When You Disagree With The Doctor’s Orders

This article was republished with permission from SCRUBS Magazine.

Warning: We’re not here to pick a fight. This is not about who is right or wrong. This is not about doctors versus nurses.

Now that we have that out of the way, let’s discuss a hot topic: disagreements. Disagreements among the healthcare team. When the nurse disagrees with the doctor.

The amount of potential energy this type of subject has is probably at the nuclear level. Everyone has their own opinion, and everyone is usually on the defense.

The scenario is almost textbook: The provider orders such-and-such for a patient or decides on such-and-such action for a patient, and the nurse in charge of that patient’s care does not think such-and-such order is right.

We could be referring to conflicting personal opinion or challenging medical decisions regarding plan of care in this scenario. Regardless of the reason for the disagreement, the disagreement exists.

Here’s the thing. We need to approach this scenario better. We’ve all been approaching it from the wrong angle, with the wrong attitude and wrong agenda.

This is not about who is right or wrong. It’s not about who is “sort of” right or “sort of” wrong. It’s not about you proving yourself. And it’s definitely not about proving the other person is wrong. It’s not about establishing or defining your abilities. It’s not about defending your profession. And it surely is not about proving your intelligence (if anything, the more we argue about this, the less intelligent we all look).

What is it about?

It’s about the patient. Period.

I’ve seen the scenario play out in so many different ways that it boggles my mind. So much time and energy lost. It’s time we approach every disagreement the same way. Here are five suggestions to follow when you disagree with the doctor’s orders:

1)   Patient safety.

Are these orders compromising patient safety? If they are, bring it to the provider’s attention immediately and take corrective action with no delay. Speak to the provider in person and find a collaborative solution. Passive-aggressive behavior is not going to help keep your patient safe from harm.

2)   Find common ground (meet in the middle).

If you’re passionate about your input, then be sure you have valid reasons. The excuse of “this is how we’ve always done it” won’t cut it anymore. Be a forward thinker. Maybe a decision exists that meets all parties’ needs. Work together and work through it, not around it.

3)   Agree to disagree.

Sometimes there is no common ground. Agree to disagree. Make amends to the provider by saying that you don’t agree with their decisions, but will follow the orders (because you have already verified it isn’t causing patient harm). The strongest attribute of a team is being able to collectively disagree on a subject in a calm, professional, productive and effective manner.

4)   Know your role.

Here’s the hard pill. At the end of the day, the provider is responsible for the patient’s care decisions that are made. Sure, all members of the team can be charged with a crime and can have legal actions taken against them, but the provider’s name is on the bottom of the chart. While the provider cannot do this job alone, in the end, they must sign the death certificate (a rather morbid concept, but completely true).

5)   Disagreements are a good thing.

But make them productive. Don’t let them drain the energy of the team. Don’t let them distract from the overall focus of the team. And absolutely keep the lines of communication open and honest. How else will a team grow and improve their dynamics?

Remember, if your team agrees on every decision ever made, someone is not speaking their mind or sharing their thoughts. And that can be a dangerous thing.


This article was republished with permission from SCRUBS Magazine.

1 COMMENT

  1. My problem is I have been told I have epilepsy on top of Multiple Sclerosis. I do not have epilepsy. I fell over once in a local supermarket. Because of this I was taken to hospital by ambulance. When I was taken home by the ambulance, my daughter called the ambulance a gain as my eyes did not seem right! I still disagree with the epilepsy diagnosis.
    f

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