Never seen anything quite like it (the things visitors do...)

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Recently at work a son of one of my patients has really taken the cake. He arrived to visit mom while I was finishing my assessment & medicating her for pain, and waited outside the room while I was doing so. I came out to tell him that she was all set & he could go in and visit. Son proceeds to go on about how he had diarrhea all morning (at this point I just ignored those comments, given that I don't care abt his bathroom habits considering he's not my patient.) I went on about making my rounds.

20 minutes later, I was down the hall in another patient's room doing my assessment & meeting the patient (as I had never cared for him before.) Out of the corner of my eye I saw someone inside the doorway, hesitating. I went to turn around and started to say "come in" as I thought it may have been a family member of this pt, and I was just finishing vital signs, so it was nothing too personal.

Once I turned around, I realized it was that son! I told him politely, but firmly- "I'm with another patient right now. You are going to need to wait outside please." He scurried out, looking absolutely shocked that I couldn't attend to his questions at that very second. Imagine the nerve of me assessing my patients!

I talked to the other nurse that was out at the desk when he had gone looking for me...she told me what his concern was about his mother---it was something I had already discussed with him MULTIPLE times, and told him that her MD was aware and the situation being looked in to. (Being purposefully vague, but the subject of his concern is not as high priority on her problem list as other medical issues are.)

Seriously--If he had walked into the room to say "Excuse me nurse my mother can't breathe/is dying.." that would certainly have been one thing...but this guy just has no boundaries! I promptly made social work aware because I have a feeling this won't be the first issue we have with this son.

What jaw-dropping things have you all seen family members do?

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.

a family seeing that we had pizzas delivered one day for a treat from a dr and it was placed in our breakroom for supper. we walk in for supper break and there's all the family and no more pizza. oh, and there was some family members looking thru staff lockers for "more food" and others whording food in their purses from the staff frigde!

a there are soooo many more, but i cant even remember most of the really good ones at the time

you've reminded me of a couple really good ones.

a grateful family ordered chinese food for us, and had it delivered to our break room. another family (who kept threatening to sue us over ridiculous things) went into the breakroom before any of the staff had a chance to, and ate all the food. then they wanted antacids because "it was too spicey" and "gave them heartburn."

another family, angry at the staff but not so vocal about it, brought us brownies one night. ex-lax brownies.

i left my purse in my patient's room. he was comatose, and not likely to steal it, and we didn't have lockers in that institution. i came back from helping another nurse, and found the patient's daughter had come in to visit. she was sitting in my chair at my computer station, and reading my book. she'd gone through my purse, looking for a bible and found my trashy novel. fortunately, she didn't help herself to my wallet . . . but that happened to a friend of mine who also left her purse in her patient's room. unbeknowst to the family member who stole her wallet, stephanie was a black belt in taekwando. when he was thrown to the ground and disabled by a 88 pound girl, he regretted even visiting his baby mamma that day!

then there was the jogger who went down at a popular golf course, right in front of one of our anesthesiologists who gave very good cpr and brought him to our hospital. he was still unconscious and had no id, when a woman came in identifying herself as his fiancee and giving his name as "joe blow." she sat by his bedside day and night for days, and if a nurse left the room, she'd jump on the computer and try to get into other patients' charts. his chart she read with impugnity because *i* was the only nurse who dared suggest that he might not want her reading it. when he woke up, it turns out his name wasn't joe blow, and he'd never seen that woman before in his life.

i have more, but i'll quit for now.

Specializes in med-surg, psych, ER, school nurse-CRNP.

Oh, keep going Ruby, I always know I'm in for a treat if it's one of your stories!

Specializes in RN, BSN, CHDN.

We had a code in a 2 bedded room and whilst we were in the middle of the resus, the other patient came behind the curtain and asked for a cup of T!!!!

Specializes in oncology, med/surg (all kinds).

please keep this thread going! i am alternating between being angry that we have to actually take some of this crap seriously when it happens and having my jaw on the ground in disbelief and eyes bulged out laughing! i just can't believe some of these things have happened. (not that i think it's made up, but that it's just so remarkable) people have such ball--------i mean audacity!

oh, keep going ruby, i always know i'm in for a treat if it's one of your stories!

i concur, i concur! :yeah:

another family, angry at the staff but not so vocal about it, brought us brownies one night. ex-lax brownies.

that has truly got to be the family from the lower infernal regions.
. fortunately, she didn't help herself to my wallet . . . but that happened to a friend of mine who also left her purse in her patient's room. unbeknowst to the family member who stole her wallet, stephanie was a black belt in taekwando. when he was thrown to the ground and disabled by a 88 pound girl, he regretted even visiting his baby mamma that day!

yay---you go girl!! i'd sure love to see that press-ganey complaint, if the guy had enough courage and stupidity to fill one out.
Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
that has truly got to be the family from the lower infernal regions.

i'd rather have them yelling at me because at least i know they're angry. we're just lucky they used ex-lax instead of orificenic!

