Just need to vent for a minute...

Published

I had a parent ask me last week if she could bring in some food to keep in my fridge/office for her daughter. Her daughter has anorexia and she would like her to be able to eat whenever she feels like she is hungry. I say sure, no problem. Mom comes to open house last night. "I am bringing in food tomorrow, is that still ok? Me: Sure. Mom shows up in my office today. "I have the food" but her hands are empty. Me: "Great. Bring it on down." She comes back down with one of the secretaries with 6 grocery bags full of food. A loaf of bread, boxes of pop tarts, cosmic brownies, honey buns, ice cream, 6 big jugs of power ade, 12 containers of yogurt, 12 Jimmy Dean frozen breakfast sandwiches, and a giant container of cottage cheese. Oh, and deli turkey breast and pre-cooked bacon. Wha....????

I was kind of flabbergasted and didn't think to tell her 1 weeks worth of food at a time is plenty. I made her take the loaf of bread home at least. So now I have an office full of food.

THEN... I had a student with a broken wrist come in saying he needs his ibuprofen. OK great. How much are you taking, I say. He says 600 mg every 3 hours. I say, are you sure about that? That seems like a high dose. He says yep- 3 of these pills every 3 hours and pulls an OTC bottle of ibuprofen out of his pocket (great!!). So I call mom to clarify dose. She says yes, the paperwork from the ER says 600 mg of ibuprofen every 3 hours. I say, that's quite a high dose of ibuprofen and in order to administer that much ibuprofen I definitely need a physicians order (so I can call and clarify said order!!!). I then explained that the standing orders that I have from the school physician only allow me to give 400 mg every 4-6 hours and since he had ibuprofen 600 mg PO at 0600 today I can't medicate him again until noon. Mom: Well that's just ridiculous. My son is not going to sit there in pain because your school physician doesn't know how to order medication. He doesn't know my son, and I don't think your school physician has ever set foot in your school even!! I know my child and I know all about medicine because I have daughter who is on medication etc etc. What is your fax # so I can have the ER fax those orders to you? He wasn't even supposed to come see you, because you guys make things so hard with your "standing orders".

Me: Uhhhhh.....

So the ER calls me to verify fax #. I ask to clarify the orders while I have nurse on the phone. She says Oh no- ibuprofen every 6 hours, alternating with tylenol every 6 hours so he gets pain medication every 3 hour, which is where I think the confusion happened. But geez!! I'm trying to prevent your son from killing his stomach/liver/kidneys.

Deep breath.....

Deep breath....

OK vent over- these are the times that I miss having a face to face coworker to vent to- so you guy get to read my vents instead.

Specializes in kids.
If he son is in that much pain why is he in school, hmmm?

Mommy prolly has a tennis lesson or hair appointment or something....

Specializes in Community Health/School Nursing.
Mommy prolly has a tennis lesson or hair appointment or something....

Yes!! I had a parent come into my clinic one morning in workout clothes holding a big bottle of vitamins. She wanted me to give her precious darling vitamins 2x every day because she had hot yoga in the morning (didn't have time to give to her) and then she has to do laundry and cook supper in the evening. LOL!! I could not believe my ears. Wow.

I assume mom never went to yoga and her family wore dirty clothes and starved because this ole gal didn't give one d*mn vitamin!

Specializes in School nursing.

Today I had a teacher send down a student with a small superficial skin tear, about maybe 2 cm across the palm of his hand. No bleeding and student had covered it with a bandaid, but the teacher had him remove the bandaid and sent him to me to "wrap it" because she felt the bandaid would not stay. And "wrapping" the student's hand for a superficial skin tear will stay? And the student won't pull at it all, right? Yes, it was on the palm of his non-dominant hand, but frankly, the tear was so minor it could stay open to air.

I put a larger bandaid on it and sent the kid back to make a point...

Specializes in Community Health/School Nursing.
Today I had a teacher send down a student with a small superficial skin tear, about maybe 2 cm across the palm of his hand. No bleeding and student had covered it with a bandaid, but the teacher had him remove the bandaid and sent him to me to "wrap it" because she felt the bandaid would not stay. And "wrapping" the student's hand for a superficial skin tear will stay? And the student won't pull at it all, right? Yes, it was on the palm of his non-dominant hand, but frankly, the tear was so minor it could stay open to air.

I put a larger bandaid on it and sent the kid back to make a point...

I wonder how these teachers parent their own kids and how many trips to the docs office they make a year. It really is an insult to my intelligence and degree when I am sent a kid like that with something so minor there shouldn't be given any attention to it.....and then for them to TELL you what they want done such as wrap it?? Why the h#ll are we here?

Specializes in DD, PD/Agency Peds, School Sites.

OP, here you are trying to keep these kids safe and healthy...and you get grief from the parents. It isn't the nurses who are making the relationships hostile. Have a peaceful Friday and weekend!

Superficial cut on the hand, washed and Band aid.

Mom feels the need to call me and ask if her daughter needs MOTRIN? She is on her way up, dropping everything.

Come on.

Sitting here in the teacher's lounge and was discussing a student with our school psychologist - taken away for neglect, been in 5 foster homes, only 5 years old.

Possible "autism" however it could also be lack of nurturing due to idiot parents.

We ended up talking about autism and a paraprofessional chimed in stating..... . . .( are you ready?)......she thinks that epidurals during labor causes autism. "So many women in the last 30 years have epidurals and I think that coincides with the increased rate of autism".

:sarcastic: :banghead:

She went on to say she thinks chemtrails may also have something to do with it. . . . . .

And she works in the classrooms.

arrggghhhhh

Specializes in Pediatrics Retired.

how about cow flatulence?

I guess I should purchase some of those tin foil hats.

:greyalien:

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