@raven-blackbird wrote:
@151949 wrote:
@Trinity11 Didn't you say they gave me morphine even when I didn't need it -- the only reason you didn't need it would be if you weren't having pain. It was a perfectly reasonable assumption.
Also - yes - many people have myocardial infarctions and don't have pain . They have arrythmias and that is how their MI is detected. Some people have routine EKGs and old MIs are detected that they were not even aware ever happened.
Just because you were a patient in a hospital does not qualify you as an expert.
@151949
@Trinity11
the fact her doctor had her on a pain medication, rather she needed it or not, falls under pain management......also, nurses can't order medication, they can only follow doctors orders.....the idea of managing the pain before it gets to a point where all the pain medication in the world can't manage it, is prudent actions by her doctor/nurses...........it will also, like aspirin, thin the blood which is extremely helpful on someone having cardio problems..........which is also another reason why they would want her on the medication rather she felt she needed it or not.
now the fact SHE HAS PERSONALLY faced this issue...........makes her more of an expert then someone who has not.........even doctors learn from their patients...............................................raven
___________________________________________________
I haven't read the entire thread so I am not sure how having an MI with or without pain discussion evolved, but as a critical care nurse for more years than I will admit, it is like nails on a chalkboard when I read things such as @raven-blackbird posted. And the nurse in me, must correct misinformation. Sorry.
Morphine sulfate is not a blood thinner in any way, shape, form, or fashion. Any nurse knows that. It is used to manage many different types of acute pain, myocardial infarction included. However, the first treatment of choice for eligible patients would be TPA which would then negate any need for pain medications.
But morphine sulfate is the drug of choice to manage pain in MI because is also decreases systemic vascular resistance and therefore decreases preload and afterload, to get technical. But it is not a blood thinner.
And yes there are individuals that have a heart attack with no pain at all. These are called silent MIs. Took care of many of those patients along the way as well.
Protocol for nurses treating pain is to assess pain level and have the patient rate the pain on a scale of 0-10; 0 being no pain, 10 being unbearable. If a patient reports a score of 0, no pain med should be administered. For the majority of situation involving pain, any nurse administering a pain med for someone reporting a pain score of 0 would be having to answer to someone and could face questioning. They most certainly would be liable in a potential lawsuit and could face discipline from their state board of nursing, depending. The patient must report at least some level of discomfort in order for the nurse to administer a pain med to be within the scope of practice.
This is standard protocol and standard of practice for pain managment with the exception of pain in someone that is terminal. The above does not pertain to that situation.
* Freedom has a taste the protected will never know *