a nursing student and doing clinicals in a nursing home I charted a patient was molting ......my instructor asked me if my patient was a bird.
Then one day while working in the ICU it was a particularly hectic day one of my patients died. I charted the death and circumstances on the wrong patient. Fortunately another nurse caught it although it was two days later when she was reading the nurses notes on her patient.
AHarri66 said:Found in the History and Physical section of a patient's chart who had experienced visual hallucinations while ill:"Patient vehemently denies any auditory, tactile, or old factory hallucinations."
YIKES!
An actual order in a patient's chart who was a very non-compliant diabetic refusing to eat his prescribed diet:
Change diet to 10,000 calorie ADA diet
Back the food truck up to the patient's mouth and dump it in
Even funnier, it was an endocrinologist that wrote it! I guess we all get tested by some patients...
kberl said:An actual order in a patient's chart who was a very non-compliant diabetic refusing to eat his prescribed diet:Change diet to 10,000 calorie ADA diet
Back the food truck up to the patient's mouth and dump it in
Even funnier, it was an endocrinologist that wrote it! I guess we all get tested by some patients...
Change in diet order $50.
Endochrinologist order $150.
Mental picture of back food truck up to Patient's mouth and dump it in PRICELESS!!
Ronna
27 Posts
Maybe they thought that he had drowned. able to sink