Most Embarassing Nursing Moments

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I can remember a few of these, and thought we'd all get a laugh from sharing. My most, most, MOST horrible one was this:

Working in a 60-bed nursing home, I was caring for a gentleman with terminal cancer. He was having the two-hourly S/C morphine, two hourly pressure care, the whole bit. He had been Cheynne-Stoking off and on for the last 24 hours, and the family was with him as he began to depart this life.

This morning I just knew that today was the day he would die. You just get that when you look at these people sometimes. There were four children, his wife, and several siblings around the bed, and I did my best to care for Stephen and his family, while not intruding too much on this painful moment. Came the time when he was due for he next dose of morphine and pressure care, my colleague and I had an intense discussion. Stephen was so far gone that I was concerned that he would die if we moved him, and I knew his family wanted to be with him for the moment of death. I delayed the pressure care for another hour, waiting for the inevitable. When Stephen was still going slowly, I decided that the need to move his emaciated body could not be put off much longer.

I went to the bed, and explained to the family that Stephen really did need to be rolled onto his other side, and that we would be very quick. They all trooped out, and my colleague and I set to work. First we gave the morphine, then gently placed our arms under Stephen to roll him. He have a loud "Aaa....hhhhhhh.......a." and stopped breathing. Cursing under my breath at the timing, I waited for several minutes to be sure that this wasn't just another episode of Cheynne-Stoking. I even got my stethescope and checked for a heartbeat. Nothing.

Feeling guilty and sad for the family, we settle Stephen onto his back, tidied him, and I went to break the news to the relatives. There was an understandable outpouring of cries and wails as they realized Stephen would never be with them again. They were not angry, just sad that he had finally gone. I stayed with them, and then offered to escort them into the room to say their last goodbyes.

All 8 relatives, weeping, followed me into the room to see Stephen peacefully relaxed on his back. They crowded around, touching him, and I stepped back to give them room, tears in my own eyes as I shared their grief.

To my shock and absolute horror, Stephen took one huge shuddering breath,...then another,...............and another! I stood there in utter shock, as this man 'came back from the dead'. The effect on his relatives was not pretty to watch. They were excited, happy, grieved, shocked, and confused. Again, they were not angry at me (must have been saints!), as I stood there watching. The only thing I could think of to say was "But he WAS dead!" :imbar (I'd verified it myself.)

I waited until the family had settled somewhat, then backed out of the room. I felt about two inches tall, and utterly confused!

I never wanted to look these people in the eye again. First I'd killed their dad, then told them he was dead and upset them all, then he came back to life!!

I cried in the toilet for a while, as you do, then went back to the nurses desk. Several minutes later, all the family silently trooped out of the room and towards the front door. They were calm and collected, one detached from the group and came towards me.

"He's gone now. He died about ten minutes after we went into the room. He just wanted to wait until we were all there before he went. That's why he came back for us all.":redpinkhe

I have NEVER experienced embarrassment at that level in my life, before or sice!

Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.

I'm a float, but usually am sent to med/surg floors or rehab. About once a month or so I am sent to postpartum/gyne. That unit is layed out totally different.

One night, I went into my patient's room, BUBBLED her and talked to her about breast/bottle concerns she was having, and even charted on her. Then somehow I realized I had assessed the wrong mom in the wrong room. Ugh! :confused:

Another shift, I went in to check on my patient who was supposed to be a fresh C-section. This gal was dressed, in her own clothes, but I went ahead and assessed her thinking she must be one tough cookie, but when I checked her incision it was steri-stripped. That's when I got the idea I had the wrong pt again, and that was clinched when I told her that I was going to be given a Rhogam shot soon and she told me she didn't need it because she was Rh+. I backed out of the room and never went back in, thinking "Oh, crap, I did it again." :bugeyes:

Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.
As a nursing student I worked in a nursing home. I was sitting in report one morning after being called in for a shift. Drinking my coffee, still waking up I realized something wasn't right--I had forgotten to put on my bra!! Luckily (and embarassingly) one of our residents wore sportsbras and was kind enough to help me out...can't say I didn't get teased about it!

I also did that. I usually work 12s but had volunteered off for the first four, during which I took a good nap in my pajamas. :zzzzz I never sleep with a bra on. When the alarm went off at 10:15 pm :yawn: , I jumped out of bed, put on my uniform, threw together a lunch and dashed out. I was seeing my first patient of the night when I realized I was completely braless. At least I had put a shirt under my scrubs, but my other female coworkers got a good laugh when I told them.

Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.
I may not be a nurse yet, but I have my own story to share. I was at clinicals going to do my usual head-to-toe assessment on my resident I was taking care of. Suddenly, I hear the call light buzzing off. So I do my QOL, ya know, knock and intoduce myself. As soon as I walked in, I discovered my resident in the BR and the door was open wide. I felt sooo embarassed! so as I take off the call llight and try help the resident off the toilet, my resident says " no, don't help me, I want the other Nurse to do it." I say ok, and then waited for the other nurse to come. I was soo embarasssed because there is nothing worse than walking in on someone using the BR. :nono:

What I hate is going into a male pt's room to check on them, and they're using the urinal. I usually apologize and tell them I'll be back in a moment and pull the curtain.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
a couple of the nurses in one of the units at my hospital (a large university teaching/trauma center) wanted to warm a towel in the microwave. they did not know you had to wet the towels first...

so they put a stack of towels in the meganuke 9000 that dietary has in the meal room, and then walked back to the desk.

this unit was known as not the swiftest floor. the sort where some really skilled nurses have work their butt off doing extra duty, covering for other nurses on the floor who should have "moved on" by now.

so, they got busy working on something else and the towels burst into flame inside the closed oven. rather than doing something logical like shut off the oven or use a fire extinguisher, they simply closed the door to the room with the towels burning in the running oven and started planning to evacuate the patients.

when the fire crew responded, they put it out and the damage was mainly confined to the oven, but the unit had to share meal space with their sister ward for a couple weeks while the room was remodeled/repainted/ceiling tiles replaced.

oh, and a new meganuke 9000, with a sign on the front explaining that only dietary staff were allowed to touch it.

i was involved in an electrical fire once in the same hospital about four years earlier. when i saw the fire in the x-ray equipment cabinet, i went over and pulled all the large power breakers in the room. engineering kept praising me for my actions, which i thought were incredibly obvious. after the towel-fire, i could understand why.

i've been a nurse for long enough that microwaves did not exist when i started. when we got the first one on our floor, one of the staff thought it would be a good idea to reheat the patients breakfasts before passing the trays. this went well for a few days, and then the weekend came. we were short staffed, and in the interest of saving time, the nursing assistant (which is what we called them then) decided to save some time. the patients were having boiled eggs and cold cereal, so she put everyone's boiled eggs into the microwave at the same time.

do you have any idea what kind of a mess 60 boiled eggs can make when they all explode inside your microwave at once? the noise? the smoke? not to mention the smell! thank god the whole microwave didn't explode, but it blew the seals off the door and there was egg all over the nutrition room -- the walls, the appliances, the floor, the ceiling, and the nursing assistant . . . .

Specializes in Surgical tech in nurseless angio suite..

do you have any idea what kind of a mess 60 boiled eggs can make when they all explode inside your microwave at once? the noise? the smoke? not to mention the smell!

hahaha...oh, that is a classic "new to microwaves" disaster. like the eastern-european immigrant we had working in our vascular lab in the early 1990s, who "knew" that the popcorn could not really only take 3:30, so put it in for 33:00. she felt so bad, but on a certain level you had to understand her confusion. but the whole unit smelled for a week.

this happened when i was a student nurse... that was about 5 years ago. hahaha... we were doing a graded physical assessment demo, and i was really really really anxious! the clinical instructor that's going to grade my demo was a complete terror! ok... physical assessment was supposed to be cephalocaudal, ryt... but when it was my turn, i got everything mixed up! my mind was totally disorganized! hahaha... plus... when i was doing the breast assessment on my classmate, i just checked the left breast ONLY! i forgot the right breast which was totally dumb coz it was right there staring in fron of me! well... i find that very funny now that i think about it.. hehehehe

Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.

I'm a vegetarian, and eat a lot of beans, broccoli, spinach, etc. Some nights I'm just one big walking fart! Last week I had a particularly musical night on the tele floor, and a nurse walked up to the floor to help with admissions and asked "Who died? It smells horrible up here!" I usually excuse myself by saying "Whew, I'm sorry I'm poluting y'all's air around here."

A couple nights ago, another vegetarian co-worker and I were comparing notes on what we eat and how farty we were. :lol2: (I am trying to change what I eat, even if it does mean kicking out foods I really love. :uhoh21:)

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..

