I won't go into the gory details, but I have posted in the randoms thread about my mom needing an emergency surgery after getting an infection following a hernia repair.
What I am curious about, is why her nurses keep denying her pain medication. Maybe my mom is out of it and forgetting when she last had medication, but this is the second time she has told me she has been denied pain meds. The first was when she first got out of surgery on Friday, and then again today. The only thing the nurses will say is she can't be on the iv pain meds at home. I understand that, but we have been told she will at minimum be in the hospital through Friday.
So really I am just curious if that is normal and what is the reason behind it. I am not a nurse and have no medical background, and I am sure there is a reason...but her nurses are just doing a poor job of explaining it to us. I am sure every patient is different, too, but I was hoping to gain some insight as to why they would be withholding pain medication after abdominal surgery when the very earliest she would be discharged is Friday. Can anyone help me out!?
I should note, my dad is on his way back to the hospital and does have a meeting with her surgeon and he plans to ask, as well, so hopefully we get more clear answers from him.
Thanks!
Re: NBR: pain medication after surgery question for nurses
They usually start off with patient controlled pain medication and then put on PO meds.
But to put things in perspective, open heart patients at my hospital are transitioned from patient controlled narcotics to Percocet pills for pain.
Hopefully once my dad meets with the surgeon we will have better answers. I think I could handle it better as long as I understand the why, no matter how much it stinks to see her go through that. The ultimate goal is to end up healthy!
Feeling/recognizing pain > being in a complete stupor and oblivious to it. At some point a regimen will need to be established for when she goes home. You have to figure out what works. And like PP said, the bowel needs to prove that it can work and actually recover..
Be sure to communicate to the surgeon that she is having pain control issues. She may need a change in medication or there might be other pain management options she can try i.e. ice packs, massage, aroma therapy
Ask the nurses to be clear about what the plan is to help your mom reach a reasonable level of pain. She has a right to know the plan and options available to her.