Luv Bunnies
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2006
- Messages
- 9,193
I posted earlier this week that my dad was having surgery to remove a benign tumor from his chest. Luckily, the surgery went well and he was able to go home yesterday. But, there was an incident in the hospital yesterday morning that was really scary when you consider what could have happened.
Right after the surgery, the respiratory people started coming in every two hours to give him breathing treatments. This made sense because they had to deflate one lung to reach the tumor. He was in ICU and on some heavy pain meds that made him loopy and he lost track of time and didn't realize how frequent the treatments were.
On Thursday morning, he was taken off the heavy pain meds and moved into a regular room. It was then that he realized the treatments were still every two hours and he didn't understand why he was getting them. He said they woke him up every hour that night for either a breathing treatment or a finger stick (which he understands because he's diabetic).
Yesterday morning, my mom got a call that my dad was confused and being argumentative with the staff. They suggested she come in and sit with him until the doctor could get there. She called me and asked if I would go with her. I got there first and he was sleeping so I talked to the nurse and got basically the same story my mom got. When he woke up, I asked him if he was having a problem. He said, "Yeah! These people keep telling me I had part of my lung removed and I'm trying to tell them I didn't!" Seems he asked the respiratory guy why he was still getting treatments every two hours and the guy said it's standard procedure when you have part of a lung removed. My dad said, "But I didn't have lung surgery. I had a tumor removed from my chest wall." The respiratory guy said, "Well, now you're just confused sir." My dad really took exception to that remark! Then the nurse came in and asked him if he knew why he was in the hospital. When he told her, she said, "No, you seem to be confused." He tried to tell her the chart must be wrong and she labeled him as confused and argumentative.
The nurse called the surgeon and he set her straight, after which she apologized profusely to my dad and said his chart was wrong. Someone entered the wrong diagnosis code and the respiratory protocol for his actual surgery was 24-36 hours of breathing treatments, not 4 days worth every two hours!
The doctor called the room while I was there and I had a nice 15 minute chat with him. He was appalled at the way my dad was treated (being called confused to his face). He said even if a patient is confused, a respiratory therapist shouldn't say it to him. The doctor plans to write a letter to the hospital director about the situation. It's bad enough that someone entered the wrong diagnosis code into the system. But then they treated the patient badly when he pointed out the mistake.
At least he was only receiving extra breathing treatments and not a more invasive procedure! I don't know how closely the doctor looked at the chart when he came in each day. He said he writes his notes after surgery and the staff enters it all into the system with diagnosis codes, etc. I also don't know if the doctor looked at the chart and saw that he was still getting the breathing treatments when he didn't really need them.
By the time he was released, my dad was more than ready to get the heck out of there! He's now at home on the couch with his remote and we'll be heading over soon to open presents and start cooking dinner. It was rough to think for a while that his mind was altered until he woke up and told me the whole story. He was about as far from confused as an 85-year old can be!!! I guess the moral of the story is if you think something isn't right when you're in the hospital, ask questions. If it still isn't right, don't be afraid to call the doctor yourself!
Right after the surgery, the respiratory people started coming in every two hours to give him breathing treatments. This made sense because they had to deflate one lung to reach the tumor. He was in ICU and on some heavy pain meds that made him loopy and he lost track of time and didn't realize how frequent the treatments were.
On Thursday morning, he was taken off the heavy pain meds and moved into a regular room. It was then that he realized the treatments were still every two hours and he didn't understand why he was getting them. He said they woke him up every hour that night for either a breathing treatment or a finger stick (which he understands because he's diabetic).
Yesterday morning, my mom got a call that my dad was confused and being argumentative with the staff. They suggested she come in and sit with him until the doctor could get there. She called me and asked if I would go with her. I got there first and he was sleeping so I talked to the nurse and got basically the same story my mom got. When he woke up, I asked him if he was having a problem. He said, "Yeah! These people keep telling me I had part of my lung removed and I'm trying to tell them I didn't!" Seems he asked the respiratory guy why he was still getting treatments every two hours and the guy said it's standard procedure when you have part of a lung removed. My dad said, "But I didn't have lung surgery. I had a tumor removed from my chest wall." The respiratory guy said, "Well, now you're just confused sir." My dad really took exception to that remark! Then the nurse came in and asked him if he knew why he was in the hospital. When he told her, she said, "No, you seem to be confused." He tried to tell her the chart must be wrong and she labeled him as confused and argumentative.
The nurse called the surgeon and he set her straight, after which she apologized profusely to my dad and said his chart was wrong. Someone entered the wrong diagnosis code and the respiratory protocol for his actual surgery was 24-36 hours of breathing treatments, not 4 days worth every two hours!
The doctor called the room while I was there and I had a nice 15 minute chat with him. He was appalled at the way my dad was treated (being called confused to his face). He said even if a patient is confused, a respiratory therapist shouldn't say it to him. The doctor plans to write a letter to the hospital director about the situation. It's bad enough that someone entered the wrong diagnosis code into the system. But then they treated the patient badly when he pointed out the mistake.
At least he was only receiving extra breathing treatments and not a more invasive procedure! I don't know how closely the doctor looked at the chart when he came in each day. He said he writes his notes after surgery and the staff enters it all into the system with diagnosis codes, etc. I also don't know if the doctor looked at the chart and saw that he was still getting the breathing treatments when he didn't really need them.
By the time he was released, my dad was more than ready to get the heck out of there! He's now at home on the couch with his remote and we'll be heading over soon to open presents and start cooking dinner. It was rough to think for a while that his mind was altered until he woke up and told me the whole story. He was about as far from confused as an 85-year old can be!!! I guess the moral of the story is if you think something isn't right when you're in the hospital, ask questions. If it still isn't right, don't be afraid to call the doctor yourself!
How could they count differently? They each have a name (C1, C2, . . . T1, T2 etc)
