Colphax wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
I'm doubly amazed that these are ER complaints, not just regular hospital complaints.
After my recent stay, my only 2 negative comments about that hospital would have been "I am quite hydrated after 3 bags of saline solution. I'm also tired of going to the bathroom every 45 minutes. I think we could dispense with the 4th one." and "Keep in mind that when you wake me at 3 am to take my vitals, you just inadvertently boosted my blood pressure a good 10-15 points and thereby defeated what you were trying to accomplish."
Actually, DE, both your complaints would be better referred to the doctor who wrote your orders, and not the hospital itself, which was just carrying them out. And both of them break down to a lack of communication as to why you were getting the fluids and vitals at 3AM. It's a bit harder to nail down exactly why each was ordered by your doc, so I'll try to stick to generalities.
That would have been great if the doctor had actually bothered to discuss this, or if the hospital staff had expressed that they were complying with orders. When you say to the nurse "hey, this is the third bag and I'm in the can every 45 minutes, is another bag really necessary" the appropriate answer is not to just smile, nod and hook the damn thing up.
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As to the 4th bag of fluids, yes you were hydrated. But how long would your body have stayed hydrated without the fluids? Your diagnosis and possibly the medications you were being given might have made it so that keeping you that hydrated was a better option than reacting when you began to show signs of dehydration again.
Probably a pretty long time since I had plenty of water to drink. I had to quit drinking it because I was pissing so much as it was. More importantly, that information should have been communicated to me if there was some aspect of my medication that required it, rather than just shoving more and more fluids into me when I point out that it's causing discomfort.
For the 3AM vitals, sounds to me like you may have been getting vitals taken every four hours. How often they measure vitals can be a sign of how acute your condition is. Your medications could warrant closer monitoring because they have vasoactive properties or side effects. So "what they were trying to accomplish" may not have been what you thought it was. "10-15 points" of elevation isn't that big a deal and can be in the acceptable range for a patient on my unit. But a large deviation needs to be noticed, and a person normally around running around 150/80 dropping to 90/50 or spiking to 200/98 needs treatment. [/quote]
I realize you don't have all the details, but at that point I was there just for tests and observation. I relalize 10-15 points may be in the acceptable range for a patient, and I was being somewhat facetious anyhow, but as far as I could tell it was 48 straight hours of "precautions" that made me have to go to the bathroom constantly, denied me more than 3 hours of sleep at a time, and generally were administered by people who simply felt they did not have to discuss anything before doing it.
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And here's the kicker, DE. You could, at any time, told the staff "No, I don't want that". And they would have. They may have tried to convince you otherwise, they probably would have documented it, and you might have had the doc come talk to you, but they would have stopped if you stuck to your guns on the issue.
In this case, the incident happened at work and I didn't want to cause issues by refusing any treatment. Not the hospitals fault, but frankly, when I started saying "hey, why do I have another bag of IV fluid", avoiding the discussion altogether by just hooking it up and relying on the fact that I don't know how to safely remove an IV needle myself to keep me in bed and doing things their way is not acceptable. Yeah, yeah, you can "refuse" things, but it's very hard to selectively refuse things. They simply do not want to hear that, especially when they're convinced you're there because you had too many energy drinks, even if the cardiologist says it was a combination of factors and he doesn't know what caused the problem.
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Anyways, hope that helps clarify some stuff for ya, DE!
Mostly it clarifies for me that the next time I won't go back to
that hospital at a minimum.