Like most specialists, I hate being called to the ER. But last night I got dragged in.
I was, however, quite lucky. Because the friendly ER staff had arranged a play for my entertainment.
It was a busy Friday night in the ER. I found a computer and phone to work at, and began writing a note. As I scribbled away, some paramedics came in, wheeling a well-dressed woman in her 30's past. A nurse told them there were no rooms available, and to put her in the hallway, across from where I was working. I heard the paramedics talking. Lady who's allergic to oregano, but accidentally ate some at a restaurant. Brought in with complaints of shortness of breath.
Though this all, Mrs. Oregano didn't move. She lay there with her eyes closed. Breathing calmly. She didn't have an oxygen mask on. A blood oxygen saturation monitor reading showed her to be at a perfectly normal 97%.
After the paramedics walked away, the awesome ER nurse went over.
(curtain rises, play begins)
ER nurse: "Are you okay, ma'am?"
(Nothing. No movement. Nurse checks pulse, blood pressure, and glances at oxygen monitor)
ER nurse: "Ma'am, I know you can answer me."
Mrs. Oregano's eyelids fluttered open. "Where... where am I?"
ER nurse: "You're in the emergency room."
Mrs. Oregano: "Oh my God! I can't breathe! They gave me Oregano at the restaurant! I told them not to do that! I could have died!"
ER nurse: "Do you have any pain?"
Mrs. Oregano: "I CAN'T BREATHE, DAMNIT!!!"
ER nurse: "You're breathing fine, your oxygen saturations are normal and..."
Mrs. Oregano: "HOW CAN YOU BE SO CALM! CAN'T YOU SEE I'M NOT BREATHING AT ALL? I HAVEN'T TAKEN A BREATH IN OVER AN HOUR! IS THIS HOW YOU TREAT DROWNING PEOPLE? I WANT TO SEE A DOCTOR!"
The ER nurse, showing remarkable calm, restraint, and an iron ability to keep from laughing hysterically, walked away. She went into the doctor's area and said "We have a winner..."
(curtain falls)
I was, however, quite lucky. Because the friendly ER staff had arranged a play for my entertainment.
It was a busy Friday night in the ER. I found a computer and phone to work at, and began writing a note. As I scribbled away, some paramedics came in, wheeling a well-dressed woman in her 30's past. A nurse told them there were no rooms available, and to put her in the hallway, across from where I was working. I heard the paramedics talking. Lady who's allergic to oregano, but accidentally ate some at a restaurant. Brought in with complaints of shortness of breath.
Though this all, Mrs. Oregano didn't move. She lay there with her eyes closed. Breathing calmly. She didn't have an oxygen mask on. A blood oxygen saturation monitor reading showed her to be at a perfectly normal 97%.
After the paramedics walked away, the awesome ER nurse went over.
(curtain rises, play begins)
ER nurse: "Are you okay, ma'am?"
(Nothing. No movement. Nurse checks pulse, blood pressure, and glances at oxygen monitor)
ER nurse: "Ma'am, I know you can answer me."
Mrs. Oregano's eyelids fluttered open. "Where... where am I?"
ER nurse: "You're in the emergency room."
Mrs. Oregano: "Oh my God! I can't breathe! They gave me Oregano at the restaurant! I told them not to do that! I could have died!"
ER nurse: "Do you have any pain?"
Mrs. Oregano: "I CAN'T BREATHE, DAMNIT!!!"
ER nurse: "You're breathing fine, your oxygen saturations are normal and..."
Mrs. Oregano: "HOW CAN YOU BE SO CALM! CAN'T YOU SEE I'M NOT BREATHING AT ALL? I HAVEN'T TAKEN A BREATH IN OVER AN HOUR! IS THIS HOW YOU TREAT DROWNING PEOPLE? I WANT TO SEE A DOCTOR!"
The ER nurse, showing remarkable calm, restraint, and an iron ability to keep from laughing hysterically, walked away. She went into the doctor's area and said "We have a winner..."
