Re: Why don't nurses listen to cna's
You will get it on both ends. You will have nurses who weren't CNA's who are the most compassionate towards their aides and patients because they see how hard their aides work and they really care about their job as a nurse. They also enjoy helping other people On the other hand you will see other nurses who used to be CNA's forget that they were once aides. They like to be very bossy, and they sure love delegating to the max and they love to throw their education around. I even had a LVN tell me, and I'm paraphrasing "Well when you get educated and you become a nurse you will understand. You're just the CNA". I looked at her and I said "When I get educated? I already hold a Bachelors degree in another field, and I'm already educated. I just decided I wanted to go back to nursing. So I am already educated, just in another field." She was shocked, and couldn't believe I was educated with a Bachelors degree.
Anyway, I wanted to point out something about the original posters post, and I hope nobody takes this the wrong way but this is what I'm seeing and it also comes from experience as an aide. What the original poster said she said to the nurse "I think his kidneys are failing". I as an aide would never say something like that to a nurse. I would just report to the nurse "the patient told me he hasn't urinated in 3 days and he says that his left side hurts". Leave it at that. Although, his kidneys might be failing, that's not something for you to mention. Nurses look for aides to do and say things that may lead the aide to jump out of their scope of practice, then they can report them to the DON or the Head Nurse. I can tell by this poster that she's a very compassionate person and all she wanted to do was help the patient. But the comment could have also made the nurse upset. The nurse could have been thinking "who is this aide telling me that she thinks the patients kidneys are failing" Also by the original poster telling the nurse "I think you should have the patient sent to the hospital because he hasn't urinated in 3 days" was a big mistake on the aides part. Again, she was acting out of concern for the patient. The original poster is basically telling the nurse how to do her job. The nurse snaps back and tells her "you're just an aide". The nurse got offended that a CNA would tell her how to do her job. Since I don't know the whole story regarding this patient, I really can't comment on anything except what is being told. Most facilities wouldn't send a patient with a distended bladder to the hospital. Depending on where you work, they might have an order for a straight cath. Since the aide isn't in communication with the doctor, maybe the doctor has already been contacted regarding the distended bladder and the nurse was waiting to get an order to straight cath him. Some facilities have standing orders and others don't. Maybe the doctor is a real jerk and the nurses have a hard time dealing with himm, you as a CNA wont know that unless the nurse tells you. Since it seems that the nurse really didn't communicate with the original poster about the patient and his condition it's not safe to assume anything here. What I see here is lack of communication between the aide and the nurse. If there was problems going on here between the doctor, the patient, and the nurse, the aide wont know that. As I said I'm not excusing the nurse for her actions. I think the nurse should have explained to the original poster the reason why she did what she did. She doesn't have to go into detail because in the end, she doesn't report to the aide, the aide reports to the nurse. But the nurse could have given the aide a rundown on the situation at hand, and why it seems as if nothing is being done. When you don't communicate with your other health care team members it leads to situations like this. So please nurse12b please don't feel guilty. It probably was something that was already in the making and you just got caught up in it. It was nothing that you did or didn't do. You did the right thing by reporting it to your nurse. You did your job!
Since the patient died of kidney failure, most likely it was something that was bound to happen. Was the patient already going through renal failure? Was he a dialysis patient? Was he on a renal diet already? What type of medication was he on? The type of medication that he is on is going to tell you the patient dx. You can distinguish what the person has by the meds alone.
Since you said you're going through nursing school you will see that things totally change once you become a nurse. I agree with you, you will always listen to your aides. You have the right attitude because your CNA can either make your job easy for you, or they can make it miserable for you. I too will always listen to my aides and what I would have done if I were your nurse I would have explained to you why I can't do anything but give him a pill (you did say that's what the nurse did right?). That will make you as the aide understand why I did things the way I did. I also would have pulled you to the side and said to you in nice way basically not to tell me the nurse how to do my job, because by doing that you're overstepping your boundaries. But then again it wouldn't have gotten to that point because you would have understood the situation a bit better. If nurses and aides can just communicate with each other it would make things so much easier. I worked with an aide who would basically read the patients chart, and would tell the nurses which meds to order for the patient. She would literally tell the patients what pain medication they could have and to bombard the nurses with certain medications, and not to take certain ones because they will make them throw up etc etc. She would do a lot of patient education and the patients would question the nurses on everything because this aide was overstepping her boundaries. This is the type of aide you DON'T WANT TO BE. My advise to new aides is basically 1. Just report to the nurse what the patient tells you 2. Don't offer any suggestions unless asked and 3. Never tell a nurse how to do her job. That will only complicate things between you and your nurse. 4. Always communicate with your nurse. Now my adivce to nurses 1. Always listen to your aides, they are your eyes and ears. 2. Explain to your aide why you do things the way you do. 3. Thank your aides at the end of the day, they worked hard to make your day easier, they deserve it! 4. Always communicate with your aides.
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