Re: GN accepted job at a LTC facility w/ horrible reputation & aids..
Just try your best darlin'. The difficult thing at first will be time management-getting meds out and g tube patient care. A caring diligent nurse wil be recognized as such. I'm sure Florence dealt with some hard cases. You can educate your aides as time goes on. The residents need you and the DON seems to be wanting to turn things around. It can be extremely rewarding to care for the helpless. Also think of this-since the rep is bad, an intelligent person will realize you tried to change it and strangely, most people will not blame you personally if they see you are energetic and caring and trying your best- it can't get worse! LTC can be nursing at it's best where you have to use judgment, clinical and critical thinking to survive. It's quite humanitarian. You might feel you have failed as a nurse at some point (because it's so demanding) and leave the field but then you might go back when you see that the human element is so strong in LTC as opposed to the shorter stays of hospitalized patient. LTC is where the healing part of healthcare takes place- after the surgeries and treatments and things that have been tried and are no longer working in that patients are dependent. It's holistic in that sense, and can involve the family, or stand in place of the family. It's where you try to preserve dignity of the patient despite their afflictions and infirmities and endless medications. It's where pillow fluffing is most appreciated, or a favorite blanket, or grandma being tucked in, or grandpa telling his stories. It's also talking to a comatose patient and making sure his linens aren't bunchy, and his stomach is full and he's not thirsty. Dementia patients can be entertaining, funny and heartbreaking. Just do your best with the skills you have now. It's like this: you have your training, you have your heart, you have these supplies, go out there and think and do. As FDR said: make the most of what you have where you are; try something and fail, but most of all try something. You will find you will remember what your instructors have said in passing and it will come to you when you are pondering. When you don't know what to do for a patient-take vital signs! It will give you time to think. Besides, taking care of older people is much like taking care of children and can be a good start for a nurse. It's not brain surgery! Really.
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