Anyone ever had a celebrity as a patient or a celebrity in your place of work? Please share any information if possible. Did you experience any problems because they were there? ie. fans, phone calls, etc
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One but it was a non-nursing capacity.
I've had a fair amount of high-profile 4-star military pt's and they were the coolest guys ever. Those with the highest rank usually are. One 4-star general up and left his escort behind and was just waltzing up and down the facility. We rec'vd a heads up but we were expecting him at a certain time. This guy just walked in, like, 'Hey - what's up!" and presented' himself at the front-desk for his exam. I took him back...and was thinking to myself.
Like, "Oh, My God - that's a whole lotta BRASS! Dude - you, like, freakin' commanded *insert your well-known war*. I saw you on CSPAN. You were on Capitol Hill and everything!"
I wish that I could tell you guys who he was but he was very down to earth. Very nice man.
I hope that I never have to deal with actual celebrity VIPs, though. Only once did I have a taste of that. Came to radiology. We had a room 'reserved' for her...which was ridiculous. That's like 'reserving' a bed/room in the emergency room. Where are the real emergencies going to be placed -- the floor?
Anyway, we had 'her' room set up and her 'routine' films were taking priority over the STATs coming down from the clinics. Seriously.
All the while I kept praying that the ER would send over a pt of the 'MVA variety' so we could boot her out of that room.
It wasn't the celeb. She was 'nice'. It was the way that the hospital/our dept approached the situation. I hated - with the fire of a thousand suns - the way that the hospital tripped all over itself trying to spread out the red carpet. It's not right. A pt is a pt, to me.
There was a certain country music star (who recently died) I was aware of; back around 1990, he was in a special suite which the hospital had just created to woo just such a clientele... what's interesting to me was the order for whiskey neat... the pharmacy kept a bottle of Jim Beam in the cooler to hold off the DTs.
On a related note; once I saw (at a really rural country hospital) what looked suspiciously like a pt drinking a urine specimen; turned out her doc had prescribed white wine to increase appetite.
amygarside
1,026 Posts
this is a very interesting topic. it deserves to be on the first page again..