Camp Nursing: 10 Camp Lessons

I have learned many lessons about being a Camp Nurse. It is a specialty with a steep learning curve and a distinct lack of information. allnurses is one of the premier sources of guidance for Camp Nurses and I hope this article helps build upon an already good foundation. Specialties Camp Article

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During my first year as a Camp Nurse, I spent hours learning everything I could about my new job. I read the book, looked at all the websites, and browsed every forum. I was disappointed to find so little information on Camp nursing. I have come to realize there are several reasons behind the lack of information.

There Are No Experts!

The truth is that very few camps have full-time nurses and a lot of camps don't have many returning staff. Even those who do generally only continue camping until their life circumstances prevent them from returning. The result is that most nurses don't log enough time to really consider themselves experts.

Camp Differences

The differences in camps make complete expertise impossible; each camp is different. The practice of nursing at each particular camp has evolved to suit the particular needs of that camp. There are some similarities in practice however; an expert can really only be an expert on their particular camp or camps, with similar design and culture.

I won't claim to be an expert, because I don't think anyone can claim to be an expert on the totality of camp nursing. I am starting my third year of Camp nursing. I work at a large Summer camp, we keep our kids for the entire Summer, and have no special needs considerations besides some ADD. These are 10 lessons I have learned along the way. I hope they can help you.

TIP #1 Preparation is Key

Every minute of preparation you do before the campers arrive is worth an hour of headache later. Some things can't be accomplished until the kids arrive, but make sure everything that can be done is done. Make sure the health histories are filled out, insurance cards are copied, medication records and inventory are as complete as can possibly be, and files are actually in alphabetical order. Make sure your camp first aid kits are stocked and emergency response plans are made and understood.

TIP #2 You're Stuck with These People ... Better Make the Best of It

I spent half of my first Summer being angry at one of my coworkers. They weren't the best employee, liked to stay out late drinking, return at all hours of the night, waking me up in the process. They couldn't do laundry or dishes. The nurse was profoundly unhappy at camp and for about a month, made me unhappy, too. At about the halfway mark I realized that it's actually pretty hard to get fired. No camp is going to discard an able body and my boss was right, a poor coworker was better than a missing one. So I got some earplugs, put on my big boy pants, and just put up with it when I had to. I did my best to enjoy my job, and not focus on what I couldn't change. I wish I had done this from the start.

TIP #3 You're Going to Think About Leaving

My first year, when I was miserable, I seriously contemplated just getting in my car and driving off. I was in a strange place, with people I didn't like, at a job I wasn't familiar with, and all this for less pay than I could make just three hours away at home. Camp is hard, and you're going to want to leave. In my opinion, that's normal. Just don't leave, that's cruel to your coworkers.

TIP #4 Make Low Friends in High Places

My second year I became friends with the kitchen and my life changed. Suddenly I got fed, not just leftovers, but real food. The health center meals got delivered on time. I also had friends for times that I was off-shift. The kitchen and the nurses should, in my opinion, be fast friends. We are both in a support role at camp, we both have odd hours, and we both don't room with children. I also inherited a friend in the office, and I always could find a pen again, my copies actually got done, and I got my license renewal paid for (I work in the state year-round, not like the other nurses who had to travel, but he submitted it, and they paid it). I was nice to the shopper and didn't have to make the 30-minute drive into town to buy a new toothbrush when I dropped mine in the toilet. I gave her money and asked her to get it on her daily travels. I thought that I would be playing games and doing camp stuff all Summer, and to an extent I did, but my friends in the other support departments make my job easier and are all-around cool people.

TIP #5 Don't Make Enemies!

My first year the new doctor, who was only there for a week, made a big stink to the camp directors that the health center was not being cleaned enough. In her opinion, all floors and common surfaces should be cleaned daily. This led to a meeting with the maintenance/cleaning team. That meeting was the last time we saw the cleaning team that year. Camp is only 8 weeks, which is plenty of time to hold a grudge. Don't make people mad when you don't have to, especially if you rely on them to make your job easier. We mopped our own floors for the rest of the Summer, for which the doctor who caused the ruckus was not present anyway.

TIP #6 Know Your Strength and Your Weakness

I have a pretty strong dislike of talking on the phone. I have a blunt personality, that only about 30% of the world finds charming, and I would rather clean vomit off the floor than sit in a chair at a desk. All these things are reasons I make a bad charge nurse. All of these things are why I have only charged when there is a gun to my head. I'm not that good at it. I will help you with it, but it is not my strength. I like big projects with goals. Do you want all of the first aid kits restocked, medications inventoried, a room reorganized? I'm your guy! Do you have a difficult staff member that all the other nurses don't want to deal with? I'M ALL OVER IT! Camp only lasts eight weeks for me and I would rather spend it using what I am good at rather than dragging the team down by insisting on doing things that I'm not talented at.

