Published Feb 10, 2008
MissERN
79 Posts
Your patient comes to the ER after swallowing the baby from his king cake. Discharge instructions: take smaller bites and chew before swallowing.
NOLATeefus
11 Posts
Yeah you right!
dsoginer
181 Posts
You know you are a Louisiana nurse when...
your patient presents at the ER with a crab claw shut tightly through the nail and face of his thumb.
Discharge instructions? remember some crabs are double jointed
You try to exlain to your pt that "Yes, those fried shrimp you ate have, yet again, caused an allergic reaction" and that it's best to stay away from them...."oh, well, I won't eat as many, and I'll wait a while."
Discharge instructions: you came in coughing this time, next time you may come in not breathing!!!
Hey, I know that guy!! la bonne ton roule!!:cheers:
10MG-IV
120 Posts
While @ triage you ask the patient, How did you get to the hospital? and they reply "by boat". true story
When you have to remove the Mardi Gras costumes to treat the sprains, fractures, etc.
The contest is: which nurse can wear/get the most Mardi Gras Beads from Patients during the shift. Then,,,,,
Other nurses are jealous of the beads you got.
When you move to out of state, you realize it's MARDI GRAS DAY and no one is wearing costumes, going to parades..... and you are sad.
You wear beads to work anyway.
When green vomit doesn't alarm you since its St. Pattys day or the day after.
There are 13 police cars on the ramp, and 13 boxes of do-nuts in the nurses lounge. Night Shift Those were the days ya'll :lol:
When your patient threatens to call "The ACTION REPORTER" or "Morris Bart" :omy:
You keep a full tool box of tool in the ER for things like
fish-hook removal.
Fishhook removal is done at triage.
Patients family will bring you take-out when they leave to get "somthin to eat":cheers:
You have taken care of a patient having "tack-a-lawdy" because there is a live roach in her ear.
CHATSDALE
4,177 Posts
loved all the posts and yes i have been there for all of them
Sean 91
109 Posts
...the patient tells you how to go out into the swamp to pick berries--or is it flowers?--to make a jelly...but to watch out for the gators. (Not funny, just true--the gators are getting out of control.) The jelly is pretty good but you have to boil it well so that you won't get sick. Wish I could remember what you call the plant. (I'm a Yankee.)
Oh, here it is, I saved the patient's note:
"Mayhaw - Small red (when ripe) berry. Trees grow best in low wet area - but grow in hills and make [berries] if receive plenty of mositure. A favorite jelly in the South."
night_owl_504
44 Posts
how about when on the first day of orientaion your director asks you if you want to be on Activation or Recovery team for the Hurricane season...
ThrowEdNurse, BSN, RN
298 Posts
When almost every time you ask a pt why they don't have a PCP or why they have been non-compliants with their meds, the answer is usually related to Hurricane Katrina. Thank God for Gustav, maybe it'll cut down on the number of times a day I hear "Katrina."
When you ask a pt how long certain symptoms have been going on, the answer starts with, "when they plucked me off the roof." (Some people blame the helicopter pilots for everything.)
Your department manager is also so sick of hearing "I'm a victim of Hurricane Katrina" that he replied one time, "Oh, why didn't you say so? You should always tell us immediately because it gives you special privileges. You didn't know that? I'll go get the Dr. right now!" It was hysterical. The sad part is the pt and family were IQ challenged and believed him. "No, no one ever told us, okay great!" His sarcasm wasn't that subtle!
vernonleon
16 Posts
You know you are a Louisiana nurse when......You have taken care of a patient having "tack-a-lawdy" because there is a live roach in her ear.
...You have taken care of a patient having "tack-a-lawdy" because there is a live roach in her ear.
'k, I'm an ignorant Californian, so I must ask: What is "tack-a-lawdy?"