A Day In The Life Of An OB Charge Nurse

The OB charge nurse. I will talk about what I do from the moment I walk in the door until I clock out. I will include my daily tasks, some situations I am dealt with, and how prioritizing is key to the charge nurse role. Specialties Ob/Gyn Nurse Life

Updated:  

"All you do is sit around until a baby is born," "your job must be great, all you do is sit and hold babies", "be happy, you're in the happy part of the hospital." I have heard it all. My job as an OB charge nurse is nothing like sitting around, holding babies in the happy part of the hospital. Many of you know that OB nurses care for the fetal demises that come through the unit, but we also see much more unhappiness. Abused mothers, drug addicts, and drama within the families are more common than the hard-working, married couple with jobs in the world. That's not to say I don't love my job; I love my job.

A Day In The Life Of An OB Charge Nurse

 5:00 am  Wake up and get ready for my day. If I don't start the day with a cup of coffee, I will have a headache by 7 am, so there's where it starts. I get showered, make sure my family is set for their day, and off I go.

 6:20 am  I arrive to work. Yes, I am one of those. My shift doesn't start until 7 am, but I need to know what I am in for. I get dressed into my fancy scrubs, work shoes, and pull out my nurse toolkit (pens, highlighter, pencil, stethoscope, badge, vocera holder, and notepad), and head to the breakroom. I always put fresh coffee on for my coworkers. Always take care of your tribe. I may or may not take a cup with me, depends if my son was up during the night (so usually yes).

 6:50 am  I glance at the hallway. I can tell you if the night was bad or not if the hallway is a mess. Somehow, before 7:00 am, everything is cleaned up. We have the respect for each other not to leave a mess. Take care of your tribe.

 6:58 am  I am awaiting my crew. I glance at the assignments and plan (ha) how the day will run. Here they come, "coffee's on, ladies.", and we await the report.

 7:00 am  We listen to report about the floor, not a detailed report, but enough to get us an overview of who is in labor, who has issues everyone should be aware of (family drama usually), and what is scheduled that day. I take over as the charge nurse and tell my coworkers what I will do for them. Sometimes, I am lucky enough not to have a patient to start with; I am pretending this is one of those days.

 7:15 am  I say goodbye to the night shift, and offer them a cup of coffee. Wish them a safe drive home, and say a little prayer for each of their safety (take care of your tribe). I start my QC checks. I always will start with my operating rooms. There are two of them. I have a scrub nurse, but I always try to make sure these are ready to go because you never know what the day will bring. I check all of the QCs in the unit, including, three crash carts, refrigerator temps, discard old medications or specimens, clean dirty equipment (even though I have an aide, don't ever think you are too good for any job), and check to make sure I have some labor rooms set, as well as a triage room. If I can get through that without too many interruptions, it's a good day. I think about my family, try to call my husband, sometimes, I just get a text from him letting me know everyone is off to school and that he made it to work.

 8:00 am  Our first scheduled inductions is usually scheduled at this time. I help as much as I can with that patient, as well as answer phone calls from various departments, answer physician questions about patients, and start getting the postpartum patients ready for discharge or post op care.

 9:00 am  The lactation nurse arrives (thank goodness). Breastfeeding, as natural as it is, is always a problem. Some baby can't latch on; another mother has flat nipples, and another wonders if her baby is getting enough milk. There is only one lactation consultant and limited nurses. I step in to help who I can, when I can.

 11:00 am  The pediatrician arrives, and the Pitocin is started on our inductions to try to have new babies by the end of our shift, ideally. Now, the office is calling. They are sending over a patient who thinks her water broke at 4 am this morning, every 10-minute contractions and hasn't felt the baby move. There goes any lunch I thought I might get that afternoon.

 12:00 pm  The triage patient arrives, it turns out I know her, or she knows me. I delivered her last baby. I don't remember her, but she said she'd never forget me. That's why I do this; I tell myself. The day is good. I am in the happy part of the hospital, but still haven't held a baby, or sat down. I check to see if she has ruptured her bag of water, it is not, but she is 5 centimeters, and she's due. Let's have a baby! I phone the physician, admit her into the computer, and start her IV.

 1:00 pm  Another call from the office, they will be sending over a patient for a repeat c section, she is in labor, or sounds like it from the phone call. I have the aide prep a bed for a section (we add a different mattress), and go through my nurses to see who could take the next patient. Everyone is crabby, I take that back, hangry. No one has eaten lunch yet, and the pediatrician just left. She put in her orders for discharge, but the first patient to go isn't going to leave until 2 pm. Unfortunately, that nurse will have to take the c-section.

 2:00 pm  My patient needs an epidural, she's booming contractions out and cannot take it anymore. She is 6 cm. The c-section patient has arrived, she ate an 8:00 am, but is contracting. The doctor says to get her admitted, and we'll have to do her c section. I am trying to find an assistant, let other nurses know, the anesthesiologist, and try to prep my patient for an epidural and delivery.

 3:00 pm  My patient received her epidural. She is progressing! I need to find a nurse who will help me with my delivery. In the midst of the patient relaxing after her epidural, her blood pressure drops to 60/40; she is symptomatic, and the baby is in distress. I push ephedrine with the physician at the bedside, as well as administer O2 via facemask, bolus more fluids, and pray that the baby recovers, or we will be going back to the OR before the other patient.

 4:00 pm  Thankfully, the baby ("my baby" is what we always say when it's our own patient) has improved. The C-section patient is ready to have a baby. Prepping the OR and counting the instruments, as well as arraigning a code pink team, and the team prepares for delivery. The patient is prepped for spinal anesthesia and laid down to a left tilt. The circulator takes over, on her own, and back to the floor I go before my patient delivers. I make a second batch of coffee because I didn't eat. I sneak a cookie from the break room for my breakfast and lunch.