(curtain falls)
No wonder some nurses are jaded!
ReplyDeletePeople like this really give people
who are truly sick a bad name. What
part of the gene pool do these folks come from? I guess that is the point, they come from the non-human
pool!
WV= mednurso (how appropriate!)
We get the other end of the scale:
ReplyDeleteMrs Little Old Lady: My dogs not eaten for two days now and I am finding it hard to give her the pills she takes for her heart.
LittleVet: Well maybe you had better bring her down so we can check her out.
Two hours later the patient presents in rigor mortis with four frusemide pills stuffed inside her cheeks.
Well it is hard to breathe with your head up your a..
ReplyDelete@Little Vet: That poor old lady! :(
Maybe she just didn't want to realize that her furry friend was gone?
Dr. G- Baa-haa-haa! You never fail to make me laugh.
ReplyDelete@ LittleVet, OMG. Bless her heart.
You have the best ER stories.
ReplyDeleteMrs. Oregano obviously doesn't have enough work to do. Is her life really so boring that she needs to stage these little theatricals to get attention? Or does she truly believe that the universe revolves around her?
ReplyDeleteIts a pity the nurse legally can't slap her around the head and tell her to stop wasting ER resources...
Sheesh!!
@ Dr. G -- Truly classic presentation of foodus neuroticus.
ReplyDelete@ Little Vet -- AWWWW!!!! Poor LOL and doggie!
I just found your site and you crack me up!
ReplyDeleteRecently as part of an online survey I was required to watch a video that came with commercials. The video was some "doctor" talking about how to combat stress, who said, "You need to remember to breathe. People forget to breathe all the time!"
ReplyDeleteReally? They forget to breathe? How do you talk to them?
Rule One: PEOPLE ARE MORONS
Grumpy:
ReplyDeleteSounds just like my people who tell the doctor they have had trouble breathing when all they did was scream (at the tops of their lungs) all night.
And the O2 sats were pretty--99 to 100%
Hello, people!
I often stop breathing when I read your posts. Also big tears rolling down my face. Should I go to ER?
ReplyDeleteThose are the people I want to put on BiPap. (Me, yelling over the machine: "How's your breathing now, ma'am?")
ReplyDeletePerhaps a visit to the psych ward would have shocked her into "breathing" again?
ReplyDeleteSounds to me like the lady was hoping to sue the restaurant.
ReplyDeleteUm, ah, Jewel, I think that's sort of part of the whole deal here. Be careful, with "insight" like that, you might end up as the focus of a Grumpy post.
ReplyDeleteI was waiting for the immortal line I have heard from ER personnel and I have uttered myself:
ReplyDelete"If you can scream, your breathing is fine."
True, but frequently bad for Press-Gainey scores.
"and she returned from stage left carrying a syringe containing a B-52".
ReplyDeleteand that is why I could never be an ER nurse, I would have retorted with, "Well you're clearly dead, so no need for a doctor, you're going to the morgue!"
ReplyDeletexx
Jaxs
I saw that same patient last night. But she got up and left before being seen.
ReplyDeleteERP - An airplane in a syringe? Must have been one HUGE syringe! LOL
ReplyDelete@Sandra and ERP- isn't a B-52 a combo of Ativan and Haldol? I have a friend who does psychiatric intake at the county jail. She named her Great Dane Haldol- we call him Hal.
ReplyDeleteLMAO!
ReplyDeleteI don't even know where to start - the boatloads of patients who present with "neurological symptoms" who deny drug use (naturally!) and who also have positive tox-screens for every known drug known to mankind...
I particularly remember the "status post-manacles" - severe iron deficiency, wot?
Grumpy, as much as you hate being called into an ER/ED for consults - please KNOW that you'd be LOVED in my ER/ED (Not that it's gonna happen anytime soon - out emergent Neurology consults are done via Tele/TV).