Unusual treatments

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Here's a few things I've seen:

The Russians insist for gastroenteritis vodka with black pepper. A couple of kids even got out of detention when they found vodka in their rooms, because the parents explained it was medicinal. It turns out this was not just an excuse, but is widely believed. They use vodka for many of their health problems. I've never tested this theory out, but they truly believe it, Who knows?

A grain of sugar in a hard to get out splinter - a Zimbabwean nurse showed me this, and it really worked. The sugar apparently draws in fluid, and the splinter works its way out. Never used it myself, but watched the result when my colleague has. There have been some stories in the papers about the use of sugar lately, so they might have some hard evidence soon.

Fractured clavicles - we had some problems because the Russian parents insisted a middle clavicle fracture should be operated and put back in alignment, while local doctor's said no. Parents still angry despite 3 doctor's recommendations, and flew child home for surgery.

Bedrest - for minor coughs/colds, Russian parents insist on complete rest in bed, and the insist that a temp of 37.0 centigrade is a fever.

Just some of the interesting things I've come across.

soap under the sheet to help muscle spasms.

My grandma does this! she used to get bad charlie horses at night. She also takes a swig of tonic water every night to prevent the cramps too.

Her doctor actually told her to take the tonic water because of the quinine in it, even though quinine was blackboxed by the FDA for some reason even though it's still readily available in the grocery stores. He went on a little rant about it, haha.

Specializes in MICU, SICU, CICU.

Some of my family's home remedies include rubbing a raw potato on a wart ( it works every time), apple cider vinegar for rashes and coal tar black salve for skin infections.

Specializes in CNS Pediatric Surgery, now retired.
Anybody work with leeches and maggot therapy? End of shift leech count was my favorite.

My favorite was when a leech drinks its fill, detaches, and escapes and you have to follow the blood trail on the floor to capture it. /s/

Loved to drop those suckers in a bottle of normal saline. They just explode.

Had to explain to a young physician that a child did not have bruises on his back from abuse. The marks were from cupping that his Asian mother/grandmother did as a folk medicine treatment.

Some of my family members are very much into holistic/natural medicine. And anti-vaxx.

Hard to keep my mouth shut. :facepalm:

Googled "vodka" as medicine and found out that it has been used for centuries for all kinds of things. Interesting.

Doesn't happen anymore (that I know about) but doctors would taste urine to diagnose diabetes. I'm thinking they could just spill it and let it dry . . . very sticky. ;)

Saw a veteran diploma nurse do this back in 1995. I almost fell over. I was a fairly new nurse and called my mom (a nurse) who explained it. She would taste the urine or sniff the end of a straight cath and tell you what bug was in the urine. She was mean and cranky but I admired her.

Husband's Norwegian granny told me to wipe a stye in my eye with a cat's tail and it will be gone in less than a day. I thought she was nuts. BUT IT WORKS.

I hope she had a home remedy for cat scratches as well...

Specializes in Oncology.
Husband's Norwegian granny told me to wipe a stye in my eye with a cat's tail and it will be gone in less than a day. I thought she was nuts. BUT IT WORKS.

Another treatment for styes is to do nothing at all and ignore it while it goes away.

By cat's tail, like a feline, or the stick like plants that grown around ponds?

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.
Yes a bar of soap. I've heard Ivory Soap works best. :)[/quote']

I have heard the bar of soap thing too, although not necessarily the Ivory part. Anyone have thoughts on what the theory is behind this? The "sugar on a splinter" treatment seems to have some science behind it. What about the soap in the sheets?

I have heard the bar of soap thing too, although not necessarily the Ivory part. Anyone have thoughts on what the theory is behind this? The "sugar on a splinter" treatment seems to have some science behind it. What about the soap in the sheets?

Placebo effect? Mind over matter? ;)

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.
She was mean and cranky

Probably because someone was expecting her to drink urine. :yuck:

I know we want the most narrow spectrum of ABX to treat an infection, but, in this case, I'm willing to wait for the C&S to come back.

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.
Placebo effect? Mind over matter? ;)

A google search did not come up with a scholarly article on the soap in the sheets tx. One non-scholarly source said "some suggest the placebo effect. Since it works for people it has to be more than just the placebo effect." As I said, non-scholarly source.

Specializes in critical care.
A google search did not come up with a scholarly article on the soap in the sheets tx. One non-scholarly source said "some suggest the placebo effect. Since it works for people it has to be more than just the placebo effect." As I said, non-scholarly source.

Ha! "Since it works for people it has be more than just the placebo effect"? Idiots.

They do not understand what the placebo effect is, apparently.

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