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I tell people who do that to please get out of the bed and I would be more than happy to get them a chair. If there is more than one of them and it is getting crowded and/or the family is not being cooperative, I will print out the hospital policy on visitors (we technically only allow 2 per patient, over the age of five).
The hospital I worked at had mostly private rooms. I had one patient who's family (mostly teenagers) stayed with her every night. They actually put blow up mattresses all over the floor and around the bed. I know there had to of been at least 4 kids in that room each night. The room looked like it had exploded! What finally threw me over the edge was a friend of the patients came in and brought a crock pot and cooler. She was cooking in the crock pot on the counter by the sink and the cooler had alcohol in it. I about died! I just walked out, got my charge nurse and let her handle the situation. I was over it at that point....I was not mentally stable enough to explain to them WHY you can't do that!! Ugh! lol
Beer cooler & a crock pot - I love it!I'd like to suggest a new hospital bed feature to the manufacturers... They should make it possible to put the bed in extreme Trendelenburg - maybe 75 or 80 degrees. Then there should be a lock on the bed that requires a key to unlock it
I couldn't believe my eyes. Maybe it was a vacation for them. I don't know. I literally kicked one of the kids head on accident one night trying to do the 2 step around them on the floor. I understand they want to be near their mother but this was ridiculous.
I think it was worse during nursing clinicals when we were sent to do pre-lunch blood sugars on the patient in the bed by the door. She almost did the blood sugar on the window patient's family member who was taking a nap in the USED but made bed of the roommate! (Fortunately she checked for an armband (it was acute physical rehab so pts were encouraged to wear street clothes) but nearly scared the crap out of the visitor) The primary nurse was laughing when she found out as it had been an ongoing battle with the visitor. Since it was an "occupied" bed it couldn't be left in the high position. The family would be told again and and again not to use the roommates bed when they were at PT/OT/ST. Though I think the combination of the almost invasive test plus a total freak out by the door patient's out-of-town family member (first time visiting, saw the bed occupied but didn't know that it was the visitor snuggled in the bed. She apparently let out a blood curling scream when after sitting by what she thought was her sleeping relative saw the actual patient in with his walker). Some people are just plain stupid.
AJPV
366 Posts
We have a number of semi-private rooms. It isn't uncommon for us to have one bed occupied with the other bed empty (awaiting a possible second patient). I can't believe how common it is for family/friends of a patient to think the second bed is there for their comfort and convenience! We have tried everything - putting the bed in the highest position, electronically locking it there, unplugging the bed from the wall outlet, placing a little card on the overhead table explaining that the bed must remain unused & clean for other patients. I'll come walking into the room and family/friends have climbed in the bed or set it up as their personal office with their laptop, and they will eat food in the bed showering it with a generous helping of potato chip crumbs. Seriously???
Any creative ideas on how to deter this?