The Worst Hospital Visitor I've Ever Seen

Not every family who visits is there to be supportive of the patient. Some of them are even downright unsupportive. Here are some of the worst visitors I've ever seen -- how about you? Nurses Relations Article

There are so many . . . . how to choose?

There was the woman who'd had an aortic dissection repair, and things didn't go well. She had a perioperitive MI, a CVA and sepsis. All told, she was a patient in our ICU for six months. I didn't hear much about the patient's life from HER; she was confused and mostly nonverbal.

Her sister, however, sat at her bedside for hours and wanted to chat with the nurse. The sister, Katie, was a nice person and since I had just moved to the area, gave me a lot of tips about restaurants to try, where NOT to get your car repaired, and the like.

The HUSBAND, Milton, rarely showed up and when he did, he was the type of man who bellowed about "his rights" rather than understanding that when the patient is in CT (or having a line placed), the patient is unavailable for visitors, even of the spousal nature.

Katie put up pictures in the patient's room -- a smiling picture of her and her sister together, and multiple pictures of the patient's beloved dogs. "They're just like her children," Katie explained. "Milton never wanted children." Tellingly, there were no picture of Milton in the room.

He and Katie barely spoke and Katie told us that when Milton married her sister, he quit working and expected that she would support him, do all the cooking and cleaning and take care of his mother as well. As for the patient, she lit up whenever Katie arrived, but shut down whenever Milton did.

One weekend afternoon, Milton showed up just as I was helping the patient's nurse finish a bath and linen change. Without waiting for the two of us to finish up or get the dirty linen out of the way, Milton leaned over the bed and whispered (loudly enough for the patient and both of the nurses in the room to hear) "I killed your dogs. I said I would do it, and I did." That man has to take the prize for being ONE of the worst hospital visitors I've ever seen.

Years ago, when I worked in CCU, a 58 year old woman was admitted in cardiogenic shock. We placed a balloon pump, lined her, gave her multiple doses of morphine and finally, scheduled surgery for the following day. (The surgeon wanted to do it immediately, but there was already an emergency surgery in progress and the on call OR team were already in that OR.)

At six the next morning, I'm filling out the pre-op check list and a woman breezes in with two toddlers in tow. As I tried to explain to her that visitors under sixteen weren't allowed in the CCU, she told me that she had "just come to drop off her kids for their granny to watch."

Then there was the visitor who injected the patient with some street drug, right through the conveniently placed central line, because "Y'all don't give him none of the good stuff in here."

the-worst-hospital-visitor-ive-ever-seen.pdf

Specializes in burn ICU, SICU, ER, Trauma Rapid Response.
Who wants to hook up in a hospital restroom?? eewww I guess ignorance is a blessing sometimes...

In the same train of thought. Every time I walk into a patient's room and visitors have their babies and toddlers crawling around on the floor, sometimes putting various things in their mouth, I just shudder in horror.

In the same train of thought. Every time I walk into a patient's room and visitors have their babies and toddlers crawling around on the floor, sometimes putting various things in their mouth, I just shudder in horror.

I just had a flash back when I was a child I would sometimes fall asleep on the floor of my mothers hospital room. Now that I think of it ewww I don't even want to imagine all those germs.

Specializes in Psych, Corrections, Med-Surg, Ambulatory.
So where was the social worker, to help the son get placement?

It probably wasn't the social worker's responsibility. In 30 years of nursing (in 2 countries), I've discovered that hardly anything is.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
There are so many! :facepalm:

There was the lady who had multiple complications post CABG. She was in ICU FOR EVER!. After a few week we noticed she had lice! LIce? Where the devil did she get that? So we treated her...and treated her... and treated her...What the heck?

Then we noticed th the family would come in and "Fix her hair". Ewe!

But the family decided to camp out in the ICU waiting room....the entire family. THey would "wash" their clothed in the sink in the waiting room. They took over the entire waiting room...day and night. They would have sex right there on the floor. Then we noticed that they ALL had lice!!!!!!!!! and they were laying all over the floor, furniture everything! YUCK!!!!!!! I saw them walking out of her room one morning scratch their head pull something from out and flick it in the floor!!!!

We had to treat them ALL and get rid of the entire waiting room furniture...we closed the waiting area for "remodeling". It still makes my skin crawl.

I think this family wins the prize --so far!

Specializes in Med-Surg/home health/pacu/cardiac icu.

