A 28 year old male presents to the ED complaining of difficulty breathing and rapid heart rate. Patient admits a history of anxiety and heavy alcohol use. Patient also admits to taking extremely large doses of an unprescribed medication. Patient insists this is a "cure" for alcoholism but patient admits to alcohol use today, but says it is below his norm.
Which of the following is the best treatment for this patient?
A) Follow standard of care for alcohol-related emergency
B) No treatment. Patient's symptoms are anxiety-related. Observe patient and discharge
C) The patient is a danger to himself and must not be allowed to continue taking large doses of unprescribed medication. Discontinue medication and hold patient for 72 hour involuntary psychiatric evaluation.
D) Maybe give a f*ck and take a look at the research on the medication that the patient has brought with him to the ED. Think rationally about it and go from there, which is kind of what he naively thought you might do in the first place, or else he probably wouldn't have come to the ED in the first place since you clearly aren't going to help him.
NE, if you could go ahead and slip that into a nursing textbook I'd appreciate it.
Man, you do have a lot on your plate! First, congratulations on the house. Seriously. If I remember correctly I saw some posts about waiting around in limbo waiting to find the perfect house in the perfect spot, and I take it you found just that if you bought a place. Yeah, I know the mortgage is intimidating, but it's worth it. Some people take out loans that big just to go to law school--you get a house that will make you very happy every day, they get a horrible career that slowly ruins their lives and crushes any shred of human decency left in them. My mother is a lawyer, so I'm speaking from a tiny bit of experience...
Anyway, that's just to say it feels like a huge deal and life-altering commitment right now, but in a year you won't even remember the size of the mortgage. You'll just be making monthly payments, not really thinking about it, and the house will be so much a part of you that you won't really even think about that, either. You'll just be happy in a background-way that you're there.
Your rationale for nursing school struck a chord with me and made me smile. I can relate to career-schooling for reasons besides getting the career at the end. It's kind of why I became a medic. Reading way too much Hemingway and realized one day I'd never seen anyone die. So I went out and fixed that. But seriously, it's awesome that you are learning about, and taking control of, the things that make you tick and the things that you're (we're) doing to tick a little differently.
Focus on the goal. Focus on the goal. Starting to get drunk at night again. Focus on the goal.
:l back at you.
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