Doctor Refuses Pain Meds For Patient, Ignores Nurse — Patient’s Wife Steps In And Gets It Done Fast
It’s not unusual to be left hanging by healthcare providers. Whether it’s waiting forever in the lobby to see a GP or waiting just as long to be seen in an emergency room, it seems more than a few netizens have a story of doctors getting it wrong.
One nurse who was dealing with an elderly patient in considerable pain couldn’t believe it when the assigned doctor put off ordering meds. Unable to reprimand him personally, she did the next best thing: pointed the patient’s furious wife in his direction.
More info: Reddit
Healthcare providers can be less than helpful, as this nurse was frustrated to find out during one of her night shifts
Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
She was seeing to an elderly patient who arrived in serious pain, accompanied by his wife
Image credits: The Yuri Arcurs Collection / Freepik (not the actual photo)
The patient was really suffering, so she called the doctor, but he said he wouldn’t order any pain meds until he’d reviewed the patient’s chart
Image credits: DC Studio / Freepik (not the actual photo)
After collecting a bunch of charts, the doctor headed off to the nurse station and point-blank ignored her, leaving her to apologize once more to the patient and his wife
Image credits: PastFace1132
When the wife asked her where the doctor was, she led her right to him, then stood back while the wife tore a strip off him until the meds were ordered
Working night shifts as a nurse can be exhausting, but dealing with stubborn doctors might be even worse. OP shared how a patient arrived in her unit in severe pain with no meds ordered. She quickly called the doctor, expecting some support. Instead? He coldly refused to prescribe anything until he’d “reviewed the chart.”
That made no sense to OP – he had already seen the patient in the ER. Still, he was adamant, dismissing her concerns and promising to come up “soon.” When he arrived, OP pleaded again, hoping he’d finally do something, but the dopey doctor shrugged it off, parked himself at the nursing station, and ignored OP completely.
Meanwhile, the patient was still in agony. OP returned to the room, trying to reassure the couple. The patient’s wife was visibly upset, and understandably so, so when she asked where the doctor was, OP didn’t hesitate—she escorted her straight to the source. Time for some much-needed butt kicking.
And oh, did the patient’s irate wife deliver. She ripped into the doctor in front of everyone, calling him out for ignoring her husband’s pain and refusing to act. That’s when the miracle happened: the doctor suddenly found his missing empathy, apologized profusely, and quickly wrote orders for some immediate pain relief.
From what OP tells us in her post, it would seem that her patient was, at least until his wife stepped in, a victim of medical gaslighting. But just what is medical gaslighting, and how do you avoid it? We went looking for the facts.
Image credits: Wavebreak Media / Freepik (not the actual photo)
In her article for CNBC, Renée Onque writes that, while the term “medical gaslighting” may be relatively new, the practice has been affecting people’s health outcomes for decades, especially women and people of color.
“Medical gaslighting is when concerns about your healthcare are being dismissed, they’re not heard and they are minimized,” says Stacey E. Rosen, senior vice president for Northwell Health’s Katz Institute for Women’s Health.
“One thing to remember when we go to the doctor is that the provider has specialized knowledge of healthcare and health topics in general, but you know your body,” says Tina Sacks, an associate professor in the school of social welfare at UC Berkeley.
In her article for VeryWellMind, Cynthia Vinney (Ph.D.) writes that, until the healthcare system changes, medical gaslighting will likely remain a problem, but there are things you can do to ensure you get the care you need.
According to Vinney, some of these include finding a doctor you trust, bringing a trusted friend or family member along, writing your symptoms and questions down beforehand, taking notes during your appointment, and getting a second opinion.
We shudder to think how much more pain OP’s patient would have had to endure if it weren’t for his justifiably annoyed wife. As OP says, her hands were tied when it came to getting any satisfaction out of the lazy doctor, so it’s a good thing the wife spoke up.
Do you think the doctor learned his lesson? Have you ever been left hanging by a healthcare provider? Let us know in the comments!
In the comments, plenty of readers applauded the nurse for her actions, while others shared their own healthcare horror stories
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I've been the Voice of (Appropriate) Fight/War for several of my family members. I'm adopted, and I'm white. My adopted family is Mexican. There have been SO many instances where doctors have dismissed my family members or straight up don't listen to them because they're brown-skinned. I'd get called up to accompany them to doctor's appointments and the like. It's amazing how attentive a doctor/surgeon can suddenly become when a white person is in the room staring them straight in the eyes instead of just the Hispanic patient they expected to see. It's a generalization and obviously not all doctors are like this, but some of them are extremely dismissive of patients (regardless of their skin color) and sometimes the family members truly do have to go to war for their loved ones.
I was rescued by fellow patients.. I was in the corner of the ER, just mindlessly chanting "ohgodohgodohgod" over and over and rocking back and forth and holding my stomach... the ER determined I was "fine" and had me waiting "my turn'. A man with a bloody arm wrapped in a towel, and a tiny woman with terminal diseases chewed out the ER nurses/doctors until they took me back and gave me pain meds so I could actually talk and get treated. My heroes.
This happened when my son burned his hand. You think a wife is bad, try a p*ssed-off off mother. That trip wound up fully paid for by the hospital, medicine and ambulance included.
I was in the ER for what would turn out to be an imploding gallbladder. It was the most pain I've ever been in in my life and my husband had to advocate for me to get any pain meds, and this was AFTER I'd been scanned and diagnosed. In the U.S. they assume we're all o****d addicts looking for d r u g s for funsies.
It always galls me that so many doctors seem to think that nurses should be subservient to them. No. They are your colleagues. Nurses know everything about the patient you're supposed to be treating, and they've spent the most amount of time with them. Listen to the nurses, doctors, and treat them with respect.
