Taboo: 10 Things Nurses Should NEVER Say!

Nurses are a strange bunch with superstitions - whether we want to admit it or not. For some of the smartest people on the planet (more so than rocket scientists or...doctors...in some cases), we sure get bent out of shape when someone says certain phrases. Nurses General Nursing Article Video

Updated:  

As nurses, we have learned the hard way to never say certain statements. Why? Well, that could be because the first time we said it - or heard it said - we got the "evil eye". Think back to the time you first heard some naive soul say, "WOW!, it sure is quiet today!" "Sure is slow", "Nothing has happened today", "We haven't had a code this week", and comments of the like - just are not acceptable!

If you are an experienced nurse (even with one day of experience), you will be able to testify to what will happen to the unfortunate employee who makes such a claim, right?! Let's just say that person is not the most popular person on the unit!

It is a fact. Some sayings are just taboo! What does that even mean? Taboo is, by definition, a social or religious custom prohibiting or forbidding discussion of a particular practice, or forbidding association with a particular person, place or thing. It is something that is prohibited or restricted by social custom.

We knock on wood if we say we have been having a good week, or we may reach out to touch the face of a beautiful child who is our patient so they don't have a turn for the worse. We cross ourselves and say a prayer when someone mentions the drug seeking patient (not currently a patient) who goes on a rampage when the doctor refuses to order the dilaudid. Therefore, speaking of such topics are prohibited!

So, what other topics is it that we as nurses don't want to hear? What is it that really grates on our nerves? Here are a few sayings...and the rationale behind it!

I interviewed some top notch nurses I know, and here is what they have to say on the subject:

  1. Karen Martinez: "We're slow today." Why? It causes the floodgates to open wide and you will probably never get a potty break the rest of your shift!
  2. Sylvia Nelson: "Our anesthesiologists have a thing against saying a child is calm, because then they wake up like a demon. I will never tell my surgeon I hope their night is quiet!"
  3. Jennifer Collins: "It's been a good day!" That's when the *** hits the fan. Wait until your shift is over and you have given report!
  4. Ashley Elizabeth: "I have a fantastic assignment!" - There is no such thing if you say it before the end of your shift....; "Calling a patient a 'stable vented patient'" will cause them to not be stable for long - you will be running a code in no time; "This patient is an easy stick." Your patient will suddenly become a turnip.
  5. Cherrie Aquino: Telling parents, "Oh, he/she is the BEST IV starter!" Your patient will be a scientific marvel and have no veins.
  6. Elissa Norris: "Don't ever mention the chronic kid (or adult patient) that has a crazy mom (or wife/husband/family member) - inevitably they show up!"
  7. Carol Kaplan: "You should never, ever, repeat the name of a 'repeat offender' patient. You will admit that patient on your shift!"
  8. Diana Montalvo: "The doctor will be in - just a few minutes." The doctor will not even be in the building...maybe not even in the country, since you said it!
  9. Sarah Weishuhn: "As a surgical nurse, we never say, 'WOW!, there aren't any add on cases today?!' Because five minutes later, the bottom will fall out and we will have an open fracture, an appy, and a C-section...NOW!"
  10. Sandra Cambridge: "Never comment on how well behaved a pediatric patient is until they are walking out the door." unless you wish to come face to face with the devil with the parent who has no control or expects you to be the nanny.

We learn to never say words like, 'quiet', 'boring', 'easy'. We never attribute these qualities to our patient(s), or the shift. We have learned, from having to jump in the trenches after these words are uttered, that these words will open up the gates of Hades and set forth a war that will cause you to have to wage battle against until your shift is "supposed" to be over.

We learn to bask in the warmth of silence or calmness that may befall our units without having to think about - much less comment about - the fact!

We never mention that we will be discharging all of our patients and request to leave when we have no more patients to care for....for good reasons! We know what will happen if we do. Not only will you be discharging all of your patients, but you will be the admitting nurse for all of the ones that ED will be sending up - because inevitably, some brickhead in the ED said, "Sure is quiet today!"

Taboo-10-Things-Nurses-Should-NEVER-Say.pdf

I said "Quiet" every shift. I never had the power to make people sicker, crazier, or become a trauma victim.

It is simply superstition - and if you want to play, fine.

But don't think that it is true. Because it isn't.

I always say I walk under ladders, run over black cats, break mirrors, say Quiet, work during a full moon . . . . :cheeky:

Quote
I said "Quiet" every shift. I never had the power to make people sicker, crazier, or become a trauma victim.

It is simply superstition - and if you want to play, fine.

But don't think that it is true. Because it isn't.

I always say I walk under ladders, run over black cats, break mirrors, say Quiet, work during a full moon . . . . :cheeky:

Be careful...

Specializes in Emergency Nursing.

Can't speak for every ER, but I can definitely tell when it's a full moon at work. I'll be halfway through my shift and think; "Dang! Work really sucks today." I check the lunar phase online and sure enough...it's a full moon.

Just because I believe it doesn't mean you have to ;)

macawake said:
Hmmm.. Yes, I have noticed this behavior among quite a few fellow nurses and honestly I don't understand it. Perhaps it's because I don't have a single superstitious cell in my body. I simply don't believe that anything I say will affect the future in the way described in this post.

