Dr. Grumpy: "What happens?"
Mrs. Hyve: "All medications give me a rash, so to safely take any pill, I have to take another pill first, to prevent the rash from happening."
Dr. Grumpy: "What do you take to keep the rash from occurring?"
Mrs. Hyve: "Benadryl."
19 comments:
He must be taking that special hypoallergenic benadryl.
Verification word: bukup
I adore your patients because they provide me with countless giggles!
I love when my patients are allegedly allergic to prednisone. One client told me her cat was allergic to prednisone and therefore she insisted I had to treat it with depo-medrol.
Yep, those prednisone 'allergies' are quite common too. Epinephrine is another one that is problematic.
I once had a patient who was allergic to cotton. I gave him some pills, but he couldn't get them out of the bottle.
OMG, Dr. Grumpy, have you advertised a discount on services this week or something? Because that's the only thing I can think of that would account for the sheer amount of stupidity you're encountering this week. Damn. Have you contacted Guinness yet?
Actually, that does make sense; around here the pharmacy shelves include a variant of Benadryl minus various additives (including that radioactive pink coloring) to make it hypoallergenic.
To paraphrase the Toyes:
"I take two Benadryl before I take two Benadryl
And then I take two more."
I often wonder what the ER docs and nurses do when faced with a patient allergic to benadryl, prednisone and epinephrine who are in need of exactly those drugs to combat their allergic reaction. :-)
My favorite was a patient who said they were allergic to morphine b/c it made them feel stoned. Um, yeah...
Just looking at all those letter in the word ADRENALINE, makes me break out, or at the very least gives me a 'rush'.
Seriously, now.
How do you keep a straight face?
Ouch, my brain hurts ;0
*headdesk*
*headwall*
Repeat?
Word verfication: "derhess"...as in "derr, I'm allergic to Benadryl, derr.."
People really have no basic understanding of biology. I am not sure who to blame. Considering that my health "professor" in college (a coach teaching first aid) told everyone that you used your chest muscles to breathe and that someone with asthma should use their inhaler repeatedly (like 10 times in a row) when they were having trouble breathing, part of me blames the education system. This was at a private college with a fabulous reputation (98% acceptance rates into vet school, med school, and post graduate programs). When he left the room to deal with something, I stood up in class and explained the concept of the diaphragm.
Ok, grumpy, I'll give you that one. That woman really is dumb.
When I worked at the hospital, I had patients claim the were allergic to adrenaline (made my heart race), potassium (this one baffled me), and nitro SL (it gave me a horrible headache). Now in retail, I always have to dig a little deeper with the allergies. Augmentin (diarrhea), egg (I have high cholesterol), all narcotics except (insert fav drug of choice) because they give me constipation. It's a wonder I don't drink.
Must be taking that other Benadryl.... :)
I wish patients could understand the difference between allergy and adverse reaction. Then again, most software I've worked with doesn't distinguish between them either, so what is a patient to do?
My partners a nurse, and the latest one cracked me up...
"I'm allergic to asprin, tylenol, wax, paper, and semen"
"And how would you know about the wax and semen Sir?"
"Well when my girlfriend poured hot wax on me, I got off, passed out, fainted, and when I woke up, there were red marks all over my body under the wax, even under the wax the semen landed on!"
You poor doctors...
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