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Full Moon Plus Lunar Eclipse Plus Blood Moon = INSANITY!?Rating: (votes: 6) The last two days have been insane, even for a place with lots of alcoholism and geriatrics. I got punched in the gut by a panicking sundowner as he tried to run away, had to sedate two OOB/ripping off lines and clothes, listened to a La Llorona for two days straight and got sympathy laryngitis, and so much more! My coworkers report similar things! Even staff who have been here forever can't remember a time so hectic! This isn't even close to consistent to trends I've seen over the years. It's the beginning of the month. People aren't usually in the hospital so much until moneys run out. I expect to see more GI bleeds due to the fact that people have the money for alcohol due to past experience. I don't see as many COPD exacerbation patients as I usually do due to allergy season. Is anyone else having a similar experience? Anytime there is a full moon the day before, day of , and a day or two after are usually crazy. If not just insanely busy, everyone admitted is insane to a degree and some of the staff working. I swear as a rapid response nurse the staff can be just as nutty as the patients. Comment:
Oh my, I could have written this. I work a surgical floor but we get medical overflow. I can't tell you how many geri ETOH pts I've gotten in the last few weeks!!! An alcoholic here and there I'm use to, but lately its the geriatric ETOH population I'm seeing. I've been punched in the gut by 3 or 4 sundowners lately. No warning at all. One second they are lying in bed talking with me calmly being the typical cute little old lady/man, the next second they morph into Mike Tyson and I get a punch to the breadbasket!I had one little geri lady the other night who would scream at the top of her lungs unless someone was singing to/with her. Needless to say after 8.5 hrs I was hoarse and never wanted to sing anything ever again!And your COPD people..well they must have decided my hospital would be a great place to go. I've had no less than 3 a shift!
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A hundred times NO – the moon does not cause a crazy nightMoon Influences Hospital Admissions? Posted: Friday, April 3, 2015, 4:00 AMPhilly.com(HealthDay News) -- The belief that a full moon is linked to increases in hospital admissions and births is just an old wives' tale, an astronomist says."The moon is innocent," Jean-Luc Margot, a professor of planetary astronomy at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in a university news release.Yet the myth persists, even among a fraction of nursing professionals, Margo said. It's likely helped by studies such as a 2004 paper in a nursing journal that suggested the full moon affected the number of hospital admissions in a medical unit in Barcelona, Spain, he noted.But Margot examined the study and said he found multiple mistakes in the researchers' data collection and analysis, proving that the number of patient admissions was unrelated to the lunar cycle.Many studies have shown that the moon has no influence on events such as traffic crashes, hospital admissions, surgery outcomes, cancer survival rates, depression, violence, birth and criminal activity, yet many still believe the moon can affect human behavior, Margot said.This may be due to what is called "confirmation bias," which refers to people's tendency to interpret things in ways that confirm their beliefs and to ignore evidence that contradicts them, he explained.If people have a strange or hectic day when there is a full moon, they tend to remember it because it confirms their belief. But when such days occur when the moon is not full, people forget about them because they don't reinforce the belief, Margo said...
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I was also going to say that although you will hear this all the time on psych units I do not think the research supports it.
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Thanks NRSKaren! I was about to post that topics like this make me despair for the nursing profession. People argue about things like whether nurses who smoke or who are overweight reflect badly on the profession, but for me it's nurses who routinely reject science that I see as the biggest problem. (and I'm not even an atheist)
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I always try to give other nurses the benefit of the doubt when they say stuff like full moons=insanity, and assume they're making a little joke. The idea of a nurse truly believing such a thing is disturbing. I kind of hope the OP was being facetious when she said she "totally believes" in it.
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My non-scientific theory goes like this: the human body is composed of roughly 65% water; we know the moon affect the world's oceans (tides are caused by the moon). I think it would be reasonable to assume we are affected by the moon as well. I know I often have a harder time falling asleep during the near-full/full moon period. Is this psychosomatic? I have no idea, but there it is...
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Quote from Dany102My non-scientific theory goes like this: the human body is composed of roughly 65% water; we know the moon affect the world's oceans (tides are caused by the moon). I think it would be reasonable to assume we are affected by the moon as well. I know I often have a harder time falling asleep during the near-full/full moon period. Is this psychosomatic? I have no idea, but there it is...
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Party pooper! (I did say it was a non-scientific theory)But thank you, Brandon, for providing me with more information on this very interesting topic.
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I remember those full moon nights on the psych ward _ A good time was had by all!!!!
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Quote from BrandonLPNI always try to give other nurses the benefit of the doubt when they say stuff like full moons=insanity, and assume they're making a little joke. The idea of a nurse truly believing such a thing is disturbing. I kind of hope the OP was being facetious when she said she "totally believes" in it.
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