Patient Friendly Oils
#1
Posted 29 June 2012 - 05:06 PM
I know there are old school folks who think we should all be fragrance free at work...but I've found patients generally do like someone who smells good taking care of them...versus the anticeptic and chemical (cleaning produccts) smells associated with hospitals or the folks who drench themselves (or so it seems) in cheap colognes!
Appreciate suggestions...just got my first order of BPAL and already have a growing list of must haves....
#2
Posted 29 June 2012 - 05:25 PM
Dana O'Shee
Sudha Segara
O
Queen of Sheba
Dragon's Milk
Embalming Fluid
Velvet
#3
Posted 29 June 2012 - 06:00 PM
#4
Posted 29 June 2012 - 06:33 PM
This post has been edited by Numanoid: 29 June 2012 - 06:33 PM
#5
Posted 29 June 2012 - 09:16 PM
#6
Posted 29 June 2012 - 09:40 PM
As far as GCs go, I usually wear The Lights of Men's Lives or Black Pearl.
You might also look into Neutral from the RPG line, or maybe even the Honeys from Rappacini's Garden.
I agree with other posters about trying to find something that stays close to the skin.
ETA: Oh, I almost forgot - I recently tried Yemaya (from Excolo line) and she was a lovely fresh, light honeydew melon. Would also probably be good for working in.
This post has been edited by kaitan: 29 June 2012 - 09:42 PM
#7
Posted 29 June 2012 - 09:55 PM
#8
Posted 29 June 2012 - 09:58 PM
Long story short, my goal is to absolutely never ever be leaving a scent trail.. but if I am right next to someone, I should smell pleasant, not perfumed.
#9
Posted 30 June 2012 - 12:46 AM
#10
Posted 30 June 2012 - 01:33 AM
I love smellies, and the heavier the better. No scents have ever really bothered me, sometimes I wouldn't like them, but scent h as s never caused a physical reaction in me.
Then I got to spend quality time in the hospital for knee issues (almost 4 weeks in the course of 3 months). I'm not sure what happwned, but I woke up one day and couldn't handle any scent of any kind.
One day a gal came in to get my lunch tray and I had such a reaction they had to call some kind of code which brought all sorts of people running because I couldn't breathe. The culprit turned out to be a bath and bodyworks pocket bac. The kicker was that I had yhe same kind in my purse and it had never bothered me.
I kniw that's not the answer uoi want, but heaven forbid somone have a freak reaction like mine, and I would think you could be in serious trouble for violating policy.
Just my 2¢. Intetestingly enough the only thing I could tolerate the smell of was Ugh massage oil. And I craved the smell of that!
#11
Posted 02 July 2012 - 02:06 AM
I'm a believer in you can wear (almost) anything you want - if you wear it on your chest and under your clothes and use a tiny amount. My preceptor this summer and I were talking about sweating after moving a heavy patient, and I commented, "This is why I always wear perfume!" I have been following her around for about a month and a half so far and we have pretty much been joined at the hip, but she was extremely surprised to hear that I wear perfume at all. I swear if you wear it on your chest, it just wafts straight up to your nose and no one else will smell a thing.
The Lights of Men's Lives gets pretty heavy rotation for me - I agree that beeswax doesn't smell like perfume, per se, and people wouldn't necessarily think you were wearing perfume if they did manage to smell it. I have, however, worn things that smell more like perfume, and still no one but me knew I was wearing anything at all.
#12
Posted 02 July 2012 - 04:19 PM
lucyboo21, on 30 June 2012 - 01:33 AM, said:
I love smellies, and the heavier the better. No scents have ever really bothered me, sometimes I wouldn't like them, but scent h as s never caused a physical reaction in me.
Then I got to spend quality time in the hospital for knee issues (almost 4 weeks in the course of 3 months). I'm not sure what happwned, but I woke up one day and couldn't handle any scent of any kind.
One day a gal came in to get my lunch tray and I had such a reaction they had to call some kind of code which brought all sorts of people running because I couldn't breathe. The culprit turned out to be a bath and bodyworks pocket bac. The kicker was that I had yhe same kind in my purse and it had never bothered me.
I kniw that's not the answer uoi want, but heaven forbid somone have a freak reaction like mine, and I would think you could be in serious trouble for violating policy.
Just my 2¢. Intetestingly enough the only thing I could tolerate the smell of was Ugh massage oil. And I craved the smell of that!
I've actually quit wearing anything day to day because I have a colleague who is very chemical and scent sensitive. I've never set her off, but I've seen her react to other people's scents and it's not pretty. Just as easy for me to save my smellies for evenings and weekends (and Mondays, when she does not work). It makes the scent budget smaller too!
#13
Posted 02 July 2012 - 05:28 PM
I save my heavy and earthy scents for days off, or when I get home from work. Some of my favorites for work are Poisoned Apple, Alice, Mad Hatter, Grog, and Dragon's Milk.
#14
Posted 04 July 2012 - 03:19 PM
Anyway, that day I was wearing Melainis, which I had not reapplied since the morning, and this was after work, but I already knew that Melainis has hella throw and staying power on me. The lady told me that she'd completed chemotherapy, and since then nothing smelled good to her at all. Either scents made her ill, or she couldn't smell anything. She said my perfume was the first beautiful thing she'd smelled since she started her chemo. Even though it's an LE, I gave her the bottle, since I had it in my purse. I was so happy to make her happy.
So long story short, this wasn't an "in the hospital" patient, but just a comment that an incense-heavy scent smelled great to someone after chemo, so maybe a light incense might also work, simply because it's not the perfumey kind of scent?

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