This was my mom - not only was she a nurse who was willing and able to take a cocky doctor down a peg or two, she was a warrior who would fight with whoever necessary in order to get stuff done. She was my only advocate in my current chronic pain situation and I miss her greatly every day. Especially now with the crackdown on opioids, which are the only thing that makes my permanent migraine tolerable and allowed me some semblance of a life. But just a mention of opioids makes me look like an a****t - especially if I dare explain how my body chemistry works with prescription d***s, which includes opioids. I have been accused of being an a****t so many times over the years, despite passing every d**g test with flying colors, despite never using illegal d***s, despite never having doctor shopped, and despite never having misused my prescription or done anything that would suggest I use opioids for anything other than *gasp* pain management!
A national treasure died on a Sunday morning having been discharged from hospital on Friday. Same hospital refused to certify his death, citing his personal GP should. Except he was in Australia at the time. After much haggling, I eventually wondered what the BBC would think of their funeral being held up by a doctor refusing to certify his death.
And yes, I was prepared to lose my job over that. I loved that guy.
Load More Replies...The nurse on d**g rounds missed me and then disbelieved me that I had not had painkillers. It took for me to start weeping in pain and for the entire ward to shout out that I was in pain. Got the medication though.
I've been there. When my mum was going through the motions of type 2 diabetic/type 1 late stage diabetic. They just kept changing her medication up and she was in and out of the doctors for UTIs which then triggered ketoacidosis so then we had to go up the hospital for fluids because she was losing sugar in her water and peeing like a racehorse. This happened 2/3 times with them keep changing her medication because "we haven't tried this yet" eventually after the third time she'd lost so much weight that when the hospital doctor tried pulling that with me I said no. I said she is done look at her we need the insulin now. We saw the diabetic nurse after that and I said to her look I appreciate you don't have the answers yet but she needs this. Might be advocating for her again soon because her pancreas is struggling even more now
I've been the Voice of (Appropriate) Fight/War for several of my family members. I'm adopted, and I'm white. My adopted family is Mexican. There have been SO many instances where doctors have dismissed my family members or straight up don't listen to them because they're brown-skinned. I'd get called up to accompany them to doctor's appointments and the like. It's amazing how attentive a doctor/surgeon can suddenly become when a white person is in the room staring them straight in the eyes instead of just the Hispanic patient they expected to see. It's a generalization and obviously not all doctors are like this, but some of them are extremely dismissive of patients (regardless of their skin color) and sometimes the family members truly do have to go to war for their loved ones.
I was rescued by fellow patients.. I was in the corner of the ER, just mindlessly chanting "ohgodohgodohgod" over and over and rocking back and forth and holding my stomach... the ER determined I was "fine" and had me waiting "my turn'. A man with a bloody arm wrapped in a towel, and a tiny woman with terminal diseases chewed out the ER nurses/doctors until they took me back and gave me pain meds so I could actually talk and get treated. My heroes.
This happened when my son burned his hand. You think a wife is bad, try a p*ssed-off off mother. That trip wound up fully paid for by the hospital, medicine and ambulance included.
I was in the ER for what would turn out to be an imploding gallbladder. It was the most pain I've ever been in in my life and my husband had to advocate for me to get any pain meds, and this was AFTER I'd been scanned and diagnosed. In the U.S. they assume we're all o****d addicts looking for d r u g s for funsies.
It always galls me that so many doctors seem to think that nurses should be subservient to them. No. They are your colleagues. Nurses know everything about the patient you're supposed to be treating, and they've spent the most amount of time with them. Listen to the nurses, doctors, and treat them with respect.
This was my mom - not only was she a nurse who was willing and able to take a cocky doctor down a peg or two, she was a warrior who would fight with whoever necessary in order to get stuff done. She was my only advocate in my current chronic pain situation and I miss her greatly every day. Especially now with the crackdown on opioids, which are the only thing that makes my permanent migraine tolerable and allowed me some semblance of a life. But just a mention of opioids makes me look like an a****t - especially if I dare explain how my body chemistry works with prescription d***s, which includes opioids. I have been accused of being an a****t so many times over the years, despite passing every d**g test with flying colors, despite never using illegal d***s, despite never having doctor shopped, and despite never having misused my prescription or done anything that would suggest I use opioids for anything other than *gasp* pain management!
A national treasure died on a Sunday morning having been discharged from hospital on Friday. Same hospital refused to certify his death, citing his personal GP should. Except he was in Australia at the time. After much haggling, I eventually wondered what the BBC would think of their funeral being held up by a doctor refusing to certify his death.
And yes, I was prepared to lose my job over that. I loved that guy.
Load More Replies...The nurse on d**g rounds missed me and then disbelieved me that I had not had painkillers. It took for me to start weeping in pain and for the entire ward to shout out that I was in pain. Got the medication though.
I've been there. When my mum was going through the motions of type 2 diabetic/type 1 late stage diabetic. They just kept changing her medication up and she was in and out of the doctors for UTIs which then triggered ketoacidosis so then we had to go up the hospital for fluids because she was losing sugar in her water and peeing like a racehorse. This happened 2/3 times with them keep changing her medication because "we haven't tried this yet" eventually after the third time she'd lost so much weight that when the hospital doctor tried pulling that with me I said no. I said she is done look at her we need the insulin now. We saw the diabetic nurse after that and I said to her look I appreciate you don't have the answers yet but she needs this. Might be advocating for her again soon because her pancreas is struggling even more now
























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