Re: I cant start IV's!
I would not say that starting IVs is my favorite thing to do, nor is it something I do on a regular basis...but I have gotten better at it as the years have gone by. I had never ever started an IV in nursing school (sim lab doesn't count!) and was a RN for about a year before I started one succesfully.
This may come as a surprise, but working at a rural community health center gave me more IV practice than working on a med/surg as a new grad! At the CHC, the summer months brought an onslaught of migrant farmworkers (our focus patient population anyway) with a) GI illnesses gotten by drinking dirty water; b) green tobacco sickness; or c) HHNK.
So....they all got IVs. There would be some days we'd go down the hall starting IVs and running fluids in everybody (tobacco sickness, especially, as the guys would come in in groups).
The first few sticks were really embarrassing, especially because these were healthy folks with garden hoses for veins, and I blew them! My supervisor kept on me to keep working on it, keep doing it, and you'll get it. And guess what? She was right.
There is a certain level of a) confidence; and b) psychomotor skill/muscle memory that one has to have before being able to 'get' IVs with any sort of regularity. That takes longer for some than for others, but if you keep at it, you will eventually get it.
I work on a mother-baby/antepartum floor, and we don't start a lot of IVs there. I will say this, though - for me, it's far easier to start one 'under the gun', so to speak, than when I'm relaxed. (A previously rock-solid antepartum whose body decides it's time to go *now*, or a bad postpartum hemorrhage, for example.) Maybe it's because muscle memory takes over rather than the higher brain trying to 'think it through' too much.
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