The worst patient I ever had was an older woman (50) having sex in a semi-private room. (with her 30 year old son.):eek: Needless to say, everybody got called into that situation, SW, APS, nurse manager, risk management.( The roommate got moved to another room.)

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
The worst patient I ever had was an older woman (50) having sex in a semi-private room. (with her 30 year old son.):eek: Needless to say, everybody got called into that situation, SW, APS, nurse manager, risk management.( The roommate got moved to another room.)

:eek:

Ohhhh....:no:

Wonder if the roommate was traumatized! :facepalm:

Specializes in burn ICU, SICU, ER, Trauma Rapid Response.
There are so many! :facepalm:

There was the lady who had multiple complications post CABG. She was in ICU FOR EVER!. After a few week we noticed she had lice! LIce? Where the devil did she get that? So we treated her...and treated her... and treated her...What the heck?

Then we noticed th the family would come in and "Fix her hair". Ewe!

But the family decided to camp out in the ICU waiting room....the entire family. THey would "wash" their clothed in the sink in the waiting room. They took over the entire waiting room...day and night. They would have sex right there on the floor. Then we noticed that they ALL had lice!!!!!!!!! and they were laying all over the floor, furniture everything! YUCK!!!!!!! I saw them walking out of her room one morning scratch their head pull something from out and flick it in the floor!!!!

We had to treat them ALL and get rid of the entire waiting room furniture...we closed the waiting area for "remodeling". It still makes my skin crawl.

I agree this family wins the prize.

Speaking as a person who has had to live for weeks while infested with lice (while deployed in VERY austere conditions), I can hardly think of anything worse. Unless it's Guinea worms.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dracunculiasis

Specializes in Med-Surg/home health/pacu/cardiac icu.

I don't know if she was, but I sure was, walking into that.

Doing peds, I would really appreciate if patients' parents/parents' significant others/people that parents just met in the lobby/etc. could find a form of stress relief other than having sex in patient rooms. And if they're going to do it, could they please stop hitting call lights while doing so. Especially the emergency lights that a staff member MUST GO IN THE ROOM TO TURN OFF.

I really don't care who you have sex with. But I don't go to the bank/store/wherever and have sex in your workplace, please stop having sex in mine.

Specializes in ICU, LTACH, Internal Medicine.

Stcroix,

That is typical behavior for Eastern Europeans. We use a lot of herbals, which are not thought to be medicines here but are there and some of them even prescribed by doctors. People

like them and want them to be used for their loved ones, so they get upset if their old favorites cannot be given in hospitals. It is just a very cultural thing.

Next time, just ask the name of the stuff and ask someone who knows what it might be. Then let the folks know that they cannot have Valerian but Xanax is even better.

Speaking about the topic - how about a clever young guy who managed to reprogram PCA so that it run dry in less than a minute, then disconnecting his dad's IV and pouring all the good stuff for himself? Found at the very last moment and escorted out by security...The same guy got the pass the very next day and tried to hack hospital computer system so that his dad could enjoy channels not offered by hospital TV service - namely, hard Media. Total breakup of the whole thing as a result and several hours of fun in ICU bound hands and feed because of EMR frozen dead.

Specializes in NICU, ICU, PICU, Academia.

The whole sex topic made me remember this guy on the med-surg/ tele floor. He's admitted with chest pain around 6pm, wife gets him settled in and goes home to fetch his pajamas and toiletries. All of the sudden, his HR is 160 and (simultaneously) the bathroom panic alarm goes off. I go racing down there only to find him in the bathroom being 'pleasured' by his girlfriend (he leaned against the panic light).

He is completely pizzed about being interrupted, of course.

I just caught my patient having sex with her boyfriend recently. The joke was on him because even though he was really disruptive and disrespectful, my patient was HIV+. She had let all of us know that she was the only one who knew about her diagnosis and we were absolutely not to discuss it in front of her boyfriend. I'm really not sure which of them I disliked the most by the end of the shift. I guess like attracts like...

Wow. You got me thinking about patient privacy versus endangerment of others...

VM -- HIV and Health Law: Striking the Balance between Legal Mandates and Medical Ethics, Oct 05 ... Virtual Mentor

Excerpt:

Specifically with regard to HIV-infected patients, exceptions to

confidentiality do exist. As stated in Opinion E-2.23:

If a physician knows that a seropositive individual is endangering a third

party, the physician should, within the constraints of the law (1) attempt to

persuade the infected patient to cease endangering the third party; (2) if

persuasion fails, notify authorities; and (3) if the authorities take no action,

notify the endangered third party [16].