Group Forums >> Psychiatric Nurses >> Eating Disorder pts
Eating Disorder pts
|
22 posts back to top |
Posted over 4 years ago HI I work with adult women who have anorexia and/or bulemia. Anyone else work with these pts. I also want to raise awareness for nurses when completeing assessments to watch out for this. Pts often self harm and have somorbid psych dx, pts often have trauma hx. Observe fingernails and teeth closely, watch for lanugo on face arms and back. If your patient refuses meal tray or seems to overload on food frequently, pt has malnutrition and refuses PO intake. The women I see are getting onset at younger and older ages. Any ??s I will try to answer.Oh BTW males are increasingly suffering too! |
|
Account Removed -57 posts back to top |
| Posted over 4 years ago I have several ugly memories of these two eating disorders. I worked with a nurse back in the early 80's, who would literally eat bags of groceries and never gain any weight. She was constantly eating and broke almost every OR rule about food and drink. She'd have her pockets jammed full of candy, etc. It wasn't until I happened to be in the restroom, and she wasn't aware I was there, that I realized she was bulemic. Heard her purging the huge meal she had just consumed. I began to watch her and realized the pattern of eating and purging she had been exhibiting none of us paid any attention to. There were physical signs too, such as her ridged nail on her right hand and when she came out of the restroom, her eyes would be teary and reddened. Then all of her dental problems, with her teeth rotting from her purging. I heard a few years later, after I had moved away she had died of complications of this disorder. This incident happened in the early 90's. Had a ballerina who performed for a large well known ballet company come to the OR I was working in.. She came in with necrotizing fasciitis of her left arm and shoulder. However, unlike what had just been released here in the US, (Imitrex in a prefilled syringe, her supply came from a bottle, prescribed in Great Britain) so she continually used the same needle for her injections. This is the reason they thought she developed necrotizing fasciitis. After the debridement of her arm and shoulder, in the PACU she became very unstable and the anesthesiologist couldn't figure out why. Her electrolytes were very abnormal as was her heart rate. I happened to be still in the PACU and was helping out with her. I saw her right hand and the strange ridged finger nail and almost callous like tissue on her index finger. I told the anesthesiologist what I thought and why. He took immediate action, got her somewhat stabilized and to the ICU. She coded and died several hours later. I've learned over the years you just never know when something you've learned from someone/somewhere else, will help you in another situation. |
|
22 posts back to top |
| Posted over 4 years ago Yes this is a serious and deadly mental illness the most lethal psych disorder. FYI-most insurance companies will not pay for inpt tx!! Are you surprised? |
|
Account Removed 0 posts back to top |
| Posted over 4 years ago I have see many articles on the increase of men with eating disorders. Seems no one knows why the increase? |
|
416 posts back to top |
| Posted over 4 years ago cdnurse says ...
|
|
Account Removed 0 posts back to top |
| Posted over 4 years ago Very good info. thanks kayak |
|
Account Removed 0 posts back to top |
| Posted over 4 years ago I'm in the military and I have had to take serveral females to the hospital to be treated for eating disorders. Recently there was one who would cut herself anytime she was caught purging herself. There was also anxeity fits that she would force her body into when she gpt caught or didn't get what she wanted. It was very hard to watch this when there were so many people trying to help her. She was admitted to several hosptials where she denied treatment over and over again and when she finally accepted treatment she lied to the doctors. When she was discharged she came back and was worse than ever. We ended up discharging her from the military and hoping for the best. We had done everything we could do to help her, but there was only so much we could, especially when she was unwilling to help herself. That is the hardest part, getting the person to want to help themself. I now have a better idea of how bad it can get. |