Then we have this-------
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19207050/ns/health-health_care/t/woman-dies-er-lobby-refuses-help/This shit happens when one least expects it.
I was at the beach and over turned my foot an some rocks and broke my ankle. Taken to the ER the receptionest went nuts as I was not wearing shoes. My ankle was a mess hurt like heck but all she was interested in was I was not wearing shoes. I was carried from the spot I broke my ankle into the ER, I had no idea where my shoes were at.
Another time I watched as an ICU nurse had a melt down around 2 AM as I had changed the bedding for my daughter and forgot to place a slip sheet under her. This nurse went nuts on me, my daughter was failing and I gave her a bed bath, brushed her hair turned her every hour to prevent bed sores, yet I totally forgot the slip sheet. This woman ranted at me like I was trying to kill my child, a slip sheet can be placed under a patient in less then 30 seconts to allow staff to move the patient.
Instead of getting a slip sheet this poor nurse got another nurse and they manually under the arms pulled her up in bed. All the while the nurse was yelling at me and here my daughter was on deaths door.
The nurse stormed out and a male nurse came into the room with a slip sheet and in the wink of an eye we had it under my daughter, no problem.
Got to remember this was around 2 AM the staff had to deal with accident victims and what not.
I thought my daughter was going to die at this point, I as her mother needed to give her a bed bath, and brush her hair, as a nurse myself the ordeal caused me to forget the slip sheet, and as clean linnen had been delivered someone forgot to add the slip sheet and I was going boinkers at that time.
Shit happens, we are only human, had I not been a nurse, I would have yelled to high heavens about the Charge Nurses conduct. This Nurse working the night shift was over loaded with patients near death and just snapped. I have never seen conduct like this before but I do understand it, STRESS in the early mornings I had faced myself. Thank God for the male RN that stayed with me and daughter until the morning came.
Daughter survived and is now on the liver transplant list.
Google the hospitals that turn patient out once they are stabilized on to the streets, no place to go, no family or friends often droped off at a shelter with no medication.
Most often we get great care when going to the ER, we have familys and friends watching. The street people with no one to watch over them ---or just one or two relitives there, no insurence---all hell can break out.