Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne 3/16/26

1 response

  1. RetiredPracticeAdmin
    March 17, 2026

    Great post Dr. Jayne.

    I was my mom’s caretaker for 20 years, until she passed this January. Keeping her safe with several hospitalizations was challenging. When she first moved in with us, she was hospitalized because her recent pain pump implant was infected. Emergency surgery scheduled for the next morning. Nurse tells me that mom was talking on the TV remote as a phone that morning. Her pain management doc called me an hour later to say that surgery was cancelled, because the same nurse gave her breakfast, because my mom told her surgery was cancelled. The nurse didn’t verify. They actually did the surgery 8 hours later because the infection was rushing to the intrathecal space. I stayed with her post op till 10 pm.

    I showed up to visit the next day at 3 pm and she was unresponsive and thrashing in pain. The CNA said it might have to do with the fall she had that morning. Someone left her ice chips on the IV pole, and she ambulated to the bathroom alone (she was supposed to have a sitter), the ice fell and she didn’t notice and went ass over tin kettle when leaving the bathroom. LOC and hip pain, no report made, no scans done, no notice to the doctor. When I called the doctor she came storming over from her clinic and laid into the nursing staff. In the meantime, I got the house nursing supervisor to meet me and discuss this horrible care and how to insure she is well cared for the rest of her stay.

    She was discharged the next day. I had to perform wound care and was trained to count the gauze pads removed before flushing and repacking. The initial count they gave me was 5 pads. When I took her for infectious disease follow-up a week later and asked about the wound stench. Turns out there were actually 9 gauze pads and 4 were festering. She had to go to infusion clinic daily for weeks, and the wound took about 5 months to fully heal. I managed all of that at home, with no compensation from insurance.

    Safety is an issue in hospitals on all levels. Every inpatient needs someone to advocate and make sure these kinds of things don’t happen.

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