Specializes in Flight, ER, Transport, ICU/Critical Care.

Wow there Ruby Vee - you so rock and make me wish I was anywhere near the nurse you are ! :yeah:

Had a patients family follow me into a room where we had just tubed and vented an 8 year old - GRAB me by the shoulders, spin me and demand that I get the PAIN MEDS for their (it escapes me - the relation & the problem - no bones sticking out or impending evolving MI tho) RIGHT NOW. Oh that so did not work out so good!

A NON-SICK kiddie patient was put in the gyn room with all their brothers and sisters and WHAT DO YA KNOW - one of the little monsters managed (against prior admonishment/strong advice of kids and mom earlier to be watched and stay out of trash and keep mouth off stretcher/floor) to get a bloody vag speculum set (had been wrapped in chux) out of the red can and "play" with it - mom had been just outside the room on her phone. GOOD TIMES and lots of problems over that one!

Had a lady hit me square in the forehead as a paramedic while doing CPR on her hubby (after defib x 8 or so) - bible in one hand and COMMANDED THE LORD TO GIVE THE POWER! Didn't work.

Vented resp patient in ICU - wife came in and had been in a bit - I noticed a smell (not the typical ICU smell!) and found the patient covered quite liberally with Vicks Vapor Rub - the wife thought it would help the resp problem.

Sad, sad story. Terminally ill youngish man due to be "institutionalized" went to the beach for one last sunrise and for an eternal swim one morning and did not return - sad, sad, sad. Took a while to ID the man - EMS called after "discovered" on beach - not survivable. It gets worse - it seems that the man had a very loyal dog that had also washed up dead - tennis ball still in his mouth. I can still cry just thinking about what that poor man must have been thinking (one last morning with my loving, faithful dog at the beach - toss the ball to shore and then....). Anyway, the cop had kept the dead dog (bigger dog) in his car trunk after I begged him to not "dump" it. The family shows up and pastoral care show them to the chapel and the MD and I go it and tell them that their XXXX did not survive, found on beach. (They added the terminal ill part that we did not know). No mention of the dog. I as gently as I have ever said anything, I told them (the gathered family) about the dog. OMG! The screaming was unreal. "What do you mean the dog is dead!" and only got worse from that point - it just overwhelmed me and I stood there crying like a baby. (MD was shedding a few tears too). I have been in some bad notifications and seen all kind of reactions - but, I can still hear that family screaming about the dog. It just breaks your heart.

I'm sure I have others "winners" - just a bit tired after the last one.

Practice SAFE!

;)

sad, sad story. terminally ill youngish man due to be "institutionalized" went to the beach for one last sunrise and for an eternal swim one morning and did not return - sad, sad, sad. took a while to id the man - ems called after "discovered" on beach - not survivable. it gets worse - it seems that the man had a very loyal dog that had also washed up dead - tennis ball still in his mouth. i can still cry just thinking about what that poor man must have been thinking (one last morning with my loving, faithful dog at the beach - toss the ball to shore and then....). anyway, the cop had kept the dead dog (bigger dog) in his car trunk after i begged him to not "dump" it. the family shows up and pastoral care show them to the chapel and the md and i go it and tell them that their xxxx did not survive, found on beach. (they added the terminal ill part that we did not know). no mention of the dog. i as gently as i have ever said anything, i told them (the gathered family) about the dog. omg! the screaming was unreal. "what do you mean the dog is dead!" and only got worse from that point - it just overwhelmed me and i stood there crying like a baby. (md was shedding a few tears too). i have been in some bad notifications and seen all kind of reactions - but, i can still hear that family screaming about the dog. it just breaks your heart.

i'm sure i have others "winners" - just a bit tired after the last one.

practice safe!

;)

ohhhhh no.... :bluecry1:

Specializes in LTC.

I don't understand how the dog died.

Specializes in Med/Surg.
I don't understand how the dog died.

If I'm reading right, I assume the dog faithfully continued to try to bring the ball back to it's owner, who had not put himself in a position to get it back from the dog. :( Sad.

+ Add a Comment