The negative experience NP I encountered will live in infamy, she is probably lucky I didn't catch her name.
I was a student guest at a British hospital, and the surgeon and I were going over the specifics of the next surgical case in the ward. This person (who I am later told was an NP and (probably not that specific title, but translated to something I would understand in American English

) came up and asked if the surgeon would sign for sedation on a patient. The surgeon of course asked "which patient?" The name was given, he looked quizically and said he had no such patient. So the NP goes on to explain the patient is actually boarding and admitted uner a different service. Said surgeon suggests she call the doctor for that service for orders.
(this is where it gets good)
She states that it would just be quicker if he signed. He stated he would have to look at the chart and agrees to. Patient is admitted for dementia workup. Baseline not yet established. So he kindly tells her he could not possibly sign for sedation on a patient under the care of another service, whose normal status was unknown.
(the really good part)
The NP then blurts out all she wants is an order for tylenol (translated from paracetamol). I was later informed because of her position, she did not need an order, she was trying to cover her butt by having a doc sign. The surgeon explained that an NSAID was not a sedative, and she needed no order other than hers. They then had a 20 minute discussion on what constitutes a sedative. In the end, she finishes up with: well the "tylenol sedated her last night." The surgeon states of course this is impossible, she probably had pain or something she couldn't communicate and went to sleep after getting an NSAID which brought relief. The NP then starts in with how the doctor is neglecting patients and doesn't care about this poor woman and that "for some unknown reason the lady gets the same effect from tylenol as other patients with benzos."
The conversation ends with: "We are going to theatre, call her doctor."
Just what the world needs, a nurse, pretending to be and wanting to be called "doctor" because of an advanced degree thinking a patient may get the same sedative effect from regular tylenol as from a Benzo and it couldn't be because she was in pain she couldn't communicate.
Good that the pharmacist knows the proper flexoril dose as well huh?