Published
To start things off, the best and funniest order I have seen on a chart, was in the discharge instructions for a trauma patient. It read simply
Darwin Consult
and was signed by the resident. Well the attending did laugh, but it was not the highpoint of that residents day.
so do you have more?
Originally posted by AllaroundnurseFLK is an approved nursery diagnosis (Funny Looking Kid) but one doc wrote FLK from FLP (Funny Looking Parents) not an approved diagnosis.
Can I ask... approved by whom? Not trying to be argumentative or anything but doesn't *sound* like a diagnosis,much less an approved one. JMO
Thank you.
Originally posted by ayemmeffCan I ask... approved by whom? Not trying to be argumentative or anything but doesn't *sound* like a diagnosis,much less an approved one. JMO
Thank you.
I agree. I have never heard of this as an approved dx. I mean, I think all of the docs use the term from time to time, but I have never seen it in a chart.
Can anyone else back up this? Is FLK really approved?
I had three patients in a LTC facility who had PRN orders (usually at HS) for various alcoholic beverages. However, I declined a request from one to get her "shot" to use as a chaser for her Lortab and Oxycontin.
One order I saw in a chart was DC black crap. The patient was using a coal tar preparation for psoriasis, and the treatment was not working. The doctor could not remember exactly what he had prescribed.
One psychiatrist I worked with was tiring of one patient constantly bugging him for anxiety medication (this patient just liked the buzz she got from benzos), so he wrote the following instructions to the pharmacy:
Big, ugly placebo PO q6h PRN anxiety
You should have seen the concoction the pharmacy put together to comply with this order.
Allaroundnurse
28 Posts
Worked on the OB/GYN unit and one of our frequent flyers would ask for Juice if it wasn't time for her pain meds. The doc wrote an order for Juice and Wheelchair rides PRN because that seemed to work as well as the pain med.