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

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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 Geriaterics.

I thought this was great. Words you think and never can say. lol thanks for a smile and a chuckle.:yeah:

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

But overeating can kill you. Just because you won't overdose at the moment doesn't mean it won't kill you.

I say this with my own war with not eating right. But, you would have to take me kicking and screaming to be a patient in the hospital. I refuse to go. I refuse to work there again and I would rather die then visit there.

No offense to your post by the way.

1 Votes
Specializes in http://apollorn.blogspot.com.

"No, sir, the medication says ANALGESIC.... not ANALgesic. They go in your mouth."

I've never run into this kind of situation but I sure laugh my (no pun intended) butt off saying it. Gotta love Scrubs.

1 Votes
Agnus said:
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.

But that might make someone unhappy.

As usual......no boundaries in nursing. The patient was NOT happy about it.

She was corrected on that stunt.

1 Votes
Specializes in Medical Surgical.

When I was a new nurse, I had an older woman come back from surgery to her semi-private room. Her room-mate had been discharged, and that bed was stripped but not cleaned and the siderails were all down. Daughter showed up about an hour postop, carting a baby about three months old. The next time I went in there, about 30 minutes later, Daughter had taken off, leaving baby on the other bed, still no linen, siderails down. Patient said the idea was that since I was "baby-sitting" her, they felt I could babysit the baby too for an hour or so. Of course, they did not even bother to tell me this; I was just supposed to know this was one of my nursing duties. :bugeyes:

1 Votes
Specializes in LTC.

This is not Burger King you can not have it your Way. Actually, I would love to make that a poster and put it on every ward.

Have a diabetic female pt. She uses the call light to tell us that her Blood Sugar is high b/c she can't move her hands or arms. If she had her way she would be spoon fed, have all the cookies her tummy could hold, and all the Dr. Pepper she could drink.:banghead:

Have a dementia pt. Constantly asking for Tylenol and a nerve pill, No You can't have that right now, But don't mind if I do.:chuckle

Have a pt with hx fx foot. Walks up to desk, puts in an order. I would like a Lortab, Seraquel, Benedryl, and Sleeping pill please. I would love to say do you want fries with that? :twocents::madface:

Oh, and my favorite one of all is One pt. Diabetic, wants us to let him in the break room so he can heat up something because he only had 3 helpings at dinner and needs his middle of the noc snack, He says can I have tylenol, Ibuprophen, and my robaxin. --- Not this noc, not any noc i work, not in my lifetime.:madface: This is the same one that tells me to make sure i put in nurses notes he needs doc to order a psa d/t blood in semen. LOL:lol2: wonder why?????:bugeyes:

1 Votes
janhetherington said:
When I was a new nurse, I had an older woman come back from surgery to her semi-private room. Her room-mate had been discharged, and that bed was stripped but not cleaned and the siderails were all down. Daughter showed up about an hour postop, carting a baby about three months old. The next time I went in there, about 30 minutes later, Daughter had taken off, leaving baby on the other bed, still no linen, siderails down. Patient said the idea was that since I was "baby-sitting" her, they felt I could babysit the baby too for an hour or so. Of course, they did not even bother to tell me this; I was just supposed to know this was one of my nursing duties. :bugeyes:

Wouldn't that be considered abandonment?? Call social services!!:madface:

1 Votes
Specializes in FNP, Peds, Epilepsy, Mgt., Occ. Ed.
Agnus said:
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.

I kinda like the sign I saw in a store recently:

"Children left unattended will be given a double espresso and a free kitten."

1 Votes
santhony44 said:
I kinda like the sign I saw in a store recently:

"Children left unattended will be given a double espresso and a free kitten."

I wish my mom would have left me unattended in that store.:yeah:

Now back to the thread----

I don't know why some parents think that their sick relative would be able to babysit.

1 Votes
Specializes in ICU;CCU;ER;flight nurse.

Nice. My first phone call would have been to the nursing supervisor or unit director. Second call would've been to the police. THE NERVE!!! People NEVER cease to amaze me with their stupidity. It was child abandonment...no matter what kind of spin this twit put on it.

1 Votes
Specializes in ortho/neuro/general surgery.

to the patient who threatened to beat me up because she didn't get "that rush" after I gave her a low dose of narcotic IVP slowly and I had to summon help

"would you hurry up and put on your coat and clothes and sign yourself out AMA already? we're all tired of your constant complaining that any amount of narcs we throw at you isn't enough, tired of being threatened and the doctors are absolutely not going to give you any more pain medicine. if you can get better narcs on the street, don't let the door hit your butt on the way out!"

1 Votes
Specializes in Psychiatric.

1. Don't wait until 4:55 Friday afternoon to call me and tell me you need a prescription for Ritalin...you know it needs to be a hard copy Rx and unless you can be here in the next 3 minutes we are GONE...and no, I am not going to wait here until 6 p.m.

2. Calling me every 3 minutes is not going to make me call in your script any faster.

3. Please leave the pharmacist alone...don't make him fax a refill request for your Valium to my office 7 times in one day...I got the first one, I promise...He and I have other people ahead of you who also need their meds.

4. I'm sorry you lost the month's worth of Seroquel I gave you for the 2nd time...I can't give you more!

5. Don't tell me you can't afford your $5 copay for Zyprexa...I can smell cigarettes on you.

6. If your son's Rx for clonidine says HALF a tablet, give him HALF a tablet! Don't play doctor with his meds and then wonder why he says he feels 'kinda funny.'

7. I can't give you samples just because you don't want to go to the pharmacy until next week.

8. I'm sorry you think the NP is a you-know-what...I can NOT prescribe meds, and if you're out of Ativan 5 days early, I will NOT call in a refill for you until 5 days from now.

9. If you don't like me handing out your meds to you daily, STOP SELLING THEM TO YOUR CRACKHEAD BROTHER.

1 Votes