 5:30 pm  The c-section went well, mom and baby are recovering. My patient is 8 cm and sleeping. We're tired and ready to go home. I figure out staffing for the night shift and clean the triage beds from earlier. Just in time, another triage patient arrives who is bleeding. I find another nurse for, and luckily, after an hour, that patient is safe to go home.

 6:30 pm  Almost quitting time, but wait, my patient is complete and ready to have her baby! I prep her for delivery.

 6:52 pm  Delivery time! The patient delivers a healthy baby girl with no problems. I can have a nurse step in my place at 7:00 pm.

 7:00 pm  The upcoming shift received a report. I stop and say thank you to all my coworkers for their help. Always take care of your tribe.

Throughout my day, you will notice, I held no babies. I did everything but sit, and that day, no sadness, but always lots of drama. If you want an adrenaline rush and an ever changing day, become a labor and delivery charge nurse. You have to be able to multitask and think on your toes, and you must always remember to take care of your tribe!

Specializes in ICU.
Kooky Korky said:
Why not just tell them to buddy up with another non-Charge nurse for help with turning patients or whatever other tasks don't really require Charge assistance/guidance.

Why don't you get Charge pay? Even if it's only a dollar or two, it does add up and you are earning it. Can you just say you don't want to be Charge on some days? Is anyone else capable of doing that job?

Lots of people can be charge... but successfully refusing charge usually requires a bit of seniority. The 15 and 20 year nurses saying "hell no, I'm not going to be charge today" are much more likely to get their way than I am.

It would be nice to get charge pay. It's just not something my unit does.

I usually get asked to always help with turns and such because I've made it a point to let people know that I am helpful and approachable, and they can always ask me for things. My unit is infested with cliques and some of the new people will literally just get blank stares if they ask someone else for help... and that sort of behavior makes new staff leave because it's too hard to fit in, so I guess I'd rather half kill myself trying to make my unit a pleasant place for newer people than have us continue to bleed staff left and right because they're getting stonewalled by the cliques.

It's an obnoxious situation.

Specializes in Nurse Health Writer / Author.
calivianya said:
Lots of people can be charge... but successfully refusing charge usually requires a bit of seniority. The 15 and 20 year nurses saying "hell no, I'm not going to be charge today" are much more likely to get their way than I am.

It would be nice to get charge pay. It's just not something my unit does.

I usually get asked to always help with turns and such because I've made it a point to let people know that I am helpful and approachable, and they can always ask me for things. My unit is infested with cliques and some of the new people will literally just get blank stares if they ask someone else for help... and that sort of behavior makes new staff leave because it's too hard to fit in, so I guess I'd rather half kill myself trying to make my unit a pleasant place for newer people than have us continue to bleed staff left and right because they're getting stonewalled by the cliques.

It's an obnoxious situation.

It sounds like you have a difficult group of people to work with. I know those who have been there 15, 20 and even 30 years sometimes don't want to be charge. After knowing them for the last 15 years, I understand why. I take it because I am a leader. Some people no matter how long they have been there are simply not good leaders or multitaskers. Yes, it's a learned task, but some just don't get there, and as a leader, you have to respect that.

I hope they put you as the point person because you are approachable, kind, and helpful. The doctors may see you as the best fit, the leader, and the prioritize better than others. It's a good thing to be charge nurse. You are the one everyone trusts the most.

On the other hand, if you love what you do, find it somewhere without that situation. The grass isn't always greener, but sometimes it's less brown ?

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.

I read this article before I was admitted to the hospital. First I was in L&D then moved to Antepartum. Nurses in both sections seemed busy as hell. This article really opened my eyes.

JanineKelbach said:
Unless it's an NAS baby....

:( True.

Specializes in Nurse Health Writer / Author.
OrganizedChaos said:
I read this article before I was admitted to the hospital. First I was in L&D then moved to Antepartum. Nurses in both sections seemed busy as hell. This article really opened my eyes.

Ha, thank you. It is a busy job, but well worth it ?

I used to work newborn nursery and there were many days where lunch didn't happen till 2:00 or later. Definitely keeps you running!

Specializes in Nurse Health Writer / Author.

Yes, you almost have to eat something in the car on the way to work, just to keep the blood sugar level stable ;-)

Specializes in OB, Women’s health, Educator, Leadership.
BeachNurse3484 said:
My goal is to be an L&D nurse. I know it's a hard area to break in to, but it's really where I want to be.

It's not as hard to break into as it used to be OB takes new grads regularly. Not that you are a new grad, just saying they train them.

JanineKelbach said:
Yes, you almost have to eat something in the car on the way to work, just to keep the blood sugar level stable ?

I always eat on the way to work, as you never know what's going to be waiting when you hit the door....

Specializes in Nurse Health Writer / Author.
passionflower said:
It's not as hard to break into as it used to be OB takes new grads regularly. Not that you are a new grad, just saying they train them.

That's true!!

Specializes in OB, Women’s health, Educator, Leadership.

Janine I have been a nurse for about 30 years. An OB nurse for ten and you just described many shifts I have worked. Great article. We have some things in common - our love for writing, I am also part of Healthcare writers network. Trying to pursue my dream when I'm not delivering babies.

Was pre-eclamptic with my first pregnancy, My 27 week daughter did not survive (1976). Never thought for a moment that you have an easy job. Forever grateful for the kindness and compassion shown to us during that difficult time. We need to always put ourselves in others' shoes.