Crosswords2 mins ago
Morphine, Paracetamol Or Ibuprofen Gel
14 Answers
Father-in-law is very weak an confined to bed now. His left arm has been aching since he got back from a hospital stay one week ago. There was bruising on inside of arm opposite elbow which nurse said was the intravenous drip needles. I rubbed ibuprofen gel on which relieved the paid. Since then his upper arm and shoulder also hurt increasingly. A District Nurse said she thought it would be muscular pain, but only to give him paracetamol and not the gel. Last year he was having morphine tablets and sometimes a couple of drops of morphine liquid on his tongue - that was before he has his chemo which he has now finished. My question is - am I right to say we should rub the gel on his arm and if that doesn't work a couple of drops of morphine, or is the nurse right that he should only have paracetamol? Wife and her dad have a phone appointment Thursday with consultant so she will ask then, but he's been in paid for a week now.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Barquentine. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks everyone. Yes- wife aware of 90 day expiry for the liquid morphine. Wife says she has to do in stages - first paracetamol (which he doesn't like taking - difficult to swallow) then morphine if they don't work. She is following Macmillan (sorry, not district) nurse advice not to use ibuprofen gel but doesn't know why she said not to use gel - but FiL said it did work last week on his bruising - and I've used it for muscular pain and I find it better than paracetamol. Luckily, wife says she has 3 way call with consultant oncologist and Macmillan nurse tomorrow. I've been overruled for tonight. But I'm with Mamyalynne - there's no reason to stay in pain now he's got to this stage of things.
Banqueting, change to liquid Paracetomol? To put it bluntly- a relative can't overrule a nurse (legally) and a nurse can't overrule a doctor. In your position, I would ring 111 and just get a GP to authorise. Write down their name, date, time and instructions (I'm sure you realise that nowadays you have to do that with any PC or medications anyway). So, please cover yourself, and get him morphine x
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.