Eva Braun

 I never tell anyone that I’m a nurse when I am a patient in the care system 
I almost did today when I attended day clinic for an injection into my right eye
The nurse doing the preliminary tests was cool and efficient
And after I had told her I was eye phobic 
She continued to be cool and efficient
I informed her that I had taken 2 Valium 
A fact she ignored 
And the rest of the consultation was completed in silence
I remembered Victoria Wood’s famous you’ve a look of Eva Braun comment

The consultant was gentle and reassuring which helped and when the injection came it was unpleasant but not horrendous 
When I left I mentioned to the staff nurse in charge that things would have been easier for me if that nurse had been friendlier 
I’m beyond keeping quiet about lacklustre care

45 comments:

  1. Good for you. They should know if their care is subpar.

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  2. Barbara Anne3:53 pm

    Well said! Yours was a constructive comment about the nurse you had for the preliminary tests. Hope that office takes the need for staff friendliness to heart.
    Am glad the injection wasn't awful. Shudder!

    Hugs!

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  3. Yes, speak up. They may have no idea. I mentioned to my doctor that a new nurse kept addressing me with her back turned as she did other things. I couldn't hear her and she ignored my requests to please face me. Next time I was there I found she'd gone. They can't afford poor patient care in this culture, plenty of other doctors in this area. There's bullying when practitioners don't know.

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    1. If things aren’t said
      Things don’t change

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  4. No excuse for rudeness, whatever the situation, but especially in a care setting. Some people are definitely in the wrong job. Not a great problem if a shop assistant is surly, but a nurse, dealing with people who are anxious, scared, worried etc, is not on. I'm glad you spoke out.
    The injection sounds much worse than it seems to have been, but the idea is, to me, horrendous! Is it just a one off, or will there be more? A large G&T will ease any discomfort, I'm sure. xx

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    1. We can all have bad days
      She wasn’t impressive

      The Valium did help, I popped a few in the waiting room

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  5. I once worked in a timber yard in England John. Myself and my work colleagues would be eager to help anyone who said please and thank you. Manners mean do much.

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  6. Anonymous4:31 pm

    Did you leave feeling smug that you'd reported the nurse? Why did your need for personal chit chat and attention prompt you to get the nurse into trouble with her superiors? She was "cool and efficient" isn't that enough for most people? Except those that think they are superior. and deserve special attention.
    Efficient is one word that I would welcome in anyone in the nursing profesion.
    If I was the staff nurse in charge my thought would hve been "what an arsehole" you are when you reported her.

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    1. No you say arsehole , because you WANT and NEED me to be an arsehole , which is a sad psychological need.
      As a former manager in the nhs, I would always advocate my staff to deal kindly with phobic patients , they need more than cold efficiency .and the nurse I talked about needed that to be reflected
      If I have her again and she is the same, I will discuss things with her directly.
      You wouldn’t and couldn’t be a staff nurse in charge
      You haven’t got the emotional and managerial intelligence to do the job.

      Have a lovely day

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    2. Anonymous7:32 pm

      Way to go squire!
      That’s telling the bitch !

      Lee

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    3. My protector Lee xxxxxx

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  7. Anonymous4:38 pm

    Well done for speaking up. What a disheartening experience when you clearly expressed a concern. I thought by ignoring your comment that you had taken two valiums she was demonstrating a clear non-engagement by her. Part of her role surely is to be reassuring and supportive. Yikes. I’m glad the procedure is over. Jean in Winnipeg

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    1. She clearly didn’t want to engage

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    2. And the troll cannot comment again

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  8. I think in those situations where we feel vulnerable and apprehensive a little kindness and empathy goes a long way.

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    1. Amen, humour and warmth is what I need

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  9. Anonymous5:00 pm

    Maybe by reacting and saying “it’ll be fine” she d have seemed condescending? I find most nurses are brisk and cold at best Efficient is fine. Rude and unkind is common tho
    I hope you weren’t there alone! Can you see. Can you drive? Rest and feel better. The Valium will help you nap?
    Hugs
    Lizzy d

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    Replies
    1. My sister in law picked me up, I was and am very grateful to her

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  10. My husband has age related macular degeneration of the eyes, not sure if this the same for you. He has had monthly injections in his right eye for five years now and for the last five months monthly injections in both eyes as the left eye has now worsened. He finds the nursing staff different every time and sometimes better and sometimes not quite so good but is grateful that he may have lost his sight without the injections. I drive him to and from his hospital appointments and read while he is there for usually an hour sometimes more. I am just glad it's not me as I too am squeamish at the thought of injections in the eye. I hope yours won't have to be so regular as it does seem to come round awful quick. Well done for getting through it.

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    1. No I have a different condition
      And it will be regular
      My eye now feels sore and irritated

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  11. I have a terrible fear of medical situations and have huge anxiety. I often do as you did and just come right out and tell whoever is attending me about it. Sometimes I cry. And when the nurse or tech responds with kindness and empathy, it makes all the difference in the world. The last time I did this, the tech said, "Do you need a hug?" I did, and she gave me one of the best of my life.

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    1. I made an effort to say I was phobic and the sentence was ignored….i have a problem sharing my needs , so when I do so and they are ignored,
      Hummmmm

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  12. At least you got Nurse Braun and not Nurse Hitler. Worse than that, you might have had Nurse Thatcher who would have butchered you just for fun.

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  13. So glad you spoke up. Lackluster care, especially in a medical setting, should not be tolerated by the powers that be.

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    1. I don’t tolerate it from my own practice , why would I accept it from others

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  14. I’m with you. Good for you for commenting on that.

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    1. The times of people pleasing everyone is over my dear friend

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  15. Good for you for speaking up. It would have been a hard thing to do.
    That eye injection sounds like something out of a horror movie to me.

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    1. I had a contraption put on my eye that I last saw in A Clock work Orange

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    2. See
      https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/stanley-kubrick-a-clockwork-orange-temporary-blinded-malcolm-mcdowell/

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  16. Less cool and efficient, more cold and efficient sounds a better description....with this sort of procedure you need to be keeping your patients relaxed....

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    1. Yes, I needed to laugh and look vulnerable

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  17. Probably 99% or more patients are afraid/phobic to have a needle stuck in their eye. You are not alone. [but on the nurse's side, she hears it 20 times a day, she just can't care about or hug them all.] Low expectations are my go to medical stance. Rudeness is the norm. It is naive to expect otherwise.
    Seems like you did very well, you're tough, you can do this.

    love

    lizzy again

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    1. I disagree with respect , it’s her job, to do it well
      It’s also part of her code of conduct

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  18. Anonymous8:12 pm

    It costs nothing to be friendly, compassionate and kind does it. Gigi

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    1. In a job which celebrates such traits

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  19. Thank you for speaking up about subpar care, you may have helped future patients receive more compassionate care. Even a kind word like "oh I understand" when you said you were eye phobic would have been good.

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    1. I agree…and let’s put things straight
      I was scared

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  20. Well, I'm glad that is over and hope your eye is feeling better by now.

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    1. It feels like shit, but it’s over for now

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  21. Many people working in the medical field today seem angry and/or dissatisfied with their jobs. This comes across regularly.
    I hope your feedback is taken seriously.
    I get surveys in the mail asking for feedback on medical care. I provide my feedback, and nothing changes as far as I can tell.
    Despite the poor experience, I hope the eye injection solves the problem.

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I love all comments Except abusive ones from arseholes