Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

allnurses

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.
Discussion

Good or Evil?

I know, without getting too deep, that the only purpose a human being serves is to build the Kingdom of God in the physical world. Nursing provides a fantastic opportunity to do just that and still be able to make a living. But not everyone in nursing is building the Kingdom of God--some are just down right evil.

I knew a nurse once who I observed giving a 17-year old girl all the pain medication she wanted while at the same time refusing to give a homeless man adequate pain medication. The only motivation seemed to be that /p giving the pain meds the patient would have to be kept in the unit longer. Obviously the girl could stay, but the nurse didn't want the homeless man around. The nurse wanted him out and to the floor as soon as possible. Would you call this evil?

I'm being deliberatly vague to erase any possibility of linking this post to the actual persons involved.

The Monist

Featured Replies

Do I smell a TROLL???????

av_troll.gif.c5b93cb784ca2f497a0c389b49ccf61a.gif

What a waste of space. I am this person's worst nightmare come to life. I care for those who are truely evil and I like my job.

  • Experts

I'm a Zen Baptist. Now, what was the question??

TrollLaptopIllustration.jpg.554ae502f5348360f94fb60b668e912a.jpg

BTW, i make damn good pasta salad. The secret is in the dressing. :D

  • Author

I find it interesting that no one has a response to the question: is it evil to withold pain medication from a patient you don't "like." Perhaps good and evil is too deep to talk about, or perhaps it just has no place in modern nursing. Nevertheless, I'm wondering if anyone out there has noticed that the spiritual warfare between good and evil becomes blatantly apparent on the floor and in the units. It seems there's always an opportunity to be an angel or a demon.

The Monist

I find it interesting that no one has a response to the question: is it evil to withold pain medication from a patient you don't "like." Perhaps good and evil is too deep to talk about, or perhaps it just has no place in modern nursing. Nevertheless, I'm wondering if anyone out there has noticed that the spiritual warfare between good and evil becomes blatantly apparent on the floor and in the units. It seems there's always an opportunity to be an angel or a demon.

The Monist

Withholding pain medication from someone you don't like, the answer to THAT is so common sense!!! It's not deep at all!!

if a nurse appears to you evil ...she is negligent...:crying2:........

anyone agree....:rolleyes:

I find it interesting that no one has a response to the question: is it evil to withold pain medication from a patient you don't "like." Perhaps good and evil is too deep to talk about, or perhaps it just has no place in modern nursing. Nevertheless, I'm wondering if anyone out there has noticed that the spiritual warfare between good and evil becomes blatantly apparent on the floor and in the units. It seems there's always an opportunity to be an angel or a demon.

The Monist

Since I'm a secular humanist, I don't believe in spirits, spiritual warfare, souls, gods, angels, demons, etc...if someone were to do that, it would be negligence as someone mentioned above. Sounds pretty simple to me.

EVIL = NEGLIGENCE.....:stone

no spirits no demons involved..:stone

just a nurse that forgot NURSES ETHICS in PATIENT CARE :crying2:

Withholding pain meds from a patient you don't like?????? In my 19 years of nursing, I have never seen that done. Every nurse, myself included, that I have ever worked with, has never been negligent like that. Did the OP stop to think that perhaps there was a reason that pain meds had to be withheld form this "homeless" person? Perhaps renal failure, or the patient had consumed alcohol earlier in the day???

No one that I have ever worked with in these 19 years has ever discriminated against a patient-- for ANY reason!!!!!! Nor even thought about it!!!!

Perhaps the OP has a guilty conscious?

I agree with you ..what Nurse would withhold pain medication for no apparent reason...:stone..hopefully none ..and in my 20 years of nursing I have seen none...:chuckle

if this really happened ..don't forget even a homeless person can sue....:p

  • Author
Since I'm a secular humanist, I don't believe in spirits, spiritual warfare, souls, gods, angels, demons, etc...if someone were to do that, it would be negligence as someone mentioned above. Sounds pretty simple to me.

It's funny that you're a secular humanist and don't believe in God, since God, Himself, aspires to be a secular humanist and has to try really hard to believe we exist. But that's another topic.

So you would call it negligence. So would I except I know the nurse knew exactly what he/she was doing. No negligence involved. If you don't like the word "evil" I could settle on the word "malice."

The Monist

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.

Currently Reading 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.