Re: What are the most invasive procedures you do?
It is hard to know exactly what you are asking, but there are many areas of nursing that involve a variety of intervention. If you are an office or school nurse you may only have to give meds, bandage wounds, etc. If you are in labor and delivery, you obviously see a lot more blood. Dialysis nurses see all the patients blood as it goes round and round thru the artificial kidney.
ICU nurses see lots of invasive lines, tirtrate a lot of drips, have lots of patients on vents, change a lot of dressings as well as deal with infected, incontinent long term patients.
In the ER, we do all of the above as well as assist with chest tube insertions, NG tubes, quick preps for surgery in trauma patients, lots of splinting of broken bones, drunks who have passed out in their own vomit, urine and feces. Yes, we put in a lot of foleys as well.
As a nurse, you are going to see people at their worst. They are either too sick to take care of their own basic needs, or just don't want to. You will see young innocent people die, and it will break your heart. You will have to deal with the ranting and raving of maniacs, and that includes patients, families, docs and other nurses.
Then why do we do what we do, if it is so awful? I ask myself that question everyday. It is because occasionally, you make a real difference in someones life. You may actually be instrumental in bringing someone back from the brink of death. You may have the honor of helping bring new life into the world. You may be the one to comfort and support the wife of a dying man, the mother of a child who is seriously ill, or hold the hand of the lonely one who has no familly to care for them.
If you put it all on a spread sheet and balenced the pros and cons of nursing...the cons would always win. No one would ever want to be a nurse. But the reasons we do it are mostly intangible. I can't put my finger on it, but something keeps me going back day after day, year after year.
No one can adequately describe what we do and what impact we make. But if you ever need a nurse, I hope you don't have to look far to find one who can help you thru your time of need.