Published
I was in my Ethics class today and one girl started talking about how her friend, an RN was with a patient when they started to bleed out. She said that the patient needed their vein sutured up or they would die. They called the dr and it took him over a hour to get to the room. She knew that she needed a dr in the room, but knew that if she waited the patient would be dead. She saved the patient and her and the dr both got fired.
How is it possible that she saved someone's life, but she gets fired for doing so?
i heard she sutured the vein by using the needle from the insulin she had just given and by unraveling a thread from her scrub top. when she unraveled the thread, it caused her bra to be exposed slightly. she saved the patient's life, but was fired for violating the dress code.
your explanation deserves a bow & applause therefore, she not only became a mcgyver nurse like, but also had a wardrobe malfunction.. yep that just about sums it up
I was in my Ethics class today and one girl started talking about how her friend, an RN was with a patient when they started to bleed out. She said that the patient needed their vein sutured up or they would die. They called the dr and it took him over a hour to get to the room. She knew that she needed a dr in the room, but knew that if she waited the patient would be dead. She saved the patient and her and the dr both got fired.How is it possible that she saved someone's life, but she gets fired for doing so?
I'll be honest...I think that your classmate was making the situation up for attention.
No way do I believe her story. It also isn't going to take an hour to get a doctor there, any resident or surgeon, could have got there faster.
That's sad to say the least. Incompentent on the Doctor's behalf as well.I was in my Ethics class today and one girl started talking about how her friend, an RN was with a patient when they started to bleed out. She said that the patient needed their vein sutured up or they would die. They called the dr and it took him over a hour to get to the room. She knew that she needed a dr in the room, but knew that if she waited the patient would be dead. She saved the patient and her and the dr both got fired.How is it possible that she saved someone's life, but she gets fired for doing so?
The time that the RN was gathering supplies for the suturing, and performing the suturing was time that she should have been holding pressure on the bleed and calling a Rapid Response or getting the help of another doctor.
That's why I always carry tape in my pocket. Convenient for when it takes too long for the physician to show up, I just wrap some silk tape around that vein. (I don't even know where I'd get sutures if I wanted them!)
Hygiene Queen
2,232 Posts
I thought it was because they were jealous of the nurse's youth, beauty and superior education.