Monday, September 30, 2019

Injection inspection


It isn't often one reads about medication errors offsite of the hospital, where the usual blame is forced upon a distracted nurse. Here is a recent event at a High School, where students were to receive a TB skin test, but sixteen of them, received SQ Insulin instead.

Lock, Stock and Peril

Oops, you got Insulin
For your TB skin test,
To the hospital you went
You must be impressed,
With our professional promise
Regarding safety and health,
Call it our Student Special
Injected with stealth.

Luckily, not one of you
Suffered anaphylaxis,
That would have looked bad
On next year's taxes,
We might have been sued
For every lock, stock and barrel,
Sixteen students got Insulin
With no warning of peril.


https://www.wishtv.com/news/local-news/students-hospitalized-after-receiving-insulin-during-tb-skin-test/

"Severe anaphylactic reaction to human insulin in a diabetic patient"
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17331861

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Future Charades


I still have plenty of words to share regarding what it's like to be the Nurse at the bedside; but my drive to expel those words, has diminished, now that I am freshly retired.
I continue to teach the science of EKG Interpretation, but that incurs no stress at all.
Still, I feel that I have an obligation to write, because my pals remain at the Western Front.


Absentee writer
That's me,
A lot of it was stress
Now I'm a retiree,
Am I any happier?
Not sure, just saying,
My thoughts are still professional
There's a balance shift playing.

I still keep up
With scientific curiosity,
Though, considering the old days
There was a degree of monstrosity,
Which changed its morphology
Over the years, and more decades,
What was believed back then
Was like a game of Charades.

If you're still a Clinician
Keep an open mind,
Best Practice isn't always
Give it a decade, and you'll find,
If all of the posturing
And big ideas in play,
Still hold any legitimacy
In that future day.