Originally Posted by Hoozdo
Good post. I would also add, why are they on the drips that they are. If something seems kooky........it probably is.
For example - a couple of weekends ago I took report on a pt that has NS with 2 amps of bicarb added at 250 cc/hr. This had been going on for almost 48 hours, KOOKY! I asked the nurse giving me report why is this pt getting this amount of bicarb. Answer=I dunno, acidotic I GUESS! Bad answer, this poor pt was extremely alkalotic by this time.
I guess what I am trying to say is try to understand why you are doing what to your patient when you pass it off in report.

I agree, I am relatively newto ICU also, but by knowing why you are doing what you are doing you can potentially pick up mistakes before they happen.
Also....
check the lines and the connections (why is my patient agitated? oh we have been giving M&M to the bed for the last 2 hours)
Always check the pumps when you reset them... had a patient in our unit who ended up on 47 units of insulin per hour instead of 4.7 (not my patient thank god!)
Always make sure you check the safety things... suction, oxygen, ambubag, masks. Think what is the worst that can happen and what will I use if it happens? Then forget about it.
Do a thorough top to toe assessment. And don't overlook things because the patient is not in ICU for that.... I do vascular obs regardless but a lot of my colleagues don't.
Ask questions!!! Ask the doctors why things are happening. Or why they are doing what they are doing. It is not outside the realms of possibility that you are right and the doctors are wrong. It's not too hard to phrase a question in a way that will save their ego. But generally the more questions I ask the more I learn, it is like fitting a jigsaw puzzle together.
Check anything that feels wrong. Chances are it is.
Talk to your workmates. My colleagues are generally fantastic people who will happily help with information etc. This is the best way to learn.
The last thing is.. the thing that you feel is your weakness (mine is auscultating breath sounds), keep doing it until you feel confident!
Oh this is the real last thing. With some relatives all you can do is smile and nod and wait for the shift to end.
Good luck!