OMG, so glad to hear somebody else saying this. The last time I was hospitalized, the recovery was a complete nightmare for exactly this reason. If there wasn't somebody coming by to poke or prod me, there was somebody coming by to do something to the other patient in the room, or if it wasn't that, the door was open and the click-clack of heels on the tile floor kept me awake, or there was too much light coming in from the hallway, not to mention how uncomfortable those beds are, etc., etc. Sleep was damn near impossible.
It was so bad that the first day I came home, I went to bed, fell asleep and had a dream that somebody came into my room and woke me up and said "I need to draw some blood". I've never been more relieved in my life to wake up and realize "fuck, that was just a dream".
"If there wasn't somebody coming by to poke or prod me, there was somebody coming by to do something to the other patient in the room, or if it wasn't that, the door was open and the click-clack of heels on the tile floor kept me awake, or there was too much light coming in from the hallway, not to mention how uncomfortable those beds are, etc., etc. Sleep was damn near impossible."
surely you realize there's more to hospital than just you?
surely you realize there's more to hospital than just you?
Of course I do. What does that have to do with anything?
As the article says, there are simple changes they could make that would maintain the same quality of care, while still allowing patients to get more sleep. Considering how important sleep is to our health, not doing those things is borderline malpractice, IMO.
It was so bad that the first day I came home, I went to bed, fell asleep and had a dream that somebody came into my room and woke me up and said "I need to draw some blood". I've never been more relieved in my life to wake up and realize "fuck, that was just a dream".