TIP #7 The Job Will Take Everything You Give It

If you spend twenty hours a day in the health center you will find twenty hours of things to do. Know when you need to put in some extra effort to get things done, and know when it's time to call it a day. Camp is a 24-hour operation, make sure you sleep, eat, and get a day off every so often.

TIP #8 This Really is Not a Big Deal

Maybe two or three times a year something in camp will rise to the level of emergency. Everything else is, at worst, a crisis and mostly just inconvenient. Don't panic, flip out, or spend excess worry over things that in the big picture are small stuff. 

FACT: Don't fall into the trap of letting your level of concern be dictated by those around you.

A camper twisting their ankle, missing a seasonal allergy med this morning, or having a fever is in fact not a five-alarm emergency. They may be emergencies to the staff, camper, or parent, but no one is going to die, so don't freak out about it.

TIP #9 Follow the Campsite Rule

Try to leave things in better condition than when you found them. Take one thing that was a problem for you, or you had a hard time learning, and make it easier for the next nurse. For me, it was an actual inventory of how many first aid kits we had on camp and what was supposed to be in them. In my second year, it was tweaking a form so that it could be one page instead of two and would collect data better. Those aren't big changes but they help. For three years running, the nurse I have helped has turned out to be me, which is a win-win situation.

TIP #10 Kids Are Here to Have Fun ... You're Here to Work

I think the most common misconception about camp is that it is fun. It will have fun parts. When you sit down and think back, it will average out to fun, but there are times when working at camp is equal to a root canal, just like every job. You will have fun, and you will enjoy yourself, especially if you can get into the mindset of camp, but if you are expecting a vacation you're going to be in for a surprise.

Please add your lesson, what have you learned that you wish you would have known on your first Camp Nurse job.

Great article. I am a nurse at a day camp in NJ. This will be my 10th year. The camp has grown from 200 to 600 campers registered for the summer, 9 weeks. They don't all come every week, but I still have to maintain the records for all the campers. When I started I tried to help out where ever I could, that included the kitchen,arts and crafts, bus evacuations, and discipline. It was hard to get someone to step up and take these jobs off of my plate when the camp grew. So my advise is to stick to the medical issues and don't get drawn into areas that are not part of your job. I love camp and I am looking forward to another great summer! Hope everyone has a great camp season

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question can you tell me "must haves" for nurses going to summer camp?

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Specializes in Home Health (PDN), Camp Nursing.

I think it's easier to go over the interpersonal stuff because its more universal than the health issues. Generally I agree camp is very basic nursing, there are a few issues related to camp that I don't see so much in other areas, but the differences in camps makes it harder to generalize the medical stuff. I could write a book on our skin issues and impetigo at our camp but we don't start seeing it until like week five, so I don't know that other camps have that issue. Conjunctivitis is another issue we see sometimes, and other times not. Once our kids get on camp we really just have to keep track of internal illness, we don't see the kids bringing illness in from home like a day camp. Same with lice and bed bugs, we only worry after visiting day when parents and siblings bring them onto camp, so shorter stay camps may not have that issue. I was thinking about a post on splinting as that's something we do 4-5 times a year and the other nurse don't seem to know a lot about it. I think as nurses we do have to work to share information, especially because we are so isolated in practice.

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Specializes in Home Health (PDN), Camp Nursing.
bigp71 said:
question can you tell me "must haves" for nurses going to Summer camp?

That's a really tough question. I would recommend you start a new thread with the information you can provide about your camp and your concerns. All camps are different, so it's hard to give specifics without as much information as possible. As far as nursing must haves, you need a flashlight stethoscope and a pen. What to pack is likewise pretty basic. Your going to over think it your first year, just try not to look like you should have driven a u haul to camp.

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I mean I dont know. Maybe i'm off base here, but when I was a kid, I went to summer camp. I remember the nurse there handed out a lot of medication (mostly add pills) to the kids. Honestly, and I may be wrong here, but I don't think it's going to be very daunting. You may get little Johnny to come in every now and again with a scratch on his knee, but really, I think you'll be fine. You'll probably be someone of a leader at the summer camp. Counselors and the director will probably want to interact with you, im sure. You may have to make sure that the kids that have certain food allergies get special meals and what not. I think you'll enjoy it. It will be fun.

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Specializes in Home Health (PDN), Camp Nursing.
NCmcMan said:
I mean I don't know. Maybe I'm off base here, but when I was a kid, I went to Summer camp. I remember the nurse there handed out a lot of medication (mostly add pills) to the kids. Honestly, and I may be wrong here, but I don't think it's going to be very daunting. You may get little Johnny to come in every now and again with a scratch on his knee, but really, I think you'll be fine. You'll probably be someone of a leader at the Summer camp. Counselors and the director will probably want to interact with you, im sure. You may have to make sure that the kids that have certain food allergies get special meals and what not. I think you'll enjoy it. It will be fun.

