experience –
Holding Patients and Visitors Accountable For Their ActionsRating: (votes: 6) Comment:
I agree with you. This is one of the big problems with society today. People are let off the hook for unacceptable behavior far too easily. People are not taught to take responsibility for their actions.
Comment:
I agree with you 50%, but the other 50% of me says that anyone who would throw a chair into a wall out of frustration has some sort of mental problem. Maybe it's psychological and they were never taught how to deal with their emotions appropriately, or maybe they're just not very smart....In any case, there will always be people who just don't "get it" no matter what the consequences are. And while I used to want to lock them all up or at least keep them from breeding, I am now just happy not to be one of them.
Comment:
We have whole generations of people with a laundry list of excuses for unacceptable behavior. Too many people play the "poor me" ticket to get by, having no concept of personal responsibility. Drives me crazy...but not enough to throw a chair.
Comment:
OP, you would have shut the SW up fast if you'd thrown a chair in her direction. It's always easy to theorize, easy to be understanding when the missiles aren't flying at you. It's quite different when the bad thing happens to you or someone you love.I was always empathetic toward criminals - oh, his daddy was not part of his life; oh, she was raped, so it's ok for her to be angry and mean to everyone all the time (I hope I'm not stepping on too many toes too heavily with this scenario). Until my loved one was a crime victim. Then, all the theory and mushy feelings went trotting down the road. Funny how that happens.
Comment:
Absolutely right. This is a problem of our culture, not of the emergency department. (though some days it seems particularly acute there ... )Training in self-control used to be a standard part of parenting beginning around age 2. The basics: the ability to sit quietly, keep hands to self, to use "indoor voice" , and to recognize that some times you're not going to get your way. Current popular culture almost totally disassociates itself from that, then wonders why there is a problem in older children/teens/adults. Go figure.
Comment:
This is the reason I am SOOOO frustrated with hospital medicine. It has become about patient satisfaction and not patient care. I completely agree with you that people should be held accountable, but unfortunately hospitals consider patients to be "customers" not patients. Apparently your hospital like so many others, including my own, believes the old adage "the customer is always right."
Comment:
This is very true, esp in the ER. I think when people enter the hospital, we automatically put the, "Oh, they're suffering" veil over them -- similar to nurses who are battered in the workplace and don't file charges. Why the hell not?! Often, it's management that won't do anything. (They wouldn't press charges against this man because it would ruin their image, he won't come back, the news will eat them alive -- anything that will damage their bottom line.)I think we, as nurses, have to stand up to behavior like this though.In my ER, we were filled with hall pts one day. This one pt (total BS issues imho) starts yelling at their mother-in-law over the phone. Everyone is staring at the pt -- patients/family standing out of rooms. The thing that got me most, though, was my co-workers, even the pt's own nurse. Everyone just staring at her! I came from a very different sort of ER... so I walked up to the pt and with a slightly raised voice informed the pt that it wasn't appropriate to be yelling on the phone like that. (I forget my exact words, but you get the point.) The pt carried on a bit, but I continued on. I eventually got on the phone, cleared up the issue, and reiterated that it wasn't appropriate to act that in this ER. The pt eventually calmed down, and it didn't happen again.In another example, a pt presented with stroke-like symptoms (and an extensive pysch history...). Pt kept yelling at spouse, saying pt didn't need another damn MRI, pt just wanted to go home, etc. I marched in their with an AMA form and told pt to sign. Pt started hedging a bit but still trying to yell at me. I told pt we had a waiting room full of people and plenty in the hall who would love this room. If pt didn't want to be here then pt could sign and leave immediately. Pt calmed down pretty quick, and apologized (citing hormonal changes as the cause of pt's behavior...) Pt didn't give me and more guff the rest of the night.I truly think people throw out some of their inhibitions when at the hospital, esp the ER! They think their frustration excuses their behavior. But, perhaps more importantly, just like children, they test their boundaries. If WE allow them to "escalate" until a chair is thrown, for example, we may not be to blame, but we do have the power to intervene. I say F that non-sense about excusing their behavior. If people are too stupid to know what behavior is/isn't appropriate in a hospital, then I will be happy to show them.OP - thanks for the post.
Comment:
I agree with you but we are constantly being told that health care is a business and patients are customers who can take their business elsewhere. It seems like the nurse is always wrong , I would like to see upper administration take the crap we take with a smile and their scripted responses: I am so sorry this happened to you, what can I do right now to make it better?
Comment:
[quote=suni;4729159]I agree with you but we are constantly being told that health care is a business and patients are customers who can take their business elsewhere. quote]There are MANY times where I would be happy to point the "customer" in the direction of the competing hospital, LMAO.
Comment:
It can be understood when young children have poor impulse control, but adults should be held to a higher standard don't you think?A family crisis is still NO excuse for cussing out employees, throwing furniture, or any other unacceptable behavior.
Comment:
[quote=ShayRN;4729862]Quote from suniI agree with you but we are constantly being told that health care is a business and patients are customers who can take their business elsewhere. quote]There are MANY times where I would be happy to point the "customer" in the direction of the competing hospital, LMAO.
|
New
Tags
Like
|