Patients' "home remedies"? What have you seen

Nurses General Nursing

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Had a family come in to the ER last night. Their little boy (~3yo) got ahold of the pot of boiling water on the stove. Clear 2nd degree burns to (I'd say) at least 30% of the inside of his arm. Little guy had dark skin, but the burn basically sloughed down to reveal bright pink flesh.

The family put sugar (!) on the burn at home. When they brought him in, the RN had to clean the wound and basically the sugar just debrided the fresh burn even more. I've been racking my brain trying to figure out the logic behind putting sugar on a burn :confused: I even Googled it and the only thing I can tell is people sometimes put it on a burned tongue. Then I was thinking that sugar on a burn probably makes an awesome growth medium for bacteria. I told the family very firmly that they must leave the dressing intact until the burn unit followed up with them - all I could imagine was them taking the dressing off and putting some other mystery substance on it. Then they refused 1/2 the kid's pain meds, but I digress.

Have you guys heard of this, or other wonky "home remedies" that you've seen come through the doors?

Specializes in Infectious Disease, Neuro, Research.

"GoldBond cure cancer...!":rolleyes: I joke with my wife about this. We've had families refuse wound care because GoldBond "did it better". Yeah.

Stupid can be cured. Its $0.18/round. Unfortunately society looks unfavorably upon such measures...

Specializes in Infectious Disease, Neuro, Research.
a couple of decades ago when I was doing ER rotations for my EMT and then Paramedic certs, we had more than one older lady come in with a potato holding up a prolapsed uterus.

Which only gets more gross when I tell you that one of the women apparently had it for months and never changed out the potato. :: shudder ::

I guess that would work. A tater is lighter than a bowling ball.

I have to ask: was it at the mashed tater or curly-fry stage...?VomitSmiley.gif :D

Specializes in Government.

I had a patient a few years ago who was a school bus driver. His A1C was 19.0. I asked him what he was doing about his diabetes and he replied " I treat it with cinnamon". :eek:

Specializes in Cardiac/Progressive Care.

Had a patient come in with chronic venous stasis ulcers on her BLE. They had been weeping for quite some time, and the pt was supposed to be following up with the wound care clinic. Instead she decided to try to dry them out by first applying bleach, and then some sort of horse product that is normally used on hooves. Needless to say, she ended up having both legs amputated midthigh due to the necrosis from her home remedies.

Specializes in Cardiac/Progressive Care.
We serve a large Amish population at my hospital, and they have a lot of odd home remedies, but the one that sticks out in my mind was some sort of linement that contained KEROSENE. The child I was caring for reeked of kerosene. I think it was for eczema or something.

That doesn't sound that unusual- when I worked in a pharmacy, we often mixed ointments containing coal tar for psoriasis.

Specializes in Med/Surg, Ortho, ASC.
I've seen a patient putting earwax on a cold sore.

:barf02:

Specializes in Community, OB, Nursery.

Gentian violet on chicken pox, as well as inside a mouth for strep throat.

When ds was a baby, he got what we thought was pinkeye (it was really a clogged tear duct but I didn't know it at the time). Apparently in rural Latin America (where my husband is from), a squirt of breastmilk in the affected eye is used to clear that up. It was quite the sight, me trying to aim at my baby's eye that wasn't really keen on being messed with. :D

Some home remedies really do work - like raw cabbage leaves on engorged breasts when Mom's milk comes in postpartum. Others, like the spitwad on the baby's forehead to cure hiccups, not so much.

Specializes in School Nursing.
I had a patient a few years ago who was a school bus driver. His A1C was 19.0. I asked him what he was doing about his diabetes and he replied " I treat it with cinnamon". :eek:

Well, there are studies showing cinnamon helps with insulin resistance and can lower BG, but it is not a cure all and clearly this guy was expecting miracles! "Hmm, I can just keep eating sugary, fatty foods and just take a spoonful of cinnamon and it will be all better". Not so much.

We have a pt. that has tried everything for terrible restless leg syndrome. I mean EVERYTHING. The pt. and staff have been going crazy as this person's legs bounce around the bed and the pt. almost falls out of bed.

Finally, as a last resort, someone decided to try a really silly sounding home remedy, a bar of soap at the foot of the bed.

Oddly enough, this has worked like a charm. Better than requip or ativan or anything else we've tried.

Very odd.

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.
A casual acquaintance (who is a MD) told us her nephew kept getting either gallstones or kidney stones (I can't remember which) she was going to (or had already) saved the stones, crushed them up, and had him drink them to prevent more stones from forming!

She went to accredited medical school in the USA (I don't know which one)!

I'm hoping it was kidney stones...I would not even want to know how they would have retrieved the gall stones! Although it would have been quite yucky to drink the kidney stones!

Specializes in Community, OB, Nursery.
We have a pt. that has tried everything for terrible restless leg syndrome. I mean EVERYTHING. The pt. and staff have been going crazy as this person's legs bounce around the bed and the pt. almost falls out of bed.

Finally, as a last resort, someone decided to try a really silly sounding home remedy, a bar of soap at the foot of the bed.

Oddly enough, this has worked like a charm. Better than requip or ativan or anything else we've tried.

Very odd.

I had horrible RLS, and it worked for me too, and I really wasn't expecting it to, so can't count on the placebo effect.

:eek::eek::eek:
I've seen a patient putting earwax on a cold sore.
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