Things you'd LOVE to be able to tell patients, and get away with it.

Just curious as to what you would say. Mine goes something like this: Nurses Relations Video Nurse Life

Updated:  

Hi, my name is AngelfireRN, I'll be your nurse tonight.

I am not a waitress, nor am I your slave.

Yelling and hurling obscenities at me will not get you your pain meds any sooner than they are ordered. Nor will having your family member or entourage do the same.

Threatening lawsuits and having umpteen family members camp out in the halls or hold up the nurse's station will not get you preferential treatment.

Physically grabbing me as I go down the hall is NOT a good idea.

I do not give the orders, but I do have to follow/enforce them. This is something that you should take up with your doctor.

No, I will not call him again to ask him for more pain medicine. He has been called twice and has said no both times.

No, I will not give you his number so you can "straighten him out".

No, you are not my only patient, and I highly doubt that you are single-handedly paying my salary. On the off chance that you are, let's talk about a raise.

NO, NO, NO, I most empahatically will NOT come get you when it is time for your next pain shot while you are having a smoke break. I also will not bring it to you in the smoking room. (Have actually said that, I am allergic to cigarettes. I did it once, had an asthma attack, desatted to 83, and turned blue, according to the patient and my charge nurse, after the patient had to help me back to the floor).

No, I don't really care if your family has not eaten all day, they drove here by themselves, they are not sick, and no, I will not call for 6 guest trays. (This of course, is if the patient in question does not need all 6 family members present, and is not at death's door).

No, you may not have 3 six-packs of soda from the kitchen, there are other people that would like a snack, too.

No, they will not open up the kitchen up just for you, at 1 in the morning, because you don't like the snacks we have on the floor.

I could think of hundreds, but those will do for a start. I know it sounds mean, but this is why I got out of bedside nursing. When a hospital becomes the Hilton, I'm gone!

Have fun!

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
eccentricrn said:
not exactly the same, but get this...we had an elderly man as an inpatient who normally cared for his wife at home... well obviously that's not possible seeing as he's at the hospital... so the md said it would be okay for the family to dump her on us... she "stayed with him for the night..." she needed assist to toilet & wore briefs... I was beyond belief... she was more work than her husband the patient... plus she disturbed him to the point he kept trying to get oob, when he was on bedrest... the kicker the family left her meds & asked that we give them to her!!:banghead: most certainly will not!!

several years ago, when I worked in ccu I had an elderly female patient who had had a big infarct. she was on multiple drips and was having runs of ectopy. her daughter came in to visit, bringing her two pre-school children. when I informed her that our visiting rules prohibited visitors under the age of 12, she threw such a fit that the charge nurse OK'd a "two minute" visit. daughter brought the kids into the room, parked them on grandma's bed and proceded to launch into a tirade about "what was she supposed to to with the kids while grandma was lying around in the hospital and who was going to watch them while she went out?"

we explained to the daughter how ill grandma was, how she needed to rest so her heart could heal, and how she needed to be protected from any stress. daughter replied that she'd talk to her mother any damned way she wanted to. she then left while I was taking grandma's blood pressure (with the old-fashioned syphgmomanometer). she left the kids there for grandma to watch.

1 Votes
ruby vee said:
several years ago, when I worked in ccu I had an elderly female patient who had had a big infarct. she was on multiple drips and was having runs of ectopy. her daughter came in to visit, bringing her two pre-school children. when I informed her that our visiting rules prohibited visitors under the age of 12, she threw such a fit that the charge nurse OK'd a "two minute" visit. daughter brought the kids into the room, parked them on grandma's bed and proceded to launch into a tirade about "what was she supposed to to with the kids while grandma was lying around in the hospital and who was going to watch them while she went out?"

we explained to the daughter how ill grandma was, how she needed to rest so her heart could heal, and how she needed to be protected from any stress. daughter replied that she'd talk to her mother any damned way she wanted to. she then left while I was taking grandma's blood pressure (with the old-fashioned syphgmomanometer). she left the kids there for grandma to watch.

oh my lord!!! that is aweful. the closest to that story is that my boss (I work at a daycare center) called me and asked me to come in at 3:30 that day. "ummmmmm, sorry I really can't I had surgery yesterday and am in the hospital" and then she felt horrible for even having called me. not at the same level at all, but similar. but holy crud I can not believe that person doing that.

1 Votes
ruby vee said:
several years ago, when I worked in ccu I had an elderly female patient who had had a big infarct. she was on multiple drips and was having runs of ectopy. her daughter came in to visit, bringing her two pre-school children. when I informed her that our visiting rules prohibited visitors under the age of 12, she threw such a fit that the charge nurse OK'd a "two minute" visit. daughter brought the kids into the room, parked them on grandma's bed and proceded to launch into a tirade about "what was she supposed to to with the kids while grandma was lying around in the hospital and who was going to watch them while she went out?"

we explained to the daughter how ill grandma was, how she needed to rest so her heart could heal, and how she needed to be protected from any stress. daughter replied that she'd talk to her mother any damned way she wanted to. she then left while I was taking grandma's blood pressure (with the old-fashioned syphgmomanometer). she left the kids there for grandma to watch.

had the same thing. daughter left a slew of wild kids with her post mi elder father.