Obviously if I yell "fire" in a crowded movie theater I'll likely cause a panic but I don't think that my voicing predictions about future events will make them happen. If a code is about to happen it will happen regardless. I didn't seal the poor patient's fate by uttering; "we haven't had a code in a long time".

I used to believe that wholeheartedly. I was never one to squelch down my impulse to say "things are certainly quiet" or "this assignment is GREAT!" (and mean it).

However - in the past 2 shifts I've had, I have said 3 'repeat offender's' names, and EVERY single one of them was not just admitted to my floor, but to ME. Yep - 2 of them on the same night! Oh! The Humanity! These are not your average, run of the mill offenders either. These are the LTAC, known to have MRSA, VRE, and usually C-diff. They have reduced mental capacity and demanding families who, despite being so familiar with our staff WE call them all by first name, think their loved one is the only patient I have tonight. They are the bed-jumping, call-lighting pushing, PIV pulling lovely patients we all in Med/Surg know and love.

Never again will I say a patient's name after they leave my floor, except in cases of "Hey, did you know Mr. X died" or "It's amazing, Ms. Y's brother decided to move her across country and they left a month ago!"

TeeKay12 said:
I used to believe that wholeheartedly. I was never one to squelch down my impulse to say "things are certainly quiet" or "this assignment is GREAT!" (and mean it).

However - in the past 2 shifts I've had, I have said 3 'repeat offender's' names, and EVERY single one of them was not just admitted to my floor, but to ME. Yep - 2 of them on the same night! Oh! The Humanity! These are not your average, run of the mill offenders either. These are the LTAC, known to have MRSA, VRE, and usually C-diff. They have reduced mental capacity and demanding families who, despite being so familiar with our staff WE call them all by first name, think their loved one is the only patient I have tonight. They are the bed-jumping, call-lighting pushing, PIV pulling lovely patients we all in Med/Surg know and love.

Never again will I say a patient's name after they leave my floor, except in cases of "Hey, did you know Mr. X died" or "It's amazing, Ms. Y's brother decided to move her across country and they left a month ago!"

If you say Mr. X died aloud he will come back and haunt you on your next Q word night, during a full moon.

Dogen said:
I try not to do things like lay my hands on a patient, close my eyes, hum a little bit, and then yell, "You're healed!"

I say "the q-word" all the time, mostly around one of my superstitious colleagues because it makes her cringe. I pay no attention to the moon phase. I just looked it up and I've picked up an extra evening shift on the next one here (8/29). I'll have to remember to tell everyone about it during the first half of the shift. "You know tonight is a full moon, right? Think it'll be quiet? Maybe a nice, slow, easy shift? I mean, X, Y. and Z aren't admitted, so it should be really smooth, right?"

Shame on you!!

Specializes in Behavioral Health.
SubSippi said:
Shame on you!!

Years ago I would argue with people, show them research, explain the confirmation bias and the availability heuristic... it never did any good. I've never claimed to be a nice person, so now I just taunt my superstitious colleagues. It amounts to the same thing but saves time. I probably should be ashamed, and yet...

Farawyn said:
Be careful...

No need to be careful. It isn't true! wave.gif.f76ccbc7287c56e63c3d7e6d800ab6c Quiet, quiet, quiet...

Dogen said:
Years ago I would argue with people, show them research, explain the confirmation bias and the availability heuristic... it never did any good. I've never claimed to be a nice person, so now I just taunt my superstitious colleagues. It amounts to the same thing but saves time. I probably should be ashamed, and yet...

Don't be ashamed.

Dogen said:
Years ago I would argue with people, show them research, explain the confirmation bias and the availability heuristic... it never did any good. I've never claimed to be a nice person, so now I just taunt my superstitious colleagues. It amounts to the same thing but saves time. I probably should be ashamed, and yet...

OMG, you are THAT guy at work, aintcha?

Dogen said:
Years ago I would argue with people, show them research, explain the confirmation bias and the availability heuristic... it never did any good. I've never claimed to be a nice person, so now I just taunt my superstitious colleagues. It amounts to the same thing but saves time. I probably should be ashamed, and yet...

When the walls of your hospital come crashing down in flames, and you look up to see the full moon through a hole in the ceiling, and it's shining down on all the frequent fliers you just named...you won't have anyone to blame but yourself. Maybe then you'll come to terms with the power of the "q" word.

I hope you're preparing yourself now for all the "I told you so's."

Farawyn said:
OMG, you are THAT guy at work, aintcha?

Obviously, I'm that person too. :sneaky:

This thread is starting to feel a bit like the anti-vaccine thread. :nailbiting:

I realize the author meant it for satire as the OP stated such a few posts back. However, this is a widespread belief in the MEDICAL field.

Saying QUIET has the power to pull people into the ER. The full moon makes people crazy.

If I had that kind of power, to use a word to make something happen, I'd be a magician. Hocus pocus.

Sorry about the attachments. I'm not tech savvy but have asked a mod to remove them.

And hey, it isn't even a full moon! Yet, my computer skills went haywire. :)