First Impressions Matter, B**ch!!!!

Nurses General Nursing

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:( Yanno, I always try to make a good first impression with patients and their families. It freakin' matters. It sets the whole tone, and it really makes a difference in what kind of rapport you can develop with your patients.

I had a special consult today in my recent quest re: possible ttc. The office nurse, the ONLY nurse btw, was a total rude, snotty little twit. This was a visit regarding which antidepressants I can and can't take during pregnancy. It was a one time consult, damn it. It had nothing to do with my physical health, no meds were going to be prescribed, NOTHING. MERELY A CONSULT OF THIS PARTICULAR DOC'S MEDICAL OPINION. NOTHING ELSE.

Office b**ch tells me as a part of her duties, each pt. gets BP/P/R and WEIGHT.......................................................

Folks, my DOG doesn't even know my weight, okay? I don't weigh for ANYBODY. I DON'T CARE WHO YOU ARE. UNLESS MY MEDICATION IS WEIGHT BASED, YOU WILL NOT KNOW MY WEIGHT. PERIOD. END OF STORY. So I politely tell her I will decline weighing, and she looks at me, up and down, pursed lips, and says, "well, we do have women who just don't look, you know."

I wanted to smack her. I am immediately on the defensive. I have weight issues, okay, and I don't effing need her crap about "there are women who don't look." I wanted to say, "I'm sorry, B**CH, WHAT PART OF NO DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND????!!??" I told her NO again, and she proceeded with my vs. I was sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo put off by her. I was just clawing at my purse, thinking a million different ugly things about her. When searching through my purse for my insurance card, I MADE SURE TO WHIP OUT MY NURSING LICENSE WHILE "SHUFFLING" THROUGH MY THINGS IN MY WALLET in hopes she'd see and know that she was not only being a snot to a patient she didn't know from ADAM, but to a FELLOW NURSE.

:( :( REFUSAL OF TREATMENT INCLUDES BEING ABLE TO REFUSE CERTAIN PROCEDURES, AND BEING WEIGHED IS ONE OF THEM. WHY IS IT SO HARD FOR ALL THE OFFICE NURSES OUT THERE TO UNDERSTAND THIS????? I RESPECT MY PATIENTS' BOUNDARIES, WHY DO THESE PEOPLE GET SO PISSY WHEN I REFUSE TO WEIGH??? IT IS NONE OF YOUR FREAKIN' BUSINESS WHY OR WHY NOT I WEIGH, I SAID NO, NOW BACK THE F OFF.

Look, people. All you students and new nurses especially........PLEASE REMEMBER..........your patient can refuse whatever he/she wishes unless their is a COURT ORDER stating they are incompetent, and there is someone acting in their stead, OKAY??? Do not get all rude and snotty if someone refuses treatment. I had a patient yesterday that signed out AMA for familial reasons. Was I rude to her? NO. Did I disagree with her decision? YES. Did I reflect that in my treatment of her? NO. I told her, respectfully and politely, the risks of leaving, and encouraged her to return to the hospital if she has any further problems. Part of nursing is learning how to CONTROL YOUR OUTWARD APPEARANCE. You can be frustrated or put off. You can not like what someone is doing. But damn it, they teach you in nursing school (at least they taught MY class) how to friggin' watch your body language and facial expressions so as not to MAKE YOUR PATIENT FEEL UNCOMFORTABLE.

Please be aware of how you're coming off. It MATTERS. It MAKES A DIFFERENCE. BODY LANGUAGE, FACIAL EXPRESSIONS, AND TONE OF VOICE SAY A LOT MORE THAN THE WORDS COMING OUT OF YOUR MOUTH. Please, people. Remember this.

Specializes in Trauma acute surgery, surgical ICU, PACU.

I agree, Flo. The basic respect of pt's rights means less in the long term if it isn't considered in the larger picture of their care and condition... following up on why is very important. Like people who refuse pain meds because they are afraid of addiction, etc.... A pt who refuses a weight can be dealt with in a more sensitive manner in the dr's office - but if a weight is really an important part of the assessment (and not just a routine formality)... it would be professional negligence to not follow up on why and what is going on with the pt.

You open a can of worms with this. I understand that Nurse also means Educator. Without the interest and knowledge of the PT, they will not grow or get better. I pity the PT's in bad positions just like I pity workers in bad positions.

BTW-has anyone ever canned worms :-(

Hey I dreamt that I was weighing all my patients backwards in my clinic.....:chuckle

Originally posted by Jas honey

Hey I dreamt that I was weighing all my patients backwards in my clinic.....:chuckle

Just curious, did they weigh the same?:chuckle

After wasting a chunk of my life reading this entire thread, all I can say is: I understand why, of all the medical professions, psychiatrists' are the #1 group committing suicide.

Originally posted by prn nurse

After wasting a chunk of my life reading this entire thread, all I can say is: I understand why, of all the medical professions, psychiatrists' are the #1 group committing suicide.

>

LOL

Originally posted by prn nurse

After wasting a chunk of my life reading this entire thread, all I can say is: I understand why, of all the medical professions, psychiatrists' are the #1 group committing suicide.

I had always believed it was dentists :confused:

Heather

originally posted by shay

one more thing...............this is especially for the likes of pebbles and molly and any other nurse who seems to have forgotten the pt. bill of rights and that they are not there to power trip on the pt...........found this on another message board:

and you wonder why people feel this way about nurses? pull your head out of your hind quarters and realize that your patients are people, not your little lab rats or subjects. you are not queen of your domain.

no wonder people hate getting health care. it's because of nurses with attitudes like yours, i.e., that pts. who object to certain things are being silly and unreasonable, that people have this image of nurses being "cold, clinical b**ches". get over yourselves and go take a course in therapeutic communication and basic social interaction. :rolleyes:

shay i agree with you 100%.! i am glad to see that there is another nurse out there that knows and believes in the patients bill of rights as much as i do.i just love your posts they are so enlightening and intertaining. would love to meet you in person some day:) well good luck with everything!

No, psychiatrists are the ones who get the most divorces...

Originally posted by researchrabbit

No, psychiatrists are the ones who get the most divorces...

Thank you! I guess psychiatrists and dentists both succeed in their statistical areas! But I was pretty sure the high suicide rate was for dentists.....

Heather

Have to add a small twist.. My teenage daughter sees the psychiatrist. She is weighed each visit to determine weight loss... the adderal with paxil caused BIG loss. So yeah, I see the question being raised. Once you said no, I could see a polite education about a basis of weight needed prior to treatment to monitor for changes.... THE BUCK STOPS HERE.

If a nurse in a psychiatric office snubbs her nose at a patient for such a "simple" request... how does she treat others?

I feel strongly that you quickly identified a NASTY BI**H that took pleasure in showing her disapproval at you which is why you are so justifiably angry.

No one needs an oscar to show respect and caring twords a patient that is informed who says no. If anything we should be further empowering our patient who are correctly informed that have very real ideas about their care.

Hat's off to you shay.... PLEASE file a written complaint about your experience and find an office which will support you through a challenging yet happy time in your life!!!!

best wishes:kiss :kiss

carol

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