1 Votes
Specializes in CTICU, Interventional Cardiology, CCU.

Things I would love to say to some of my cardiac pt's.

Oh you came in c/o dizziness, well maybe if you didn't pump your veins full of heroin and meth you wouldn't be dizzy.. and at discharge don't ask me for percocet to go..this isn't McDonalds

You were lucky enough to have a heart transplant 7 years ago and now your new heart's trashed b/c you spent all your money on heroin insted of your rejection meds. What a waste, b/c you have only been a herion addict for 3 years.

you are having CP, maybe if you would stop shoveling greasy fried chicken and fries in your mouth while i am trying to to an EKG you wouldn't be here in the first place

STOP pressing the call be to have me turn the heat in your room up and down, you were able to walk when you came to the hospital, get up off your butt and do it your self, there's a switch on the wall press on or off.

it's 0200, you come to my floor,don't ask me if I can call and get you a burger from the cafeteria..it's closed wait till breakfast b/c i know they fed you in the ED. and don't throw a hissy fit b/c i can't magically make the kitchen whip you up something at 0200..I haven't even had dinner yet.

this is my fav..you are diabetic, I know you check your sugar at home, don't scream at the top of your lungs when i do a FS,it's a prick to the finger, Its not like I am shoving an 18g into your arm.

or pt screams like bloody murder when you do a blood draw with a 25g, you were a cop for 20+ years in one of the worst cities in the US, I think you experienced more pain then this, if not then turn your head bit on this towel and keep quiet and stop flinching when I am trying to do a STAT lab.

or you don't pee on your floor at home, well this is my home you don't pee on my floor you use the bathroom

or here's a basin, hot water, and some soap take a $#$% bath b/c you are making your roomate gag along with the rest of the floor

and no I can't just give you MSO4 b/c you have a headache then threaten to sue b/c the "other" hospital you frequent gives it to you.

or PLEASE STOP PRESSING the call bell just to tell me you haveto urinate, you can walk, go pee you don't need me to watch

1 Votes
Specializes in Med Surg, Hospice.

And to all of the yellers:

Just.Shut.Up.Already.

Y'all are giving me a headache, and I'm not your babysitter. I don't do well with attention seekers.

Just.Shut.Up.

1 Votes
Specializes in HCA, Physch, WC, Management.
BabyScanner82 said:
How is consuming too much food any different than abusing your body with drugs?:o

It's different because you don't need narcotics to live. You do however need food to live, which is why over-eating is such a difficult addiction to deal with. Alcoholics can still live if they completely give up alcohol. Managing to control limited amounts of consumption of something that is addictive to you is much more difficult for more people than being able to completely cut the addictive substance out of your life.

:stone

1 Votes
lainith said:
It's different because you don't need narcotics to live. You do however need food to live, which is why over-eating is such a difficult addiction to deal with. Alcoholics can still live if they completely give up alcohol. Managing to control limited amounts of consumption of something that is addictive to you is much more difficult for more people than being able to completely cut the addictive substance out of your life.

:stone

I would guess that you don't completely understand addiction then.

1 Votes
Specializes in ICU.

Morbidly obese patient, ventilated, can't talk...but he can

1: Click his fingers

2: Make loud smacking noises with his lips (aka Skippy the Bush Kangaroo)

Really wanted to tell him to shut up. I have never, ever been so irritated. Oh happy day when he was stepped down :yeah:

1 Votes
Specializes in Geriatrics, Med-Surg..

A few years ago, my parent in law was in critical care, in an induced coma, among many other issues. Well, since my spouse and I are closest to him, we would visit him in ICU as much as possible. Anyways his family would receive nightly updates from us. His sisters being the PITA's that they are were sure we were holding back info from them, which we were not, so they bombarded the ICU with call after call. They were told to stop eventually by the nurses after both I and my spouse told them to cease and desist the ICU calls. Needless to say, when the real work of caring for parent in law began after discharge, we could not get any of them to lift a finger. How typical is that!:banghead:

1 Votes

When I was a grocery store pharmacist, I once had an old geezer tell me that I made too much money. I replied, "Nobody is forcing you to take any of these meds."

The other pharmacist told me later that if I was called on the carpet for this, he would be first in line to defend me because I had no business taking a personal attack like that.

1 Votes
BrokenRNheart said:
Had the same thing. Daughter left a slew of wild kids with her post MI elder father.

Big NO NO. Children must be accompanied by an adult who is not the patient. When we find kids left for a patient to watch we call security and the responsible parent or gardian is tracked down by the police if necessary.

1 Votes

PLEEEZE, go AMA.

1 Votes