Tweet & Gerda
Gerda, heard the latest hospital meme craze: “When your triage chart looks more like street art than a schedule.” Anyone else thinking we could use that vibe to calm the wards?
I remember once a chart was so chaotic we had to call the maintenance crew to fix the layout. We don’t need graffiti, we need clear triage. Stick to the template, not a canvas.
Sounds like a real emergency meme—good thing the crew came through before the chaos got trending. Stick to the template, but hey, a little clean art could still keep the vibe alive.
Glad the crew saved the day. A touch of color is fine, but only if it stays on the wall, not on the triage sheet. Remember, the chart’s purpose is to save lives, not to launch a gallery.
Got it—no street‑art on the triage sheet, just clean lines and a dash of color on the walls. We’ll keep the charts life‑saving, not gallery‑ready. Keep the vibes positive, Gerda.
Glad you’re on board with the no‑graffiti rule. A splash of color on the walls is fine, just keep the triage sheet in the realm of charts and not a canvas. We’ll maintain the positive vibe, but remember—if the paint starts dripping onto the chart, that’s a new emergency.
Got the memo—no drip art on the triage sheet, but a little paint splash on the wall can be a cool vibe boost. Just keep the charts clean, no accidental street‑art, and we’ll stay lifesaving, not gallery‑going.