Tamra is extremely rude. She answers the phone when you call the number. She was so quick to transfer me to a number that was useless. Her supervisor talked to me like I was a idiot and was basically as helpless as her. Avoid this place, if you can. They give you the run around and are so quick to get sassy and pass you off to someone else so that you can wait on the line forever again to talk to an actual person.
Nurses are there to help us in our most desperate need. Not stress us out and cause us more undo pain and anguish.
I was here in 2011 at the same time of the year for the same issue. I was on my death bed. And I stayed for 2 weeks. The first couple days where a struggle. Fighting with the staff about not letting me up, having alarms on my bed. I finally had them turn it off, after a big debate over it. They never could get my medication right.
Some of the nurses have really bad attitudes (Lizzy) yelling at patience in pain arguing with me about a blood thinning shot I have a choice to take is stupid and unprofessional. I should have done more than just had you removed from my room.
I grew up in a field of work where the customer is always right. You stand there with a smile regardless of how you feel you nob and do what you can to please them.
The emergency staff were very nice but I did not like how uniformed they kept us while everything was going on.
Other wise I was ok. The beds really need an upgrade.
I the hospital I feel they are in a far more sensitive environment where what I learned would be good to apply to patience.
You and the fact that you tried to slip a pill in my mouth without telling me what it was and the fact I was allergic to it is the only two things I disliked about my stay.
Love the doctors!!! Love the care and the food is much better. I could have done with a larger room, claustrophobic. And the small TV.
My Clinical Rotations class from Garland High School took a field trip to Baylor Garland today, where we had the chance to briefly speak with the Nursing Educator while our teacher was away handling other business. It seemed like a great opportunity at first until about two minutes in, when she publicly shamed one of my fellow classmates after she didn't respond to the question she had asked her. This classmate had been having a very rough day and on account of her emotional state was simply distracted and did not hear the question. The Nursing Educator immediately berated her for not listening, making rude and sarcastic remarks about her attitude and saying that she would get nowhere in life if she did not "get over herself". The student never talked back or retaliated, yet the Nursing Educator, rather than leaving it at that, would continue to bring this issue up repeatedly and reiterate these comments several times more before the end of our session, even getting in the face of the student and continuing to scold her as she was very visibly crying. The student continued to cry even after the session was over, and not once did the Nursing Educator show any remorse for her actions or even check to see if the student was okay. She simply continued with what she was doing, as if she had not clearly just left a high school student in shambles. This repulsive lack of empathy for somebody who was clearly struggling emotionally not only contrasts the empathetic nature that the Nursing Educator had been preaching to us the whole time, but also, from what I have seen, speaks to her character and her lack of good interpersonal skills, which a good healthcare professional must possess. While I see the importance of teaching students to be attentive and exhibit a positive attitude, I see no reason for a healthcare professional who has been in the field for over 30 years to act in such an immature and unprofessional manner as to degrade a high school student and tell them that they will not succeed in life because they are having a rough day. In simplest terms, this seemed to my classmates and I like a classic bullying scenario, but between an adult and a high school student, making the situation absolutely abhorrent.
I was please to see some of the issue I had back then had changed. But some however had gotten worse. People will be people and that you can not change. I am referring to nurses. Our personality will eventually clash with someone.
It was that they took such good care of my father in Dec. when he passed I should give them a chance. I had been going to Plano for years.
My husband went to ER on 9/6 the people who took care of him was really nice! He spent 5 days in the hospital everyone did a great job
Baylor Scott White Medical Center Garland is a US Hospital based in Garland, Texas. Baylor Scott White Medical Center Garland is located at 2300 Marie Curie Blvd, Garland, TX 75042, USA.
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