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 Labor & Delivery, Med-surg.

In training an elderly man with Alzheimer's peed in his drinking glass and then proceeded to drink it. Me and my fellow student went to the desk and asked the cute medical student whether we should chart that as input or output! I can't remember his response!

Another one along the same line was a little native boy who peed in his water jug one night and I thinking it was apple juice tried to get him to drink it, as he was on push fluids. The horrified child just stared at me in disbelief, not saying a word. It took some time to get it out of him why he absolutely refused to drink!

Specializes in Emergency/ Critical Care.
Mine was walking into the employee bathroom only to find a couple of coworkers doing the nasty!

And here I thought that only happened on Grey's Anatomy!

Specializes in Retired OR nurse/Tissue bank technician.

I was a second year student on a medicine floor. Nineteen and still very innocent/naive about some of the ways of the world. I answered a call bell for a student who was on break-it was a 4-bed room, all older men.

I did what the patient needed, then before leaving, I touched his hand with mine. His eye lit up and he said:

"Oooh-eee! You've got hot little hands. You got a boyfriend?".

*Me, puzzled*, "Where did that question come from?"

"Well with hands like that you could sure keep a man warm at night!".

I went bright red and hightailed it out of the room with the chortles of the men following me.

The next morning, I was standing in the hallway, looking over the nurse's desk, talking to my instructor when I felt a tug on my skirt. I turned around and saw the gentleman from the day before. He winked at me, grinned and said, loud enough for all and sundry to hear, "Hey there, Hot Stuff!". :imbar

Specializes in Retired OR nurse/Tissue bank technician.

Another one....

I was a student on the post-partum unit. I had a young-ish (~20 years old) mom who was working hard to establish a good nursing relationship with her new baby. She couldn't tell if her milk had come in yet and she asked me if there was a way to check.

We had learned in class to 'milk' the breast to check for let down, so I explained what I wanted to do, pulled the curtain and she lowered her gown so I could check her breast for milk.

Apparently I was a little too vigorous with the 'milking', because I wound up with a face full of breast milk. I was able to assure her that her baby was definitely getting good Mama's milk.

Specializes in OB, ER, ICU, Supervision, SANE.

I worked in ICU with an experienced nurse. During the shift her patient had died. She was on a clinitron bed (the air beds) and once she was pronounced, the nurse turned off the bed, causing the air to deflate. We proceeded to clean the patient up for her family to come visit. About 1/2 hour later we got a phone call that the family was there. The experienced nurse decided to turn the bed on so the patient would look natural - so on goes the air. The bed we had, however did it in sections, and the top was the first to inflate - causeing the patient to ""sit up" right as the family came in the room!

Specializes in Pediatrics.

A few months ago, I was taking care of a 15 year old who had an extensive psych history who had just come out of PICU after drinking 2 bottles of vodka. I was preparing to leave at the end of my shift when one of the peds residents told me that she was going to tell the kid that he had to go back to the psych hospital that he had previously been discharged from. Knowing that he was going to be very upset about having to go back, I decided to go into the room with her. She was chit chatting with him, gaining a rapport with the kid. He all of a sudden pulls something out of his pocket, looks at it, giggles, and shoves it back in his pocket. The resident asks, "What was that?" He laughs and says nothing. Again, she asks, "What was that in your hand?" He says he doesn't know, but takes it out of his pocket and holds it in his hand. "What is that?" "I don't know." He opens his hand and puts the object on the table. It was small, had rubber spikes, and lit up. I am trying to figure out what it is and so is the resident. I ask him what it is and he still says he doesn't know, while laughing. All of a sudden, I realize what it is...a bullet shaped "love toy". I have no clue how to react. I am still a new nurse! And the resident still hasn't figured it out! She asked him one more time what it is and he says, "I think it is for a woman's lady parts." Then he turns it on and it buzzes all the way across the table while he laughs his butt off!! The resident and I just looked at each other, our faces both red, and just walked out! He bought himself a nice long stay in a psych inpatient facility. Poor kid though. He told me that he drank all of that b/c he got into a fight with his mom. He also said that he got the toy from his mom's drawer. Sad to know how he knew it was there...

Specializes in Education and oncology.

I had a young (sad case) 20 yr old with leukemia- was in for induction chemo. This kid was a "chef" at 99 Restaurant- hardly a high end place, and he weighed over 450lbs. I was in and out of his room all shift, went in to hang 10pm antibiotic, and found his girlfriend on the floor, he's sitting in a chair and there's a blanket over her head while she... right. Now I've been entering and knocking all night- you'd think they would expect my presence. We had to counsel them about appropriate activities when his counts were low.

Sadly, he died right after his bone marrow transplant but before he did, it took us 6 nurses to turn him. Horrible. :cry:

Specializes in Emergency Room.

:) I love this thread by the way!

I'm still a student, and everyday is a fight to keep my confidence up.

I was in my Peds rotation, and in Peds there's 2 beds in every room except a few iso rooms which I always somehow got the privledge of getting......until today.

I was so excited that I didn't have to do iso stuff, I think I had a minor brain fart. I walked into the room and I was assigned bed 2. Both patients were around four months old. Well, bed 1 was a male, and bed 2 was a female. I walked into the room with my usual spiel, in my cheerful voice "Hi! I'm Jessica, I'll be your student nurse today.... blah blah blah." THen I started commenting on how beautiful their baby girl was etc etc. Mom and Dad looked at me like I grew horns and fur. I was definetly at the wrong bed. They we're slightly offended, but played nice. I apologized profusely and I felt even more dumb when I did the whole speil to the other bed all the while the other parents who WERE at my assigned bed were laughing hysterically.

Oooops! They all look alike at that age anyway right????

Lesson learned: If you can't laugh at yourself, then you just can't laugh period.

Specializes in med/surg , hospice and oncology.

Darn, this is embarrassing....One nightshift I was making my rounds and I felt the most intense urge to..you know.."toot". I didn't want "it" to happen in the hall and I knew I wouldn't make it to the bathroom for privacy. My first impulse was to head into my confused patients room. "It" happened.:imbar Would you not know it but the nursing assistant popped into the doorway after "it" happened. :eek:The only thing I could think to say was, " I think we need to check mrs. so in so." "I think she may had a BM." Of course, the patient was not incontinent. The nursing assistant did comment on the patients, "bad gas". I ,of course, chimed in and agreed!

Specializes in med/surg , hospice and oncology.
Specializes in Pedatrics, Child Protection.
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 . . . .

omg!! i just about choked on my tea! oh ruby...

last summer one of our housekeepers had quite a burn on his top lip. i asked him what happened-- his reply:

"did you know that it's a bad idea to reheat a boiled egg in the microwave?"

i burst out laughing and said "yes....i'm surprised it didn't blow up"....he replied "it did...when i cracked it open"

i cannot imagine how much that must have hurt. frightening thing....he was in school for biomedical engineering!

This is a fantastic thread! I'm still a student, but I am really enjoying all the stories!!

Thanks to all of you for sharing!:heartbeat

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