20 Things Nurses Wish They Never Had to Say

OK, I'll have to admit that I got the idea for this piece from a desk calendar my sister gave me for Christmas last year. It's 365 pages of nursing funnies, some of which really aren't, but the rest of them range from the mildly amusing to rolling-on-the-floor-with-tears-squirting-out-of-your-eyes HILARIOUS. And after having the kind of Hell Week I just went through, I needed the comic relief of "How in the world did THAT get in THERE??!" Nurses General Nursing Article

Here, for your enjoyment, are twenty more things nurses wish they never had to say:

1) To the CNA: "Uh-oh........it looks like Mrs. Chambers hasn't had a BM in nine days."

2) To the patient with Munchausen's Syndrome: "No, I can't give you any more pain medicine," when what you'd really like is to swack him up with enough Dilaudid to shut him up about his manufactured miseries for a few hours.

3) To co-workers, upon seeing a frequent flyer coming up in the elevator: "Oh, Lordy......look at what the cat dragged in."

4) To the MD: "You want me to do WHAT?"

5) To your best friend's 10-year-old: "No, Eric, you're not a dork. Everybody gets their big toe stuck in the bathtub faucet at least once."

6) To a frantic grandparent calling to ask what to do about the thirteen-month-old who just consumed one of their Pall Malls: "How soon can you get him to the hospital?"

7) To any mother: "Your child has head lice."

? To your son who's faking illness to get out of going to school: "If there's no blood, no broken bones, and no passing out, I'm not impressed." (You're tempted to introduce him to your Munchausen's patient so he can see what happens to malingerers.)

9) To the babysitter: "I'm sorry, I can't pick up the kids yet.......got another half-hour of charting to do........I'll be there as soon as I can."

10) To your husband: "Not tonight, honey, I've got a backache."

11) To your boss: "Why, of course I'll pull a double tonight."

12) To the patient with a six-inch-long screwdriver in his rectum: "What were you thinking?!", because you really want to know why a full-grown man would put such an object in an orifice that was intended as an EXIT rather than an entry.

13) To your spouse: "Sorry, honey, looks like I'm working late again.....don't worry about fixing me anything, I'll just grab something at Mickey D's on the way home."

14) To the confused resident who keeps asking you about her cat---which has probably been dead for the past 30 years---as you push your med cart down the hall: "I'm sure Fluffy is somewhere around the neighborhood, Mrs. Jones, but I really can't go with you to look for her right now."

15) To any GYN patient: "Can you please scoot down.......a little more........a little more.......there." Every woman alive knows what "scoot down" means, and believe me, nurses don't like the stirrups any better than patients do!

16) To the unit secretary: "I'm sorry to bug you, Tina, but I reallyreallyreallyreallyREALLY need these orders processed right away, couldya please put them in ASAP, huh, couldya, pretty-please-with-sugar-on-top? Thanks, you're a doll!"

17) To PT/OT/ST: "Next time you take my patient off the floor, would you please let me know so I don't freak out when I can't find him?" (I used to LOATHE this habit of theirs when I was working in acute care. I hope it's gotten better in the years since I left....but somehow I doubt it.)

18) To the new parents flummoxed by the car seat they are supposed to take their baby home in: "Uh...excuse me. Do you know how to use that thing?" (Because that obligates you to teach them to use it.....oy.)

19) To the idiot-sticks who run long-term care pharmacies: "You're the fifth person in the past hour who's called to ask me the same questions about that medication. Don't you people ever TALK to one another?"

20) To the Grand Pooh-Bahs who have never walked a hard linoleum floor in our battered NurseMates: "Oh, of COURSE I don't mind standing while I chart/working an entire 12-hour shift without eating or peeing/turning bariatric patients on my own/running back and forth to find equipment/fill in the blank."

After all, we are nurses, and we love what we do.........right? RIGHT?? ;)

Specializes in Oncology/Haemetology/HIV.
Sorry to get off topic but I had a question?** if I got a ppd test done which had no wheal and received positive results is it possible the results are affected by the incorrect administration??? I'm kind of upset and think the doctor was trying to cover up her nurses mistake and said there is no need for a wheal??* I'm not crazy I had this shot before I just wanted more info and the Dr seem like she was doing more hiding then explaining

Things nurses wish they didn't have to say:

It clearly says that we cannot give medical advice when one signs up - why are you asking, given this rule?

There are plenty of places to put this post that would have slightly more appropriate, if one reviews the site - why interrupt a thread inappropriately?

