our patient:

  • doesn’t take his medication, we inform him about the risks and document. He says he’ll take them ‘later’, never does.
  • refuses his insulin, we inform him about the risks and document as well as chart.
  • refuses his blood thinners, we inform him about the risks and document.
  • turns his phone obnoxiously loud, also talks loud.
  • insults us several times every day, gets passive-aggressive.

this is not psychiatry, patient is a young, AOX4, fully competent adult.

Fine, you’re a free man and free to do with your life what you want. But why go to a hospital in the first place if you are going to behave like this?

Yesterday we found him unconscious on the floor, vitals were normal, didn’t hit his head. He is being released tomorrow. Doctor agrees.

I have the feeling we’re going to see him again very soon, but he is the biggest asshole I’ve met in my nursing career.

Why do people behave like this? we are literally trying to give him some quality of life and he attacks us each time we open the door. why?

If any of you is a nurse and has some insight, I’m all ears.

Do please notice that I’m not asking how to deal with people like this: we document, chart and move on, but to understand why in the fuck people are like this.

  • NoneYa@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    First thing I thought. Dude sounds depressed based on the first few things.

    Being loud and rude could be other things unrelated. But could be indications of someone who has given up and no longer cares what others think.

    I’d probably be depressed too if I had to rely on drugs to live.

    • z00s@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      If he’d given up, he’d be apathetic rather than argumentative.

      He sounds like a teenager acting out, who wants someone to set boundaries and make him do the right thing, except he’s an adult so they can’t.