Same thing happened to me when I had my sleep study. I just so happened, my body decided to do a lot of draining. So about every two hours, when I got up,(she having to help me due to all the gadgets I had on me.) I burped, farted, and coughed. After a few hours, the tech said; "My we are gassy tonight aren't we." I said, "Not only gassy, but runny too."

Specializes in Paediatrics, Orthopeodics, ENT, General.
there was egg all over the nutrition room -- the walls, the appliances, the floor, the ceiling, and the nursing assistant . . . .

i had a similar experience in my firs year of nursing, back in 1992. this was before sterilizers were used on most floors to clean the pans. we had the old 'pan hopper', which flushed the liquid waste off, but not the solid.

in my usual rush, trying to cope with 6 acute surgical patients while only 3 months out of training, i ran in with my full pan and placed it in the door of the hopper, released the foot plate to shut the door, and pressed flush. unfortunately, i didn't wait quite long enough before pressing flush. a jet of water gushed out of the tap, hit the inside of the full pan, and fountained out of the partially open door. there was i, dripping wet, covered in liquid waste!! :no::no: not only was i covered, but the ceiling and the wall behind me also recieved a liberal spraying. while standing there, gasping in shock, i looked sideways and saw the ward maid watching. she looked at me and said "i'll get you a towel so you can clean up the mess." no sympathy, just a request that the pan room be sanitized before she came back in!:crying2:

Specializes in Med Surg, Case Management, OR.

While I was in nursing school I was a unit secretary on a Peds floor. I was always eager to help, and had a 19 year old who pushed the call light because he had to use the urinal. This guy was in to get decannulated after TBI from a gunshot. He had been in Inpt rehab for awhile and had to relearn almost everything. I was told by the nurse, help him with whatever he needs...

So I go in and ask what I can do for him, and he told me he needs me to take his member out of his pants, put his member into the urinal, wipe him off, etc, etc. I even stayed to help him with his sandwich (cutting it, feeding part of it to him, etc, etc).

The next day I go to work and see him making the rounds on the floor with the physical therapist! He was walking with a rolling walker and waving at the nurses, cracking jokes, and carrying on like a normal guy!

He even came by the nurse's station and gave me a big smirk. I was sooo embarrassed. I've since leared to ask patients "How can I help you to help yourself do this?"

:chuckle

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..
While I was in nursing school I was a unit secretary on a Peds floor. I was always eager to help, and had a 19 year old who pushed the call light because he had to use the urinal. This guy was in to get decannulated after TBI from a gunshot. He had been in Inpt rehab for awhile and had to relearn almost everything. I was told by the nurse, help him with whatever he needs...

So I go in and ask what I can do for him, and he told me he needs me to take his member out of his pants, put his member into the urinal, wipe him off, etc, etc. I even stayed to help him with his sandwich (cutting it, feeding part of it to him, etc, etc).

The next day I go to work and see him making the rounds on the floor with the physical therapist! He was walking with a rolling walker and waving at the nurses, cracking jokes, and carrying on like a normal guy!

He even came by the nurse's station and gave me a big smirk. I was sooo embarrassed. I've since leared to ask patients "How can I help you to help yourself do this?"

:chuckle

;););)Hey there honey, Maybe he wanted to give you a hug????:yeah::yeah:Good one.:chuckle
Specializes in Paediatrics, Orthopeodics, ENT, General.
While I was in nursing school I was a unit secretary on a Peds floor. I was always eager to help, and had a 19 year old who pushed the call light because he had to use the urinal. This guy was in to get decannulated after TBI from a gunshot. He had been in Inpt rehab for awhile and had to relearn almost everything. I was told by the nurse, help him with whatever he needs...

So I go in and ask what I can do for him, and he told me he needs me to take his member out of his pants, put his member into the urinal, wipe him off, etc, etc. I even stayed to help him with his sandwich (cutting it, feeding part of it to him, etc, etc).

The next day I go to work and see him making the rounds on the floor with the physical therapist! He was walking with a rolling walker and waving at the nurses, cracking jokes, and carrying on like a normal guy!

He even came by the nurse's station and gave me a big smirk. I was sooo embarrassed. I've since leared to ask patients "How can I help you to help yourself do this?"

:chuckle

I have been caught this way SOOOO many times. My defense has been to become cynical, and doubt what most patients say. I'm not nasty, I just wait to see proof of what they have claimed before I believe them. I have to say, it's saved me a LOT of trouble over the years!

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