Respectfully and not to be harsh, one would not walk into an MDs/ accountants/teachers meeting, with rules that one agrees to abide by - just walk in, interrupt the discussion and ask what one has agreed not to ask.

Your best bet would be to discuss with your MD, or get a second opinion. As it does not seem that you have been harmed by the issue, your MD generally would have little reason to lie.

Specializes in Critical Care.
"I'm sorry. I have no idea how you are going to get home. No, we dont give people cab vouchers anymore because people abused them. How did you get here? You don't know a single person who can come pick you up? No one?"

This one was bothersome to me a bit...got really sick last year and had to call an ambulance. I don't have any family left in the area (all have passed on) and I was truly sick. After I was taken in emergently and the situation fixed, I had no ride home at 4 am and no one to call. I was luckily able to find the $20 to get home (thank God I had my insurance card in front of my ATM card) but what floored me was the fact no one seemed to care. One comment was "well you can take a bus home"..hmm, no bus runs at 4 am in my town, I'm in a hospital gown and sweat pants...not thinking this is a good situation. My hospital does set things up like cab vouchers for those in situations like mine. Wasn't too impressed with my community hospital

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

Mrs. Imsosorry? This is the Emergency Department.....your son's been in a terrible accident...........

and the grand majority say, "i didn't think you'd believe me if i brought it down." no. 2 reason-didn't bother, had to go for a cigarette run first.

no.3 reason: "i don't have money for tylenol" said by the mom in designer jeans, carrying a designer purse, fresh manicure, and latest cell phone. grrrrrr! (oh and the child is usually brought in wrapped in a quilt!!)

no.3 reason: "i don't have money for tylenol" said by the mom in designer jeans, carrying a designer purse, fresh manicure, and latest cell phone. grrrrrr! (oh and the child is usually brought in wrapped in a quilt!!)

how are you allowed to respond to something like that... i mean are you ever allowed to scold someone for doing something to ridiculous or detrimental to a person, let a lone a child's health????

Specializes in Telemetry, Med/Surg.

It's so sad that so many of us are able to relate to that one!

Specializes in CCT.

One for EM/ED

"HOW did you get that ther....never mind, I don't want to know".

Specializes in Hospice.

I worked in long term care for only 3 weeks, and your comment about the pharmacies brought back so many memories. I am sitting here laughing now- nothing like 2 pharmacists and 4 techs all calling to ask if you know that Mrs. Smith is on percocet and she has a past allergy to lortab, and are we sure she should be on percocet? Hehehe.

Things I hate to say:

1. I know it seems like the new medicine has caused your mom to decline, but the doctor and I feel pretty certain that she is dying, and has probably less than a week left.

2. No, there is no one who will pay for your long term care, even though you worked hard your whole life, pay for medicare, and saved money. Actually, you will need to spend every last penny you have, and sell all your possessions, and then medicaid will kick in. And your family will have to pay medicaide back with your life insurance policy.

3. I know the doctor's were not upfront with you, but they do not expect this treatment to cure you, improve you quality of life, or extend your time.

Gosh, this list could just go on and on.

3. I know the doctor's were not upfront with you, but they do not expect this treatment to cure you, improve you quality of life, or extend your time.

......I love this one, wish I could actually say it!

This is great!!!!!! Thanks for sharing

Specializes in Trauma Surgery, Nursing Management.

Oh, this one makes my heart hurt:

"No, there really isn't anything more that the docs can do. I am so sorry. I won't pretend to know the difficulty you are going through right now. I can't tell you that things will get better. I won't tell you that 'I know', because I don't, and can't grasp myself the absolute pain you are facing right now. But I CAN tell you that donating your husband's organs will enable many people to LIVE just when they have accepted death. Your husband will be a hero to countless people."

I hate having to say this. HATE IT.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
Oh, this one makes my heart hurt:

"No, there really isn't anything more that the docs can do. I am so sorry. I won't pretend to know the difficulty you are going through right now. I can't tell you that things will get better. I won't tell you that 'I know', because I don't, and can't grasp myself the absolute pain you are facing right now. But I CAN tell you that donating your husband's organs will enable many people to LIVE just when they have accepted death. Your husband will be a hero to countless people."

I hate having to say this. HATE IT.

And reading that was like a punch to the solar plexus. I've had to tell a lot of people that their loved one had passed away, but when I was asked to be on the organ-requisition team at my hospital some years ago, I turned it down because of the prospect of having to say exactly what you did above. OUCH. :(