Was I wrong?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Bear with me for this is going to be a little long. I was covering part of a shift for a co-worker on my scheduled day off. The shift was 7am-730pm and I was working 9 to 3:30 for her on the regular med-surg floor(I work Neuro med-surg normally).

I came in and my co-worker gave me report on her patients and then she left. She told me she did everyone's vitals and morning meds so everyone was set that the only thing she asked me to do was to give her sickle cell patient her PRN morphine. So I went in and accessed the patient and the poor girl was clenching the side of the rails squeezing her eyes shut she was obviously hurting. She was admitted for pain control and dehydration. She had orders for morphine 6mgs IV q2hr. Oxycontin 40mgs q8hrs, ativan 2mgs IV q6hr she also had prns for benadryl and zofran forgot the dosages though..probably 25mgs and 4mgs respectively. So I went in and gave her the morphine and she said it hasnt been working and the other nurse was supposed to get an order for something else. The other nurse made no mention of this to me so I called her doctor.

I spoke to the resident and he was open to my suggestions so I suggested this patient would be a good candidate for a PCA since she was requiring PRNs Q2 and wasn't getting much relief from that I thought a PCA would be good for this patient. Not to mention most sicklers I get on my floor are on a PCA and do well. So I got an order for a fentanyl PCA and the doctor also ordered toradol 30 IV q6 and a one time dose of IVP fentanyl 50mcgs to break the pain she was in since the morphine didnt help and to hold her while I was setting up the PCA. So I gave her the fentanyl and toradol and just after that she said she was feeling a bit better. I gave her the PCA and about an hour and 15 minutes after I set it up for her she was up and sitting in a chair watching TV and drinking cranberry juice where before she was clenching the rails looking(and feeling I am sure) like death warmed over. She was smiling and thanked me and reported her pain down to 3 when it was a 9 before.

Now this is where the trouble started. My co-worker came back shortly after 3:00 to finish the rest of her shift. I gave her report and of course told her about her sickle cell patient how the morphine wasn't working and how I got her a PCA. My co-worker went ballistic on me. She told me this patient was a known drug seeker and scammer how she comes in the hospital all the time for narcotics and 3 hots and a cot and she was going to do everything in her power to get the PCA d/c because she wasn't going to cater to this addict when she had other patients with real problems to deal with. She was also mad that I didn't call her and consult with her about getting HER patients meds changed. I was just covering I should have just followed the med orders and she would be the one calling for order changes not me.

Am I losing it or am I really in the wrong here? This patient was obviously in genuine pain and with a sickle cell diagnosis I would rather treat faked pain then not treat potentially real pain. Also she didn't say one word about this patient being a seeker. She actually asked me to give her patient the morphine. I dont think anything is wrong with calling and getting a patients order changed that was visibly in distress. Its not like I was covering a lunch break. According to this nurse I should have made this poor patient wait 5 plus hours in excruciating pain for her to get back. I also didnt see any drug seeking red flags. She wasn't asking for any of the double D medications(demerol or dilaudid) she wasn't reporting 10 out of 10 pain while laughing on her phone and scarfing down trays of food and her HR was 110..she was in pain.

What would you have done? Would you have waited for your co-worker to get back or would you have called for a different order?

Specializes in Transitional Nursing.

Your co worker is a bum hat. Sickle cell is one of the most painful conditions there is and many SC patients are labeled as drug seekers. Your colleague had no right to play judge and jury and decide what her patient did or didn't need - her job is to give the provider the objective information and let he or she decide.

Don't feel bad for one moment - this other nurse has a serious problem.

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.

I've medicated patients who said they were in a ton of pain that were laughing, playing on their phone & then I came back & were asleep. If they're asleep I generally don't wake them up unless they're post op but even if they're laughing or playing on their phone I will medicate them. I don't know how much pain they're really in.

Yeah it will irk me that patients might me playing me but I'd rather give them pain meds than not & have the 1 patient I don't be in pain.

Your coworker could be burnt out, acute care takes a huge toll. But that's no excuse to act the way she does. She needs to be written up & reported to her manager.

The issue of possible drug seeking aside. I likely would not cover for anybody like that again.

Your coworker was wrong. You were the nurse at the time. Besides, if she was such a drug seeker, she probably wouldn't have rated her pain a 3.. it still would have been a 9 or a 10. Addicts usually want more.

It's nurses just like THIS that absolutely ruin it for the rest of us. Stop helping her in any way. AVOID her she'll just look for ways to ruin you. DOCUMENT what she is doing. She has NO RIGHT to deem this patient as an addict and then play judge and jury on whether the patient gets pain meds or not.

Excellent point about the "3" rating.

You did the right thing. As soon as you took over her patients, they became your patients so you did your assessment and advocated for that person. So she had no right to go ballistic on you for helping alleviate one of her patient's pain. It does not matter if that person was a drug seeker, you did your assessment and the patient needed further exploration of pain control. We cannot judge people based on their past, but it does make us very wary of things that can happen. Now that you have seen this co worker react to you that way, its up to you whether you want to help her out again. You documented everything so you are okay, just be careful on who you deal with and do not let her shake your confidence. You cannot be her so what you see is not going to be the same view as her and things can change fast if any patient goes downhill or status changes for whatever reason. Good job and don't doubt yourself!

Specializes in LTC.

No way were you wrong! You did what you felt the person left in your care needed and it was justified. Your coworker sounds like *****! Don't ever agree to do any favors for her again.

Specializes in Psychiatric and emergency nursing.
No.

You were in the right, and by the laws of Occam's Razor, she was not {i.e., You (right) = She (wrong}.

Any questions?

Occam's Razor. Love!

And I agree with everyone else here: OP advocated for proper pain relief and obtained an order for a PCA, patient almost immediately felt better. Diversion might be reaching, but assuredly, your coworker was a t**twaffle to have thrown such a hissy fit.

Occam's Razor. Love!

And I agree with everyone else here: OP advocated for proper pain relief and obtained an order for a PCA, patient almost immediately felt better. Diversion might be reaching, but assuredly, your coworker was a t**twaffle to have thrown such a hissy fit.

Lol, I have just learned a new word. :o

Then again, I have gone on the record many times saying I learn something new here at AN every day.

Specializes in Psychiatric and emergency nursing.
Lol, I have just learned a new word. :o

Then again, I have gone on the record many times saying I learn something new here at AN every day.

Glad I could be of service. I often come up with many unique words for different people and situations, simply because there is not, to my satisfaction, an appropriate word that currently exists. I'm thinking of publishing my own dictionary. I'm just hoping I don't get flagged for TOS, lol!

I bet you won't cover a shift for her again. I guess she slept through the pain lecture in nursing school.

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