Try not to expose yourself and masturbate in the open, while in the clinic.
Since you are asking, here goes: Try not to expose yourself and masturbate in the open, while in the clinic. REPEATEDLY... Try not to make LOUD, and FIlTHY comments to both staff and patients. Probably not a good idea to cuss at the top of your lungs, or throw food at people, whether staff or patients. Don't repeatedly pull out your needles. Don't have a BM in your pants, every treatment, either because you don't want to get up to go, or won't ask to go, and then refuse to be cleaned up or get yourself cleaned up. The smell is overwhelming, and by the time you leave, the chair is almost impossible to clean. EVERY treatment, for a person who walks unassissted. REALLY??? Avoid any of these behaviors and you should be good to stay in the clinic of your choice. And remember, all of these behaviors have occurred in my clinics, resulting in being kicked out, and NONE of them were violent.
Anyone who masturbates incessantly or does number 2's in the chair is obviously mentally challenged and should be treated as such. I'm presuming in these cases there would be ongoing help for these poor souls? It reassures me that I could never be a nurse though!
Great news! The patient in Texas has been assigned to a clinic and will be receiving dialysis on a regular basis. When I talked to the patient on the phone, I was told the patient was accused of clamping a line and causing air to back up into the machine - patient talked to manufacturer and manufacturer said that couldn't happen. Also the doctor expressed dismay that the patient wasn't reaching dry weight - patient says this was due to weight gain. We can be happy a tragedy has been avoided.
That's good to hear. Unfortunately it sounds like it's the clinic staff who are the problem makers though and they could use some training in professionalism.
Quote from: nursewratchet on September 09, 2009, 08:42:32 AMSince you are asking, here goes: Try not to expose yourself and masturbate in the open, while in the clinic. REPEATEDLY... Try not to make LOUD, and FIlTHY comments to both staff and patients. Probably not a good idea to cuss at the top of your lungs, or throw food at people, whether staff or patients. Don't repeatedly pull out your needles. Don't have a BM in your pants, every treatment, either because you don't want to get up to go, or won't ask to go, and then refuse to be cleaned up or get yourself cleaned up. The smell is overwhelming, and by the time you leave, the chair is almost impossible to clean. EVERY treatment, for a person who walks unassissted. REALLY??? Avoid any of these behaviors and you should be good to stay in the clinic of your choice. And remember, all of these behaviors have occurred in my clinics, resulting in being kicked out, and NONE of them were violent.Well I will say you do have the icky factor going, however nothing you have described would bring a sentence of capital punishment to most US citizens - so why are dialysis patients different? If punishment or counseling is in order, shouldn't it be the same punishment or counseling they would receive if the offense was done elsewhere? We don't deny life-sustaining requirements to the worst of offenders - food or water - but it is ok to do it to someone on dialysis who got icky?It does look like you did address the one extreme end of the spectrum of people who get dismissed. How about the other end? My recollection is people have been dismissed for wearing sunglasses in the clinic (overhead lights were bothersome), complaining about poor care from inexperienced inept staff, questioning care, etc...Just in my short experience with my daughter there is no doubt if the roles were reversed I would have been booted. She was the very compliant patient and I was the one the charge nurse seemed to have problems with. I was insistent on getting her off reuse and questioning their way of figuring dry weight - heard about these critline devices. I got dragged in once during a workday because the nurse didn't like me "challenging" her after finding studies on reuse and asking how many times they were doing reuse on my kid. Then I got told by the nurse if I didn't like the way they did things I could take my daughter to a tweedle-dum clinic 30 miles away. Then I heard I was getting blamed for things I didn't even do! Yes, I was the Great Satan there for awhile. I was lucky I had DialysisEthics behind me and she got the transplant soon.Anyway, back to business.Nobody is denying access to life saving treatments. They can get it a hospital if they have to. If a child is repeatedly disruptive in school, they are not denied an education, merely sent to an alternative school. Life saving treatment is NEVER denied, but you don't have to subject an entire clinic of staff and patients to unacceptable behaviors. Like Big Sky said, two side to all of this.
Well I will say you do have the icky factor going, however nothing you have described would bring a sentence of capital punishment to most US citizens - so why are dialysis patients different? If punishment or counseling is in order, shouldn't it be the same punishment or counseling they would receive if the offense was done elsewhere? We don't deny life-sustaining requirements to the worst of offenders - food or water - but it is ok to do it to someone on dialysis who got icky?
In the UK bad patients like the ones identified by Nursewratchet risk being assessed for the "Liverpool Care Pathway". There's some current controversy because once patients are on this pathway, it's difficult for them to come off (other than the final exit).
Exactly! No one is denied treatment, just moved.
When a patient is dismissed and blackballed, their only option is emergency dialysis at the hospital when their labs have reached a critical stage from what I understand - a slow death, they might last two months tops.
Like I said, some patients don't belong in a group setting. I still await your response to my post....would you or would you not tolerate a convicted sex offender spewing vivid details of what he'd like to do to your child three days a week? I know I wouldn't stand for it EVER. edited for a spelling error