Ever had 2 pts die on you in 1 day?

Nurses General Nursing

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I've been interning in the ICU for less than a month and a double whammy like this is something I wasn't prepared for today. The first pt was a guy who got hit off his motorcycle by a speeding car. Unfortunately for him, he wasn't wearing any protective headgear and he landed head-first on a concrete pavement. Shame, shame. He was a pretty young fella, too. He was allready hangin by a thread when they sent him up from the OR, and he passed a few hours after he came to the unit.

The other case was an older adult who had been admitted many times before for FTT. This man lives with a wife who claims to "take very good care of him", but he was in extremely bad shape: very badly malnourished and dehydrated with severe electrolyte imblances. The man's thigh's were as thin as a wrist, and he had decubs developing in a lot of the bony prominences. Worst of all, he had a hx of cardiac problems and he also had a DNR so you can already see where this is going with the K+ imbalance. We were trying to bring him up a bit with IV fluids with Kcl, and the doc had to get pretty aggressive with the therapy but the pt just wasn't responding to it at all.

It was real drag doing post mortem care. One one hand we're trying to calm down hysterical family members who want to spend time with the body, and on the other hand the charge nurse is whispering to ask if could try to move things along because they need the beds for other patients. Our ICU was really hoppin' today. Almost half the pt's were sent down to tele to make room for new admits.

Specializes in MDS coordinator, hospice, ortho/ neuro.

I used to work on a hospice unit. It often seemed that patients would go in bunches of 2-3 in the same day or same hour. We used to say that the bus had pulled in. In the nursing home it always seemed like we'd lose several at the change of seasons and after the christmas holidays ( and of course during flu season). I've always wondered how much things like tidal forces, moon phases, weather shifts, etc had to do with this kind of thing.

Specializes in Home Health.

In my first few months in ICU we had a day when 3 died in a day.

The first was a burn pt, severe burns of face chest and neck, he lost his airway during report, due to edema, anesthesia could not get another one, and by then, trach was too late

Second one was an elderly woman who c/o H/A while playing cards w friends and collapsed, ruptured cerebral aneursym, she was a DNR.

Third was a surgical FUBAR (F Up Beyond All Repair) and had been so ill adn hanging by a thread for a while. Family would not make her a DNR, which may have been at the encouragement of the surgeon. It was a short code thank God, but an unecessary one none the less.

This was all before lunch. The beds were filled before the end of the shift.

My first ever night shift as an RN in the ER, I lost 2 pts. Got me the nickname Angel of Death for quite a while. ;)

Healthcare workers develop a sick sense of humor to cope don't we....

Yes it has happened to me and I got teased (and hugged) about it.

I'm sure the public at large wouldn't understand us teasing each other with such a nickname...that is why it is good for us to come here and vent with each other.

Specializes in LDRP; Education.
My jaw is really on the floor now, Q! That's a miracle baby for sure! (Please tell me that the mother did not get custody....)

Of course she got custody. :rolleyes:

The weird thing of it all was that these cases (both the 25 y/o and the baby in the toilet) are common, but to take care of both in one shift was just the strangest dichotomy ever.

I have lost 2 patients in one shift as well and once had a reputation that still haunts me to this day - once called the angel of death like another poster (ERNurse752) was.

I like to think those that are ready to pass from this world to the next find a helping soul, someone that they feel comfortable enough with, to let go of this world and move on into the next, like a guide. Kind of a spiritual thing I guess.

Still the loss of patients, even when it is their time can be hard on you.

:Holly1: Happy Holidays to you all.

A fellow senior nursing student and I lost 3, one 3-11. We were so busy, we didn't have time to think about it until later. It was a medical floor with elderly patients. None was a surprise.

KNOCK ON WOOD, I have been a nurse over 6 years and have never had one of my patients die on my shift (sheer luck, I'm not super nurse). I have worked just about everywhere from ICU to ER.

I have had 2 die and 1 code in a 12 hour-shift. One of the patients that died was a DNR, but a few days prior when I laughed, and told him he was not going to die on my shift, he replied "I will because you are my angel". He was transferred to another floor the next morning and I was floated to that floor 2 days later and he died at 7:30am when I was about to leave on Christmas Day. The others happened earlier in the shift although they were not my patients, I assisted. The only thing that helped is that the family said all he talked about was me for the prior 2 days. The man and his wife had been married almost 60 years, so it was sad to see her calling his name out. I never minded working holidays, because I don't usually celebrate them, but that day haunts me every Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. One nurse really "broke down" because she had lost a daughter on Christmas Day and another her husband. So we all just had a cry-out that morning. It's funny they say "give empathy, not sympathy". Well that was like family...so we all had sympathy.

Specializes in Med-Surg, Geriatric, Behavioral Health.

Yes, I have. It makes a very unpleasant day.

Lost 3 in one shift when I worked LTC. All together we lost 30 that month! Crazy!:uhoh3:

Specializes in SICU-MICU,Radiology,ER.

Came on board in the morning, transfered two out right away, admitted two who both died (not DNR), did postmortum, then admitted two more.

Not two long ago both patients on both sides of me died (4)-

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