You wouldn't be the first ex camper to think that working there is almost as easy as going there. When you finish school send me a message I will be more than happy recommend you for a job.

It is a lot of meds.Not only giving them but making sire they go on trips and return, not to mention the growth hormone injections (we have 8-10 every night) But the a lot more than you think. Strep, lice, impetigo, conjunctivitis are the routine stuff. Last year my camp had four fractures, two pneumonia, several syncope episodes, a new onset seizure, and more fevers than I could count. We treat all of them from camp. We sent maybe two kids home in the 8 week season. Then there was the nurse who had a heart attack!

It is fun, but more work and headache then most people think.

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big al lpn said:
You wouldn't be the first ex camper to think that working there is almost as easy as going there. When you finish school send me a message I will be more than happy recommend you for a job.

It is a lot of meds.Not only giving them but making sire they go on trips and return, not to mention the growth hormone injections (we have 8-10 every night) But the a lot more than you think. Strep, lice, impetigo, conjunctivitis are the routine stuff. Last year my camp had four fractures, two pneumonia, several syncope episodes, a new onset seizure, and more fevers than I could count. We treat all of them from camp. We sent maybe two kids home in the 8 week season. Then there was the nurse who had a heart attack!

It is fun, but more work and headache then most people think.

O, I know it's not a cakewalk. I am always hesitant at postings like this because I have noticed that nurses (more than other professions that I have seen, anyway) seem to be quite sensitive when it comes to their work ethic/duties. If your a nurse, you work hard(PERIOD) That being said, I think that some jobs as nurses may be a little less rigorous than others. I'ts not for me to say if a school nurse's job is harder than a trauma nurse in the ER. I will say this though, I would personally probably prefer to work at a Summer camp or a school. That is just me. I probably won't, though. Since I have waited so long in my life to do anything, and since I'm only starting school prereqs, it's going to be 4 years before I even put that stethoscope on. That means I'll be 38. By 38, I may have 25 years to work, if I'm lucky. That means I will need to put as much cash as I can into my retirement, so that one day I can relax. Otherwise, I'll be 65 years old, alone, and wondering if I should buy possible medications that I may need, or should I get that can of cat food to eat so I don't starve. Cause if I continue on the same road I'm at now, I'll be lucky to be able to afford a can of cat food daily to survive on. Anyway, I don't know you, but I'm sure your a good person, and a hell of an RN. Stay Cool

Josh ;)

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Specializes in Home Health (PDN), Camp Nursing.

Josh.

No offense taken. I encourage you to consider camp nursing as a first or retirement job. It's good exprearence and is also physically easier then floor work when your old with a blown out back, elbow, or other work injury. I was serious if you want a gig just message me. I'll still be here in four years.

Senceerly Alex (LPN I don't want any confusion on my credentials)

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Specializes in Pediatric Private Duty; Camp Nursing.

Au contraire. We had a nurse last summer who had back problems. She didn't last a week. Sr. staff cabins were a 10 min walk down the path, and she kept going on about needing a golf cart for personal use, which was not possible. Then she couldn't help make beds or do anything remotely ordinary. You need to be pretty rugged and outdoorsy (and not afraid of bugs, skunks, snakes, etc!) if you want to live at camp!

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We had a nurse who complained about making beds in the infirmary, said she didn't spend money in nursing school to clean or make beds. I asked her. What do you think Florence Nightingale did? Another nurse who complained about bugs, its camp, what do you think bugs are at. At least she was gone by the time the bear camp and ate out of out trash. Lol

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Specializes in Alzheimer's, Geriatrics, Chem. Dep..
big al lpn said:
My first year as a camp nurse I spent hours learning everything I could about my new job. I read the book, looked at all the websites, and browsed every forum. I was disappointed to find so little information on camp nursing. I have come to realize there are several reasons behind the lack of information.

I'm gonna miss it this year :( Hope you do have fun even tho you aren't theoretically supposed to LOL... good list!

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Excellent article, big al. I think one of the many things that probably makes you a good nurse at a summer camp is that you have the drive and the passion for it. You mentioned that your talents lie in other places outside of answering phones, talking with certain people etc etc. I'm the total opposite. I'm an extreme extrovert. My fuel comes from others personalities. I do better talking on the phone than I do cleaning up vomit, lol. I have always been that way. This is why I want to be in nursing. With you, you just a pure NURSING MACHINE lol :) At the end of the day, it's guys like you that end up getting the stuff done. Be proud of who you are, Al. I sense your a good person. Stay cool brother.

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