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."
One busy day in the ED, a doc told me to set up for a pelvic exam in room 10.
Imagine my suprise (and the patient's!) when I wheeled a pelvic cart into the room and HE apparently knew what it was because HE said "Oh, I don't think so!" I had to inform the doc that the male patient refused the procedure...
oooohhh and my husband is an ICU nurse, he said one dr. wrote in the patients chart...."if patient codes, be sure to SLOW code him, IF he makes it through the night, get chest xray"...my husband called him and said "i dont think you should of wrote this in the chart....the doctor first couldnt understand why but he must of consulted with peers because he was on the floor 15 min later and re-wrote the order...thankfully for his sake his had been the only order on that page so he could just throw it away
Just last night at work I checked an H&P - the admitting Dx was CVA, but the history stated that the patient tripped and fell at home, hit his head, had a subdural hematoma, a subarachnoid hemorrhage, a non-displace occipital fx...and NO mention of a CVA anywhere in the history. TBI or CHI alone would have been good enough to get this guy into RHB, where I work - the doc didn't have to find some Dx that wasn't substantiated by the hx! The surgical history, Item 2. was "Awake, alert and oriented repaired in 2003." Maybe a lobotomy?? It must have worked, whatever it was, because this poor guy has no retention of anything, and can't seem to remember much of the past either.
Savvy
grace90, LPN, LVN
763 Posts
Maybe the doctor bit him because he got tired of the pt coming in for ridiculous complaints.