You know you're Old School when...

Nurses General Nursing

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Oh dear I really have set myself off on a trip down memory lane!! Recently a doctor called me "very old school" I think it was meant as a complement but unsurprisingly I was horrified but to be fair when I look back so many things have changed so.... so you know your old school when you remember......

Metal bed pans that had to be washed in the bedpan washer. Kind nurses used to warm them with hot water as they were freezing cold and would have patients hopping off the bed :)

Female nurses only being allowed to wear dresses and hats. The number of stripes on your hat indicated how long you had been training and when qualified you got a cotton one with lace trim. Evil things they were you used to spend half your life pinning them back as confused patients knocked them off

Unless you were married you had to live in the nurses home whilst training. Lights were meant to be out by 11pm and the house mother used to do spot checks on the rooms to make sure no men were hidden away!!!!:redbeathe Once a month an army bus used to come and pick all the student nurses up and take them back to the barracks were 300 army boys were waiting for a free disco, free food, free drink and far to much free love :)

We were not allowed to tell patients our first name and were called Student Nurse Smith. When a patient died we would dress them in a shroud, put a flower in their folded hands and then they would e wrapped in a sheet. A window would be left open to allow their soul to leave. They would go off to Rose Cottage, never called the mortuary. The nurse in charge would always say "there be 2 more before the week's out" as in those days people only ever died in threes!!!!

The wards were long open plan called Nightingale wards. 15 patients down each side. We had a back trolley and every two hours would work our way up and down the ward turning and cahnging every patient. We used to rub something onto pressure areas but I can't remember what it was. If you had lots of dependent patients then it was like painting the forth bridge - as soon as you had finished it was time to go round again!!! At Christmas a huge tree would be delivered and we would decorate the beds with tinsel - wouldn't be allowed today becuase of infection risks.

Consultant ward rounds were like a royal visit. They occured at the same time on set days. The Consultant would only talk with the Sister and you were expected to have every pt in bed, sheet folded to middle of the chest looking tidy!!!!! Never figured out how to make a pt look tidy.

Getting your silver nurses buckle was like a right of passage. As soon as you got your results from your final exams the whole set headed off to the only jewellers that stocked buckles and chose their badge. I still wear mine but it's fair to say the belt is notably bigger :yeah:

Male nurses and female doctors were rare. Now in my department we have more male nurses than female definitely a change for the better.

We took temperatures with a glass mercury filled thermometer covered in a disposable plastic cover and BP's were taken with a manual syphg and stethescope.

I am sure there are more but please other old school nurses share your memories with me :)

Specializes in floor to ICU.
Oh man! Thanks for reminding me about the "double shot" penicillin (2.4 mu - 1 injection for each side). I gave a few of those back in the day working for a family practitioner and had absolutely no qualms giving them either. My thought was if you play around you're gonna have to pay for it one way or another. I always had the guys lie down for the injections too. Sure didn't want them passing out on me and hitting the floor!

The thing I always wondered about was if any of those guys told their sex partners they were treated for gonorrhea? Probably not. :crying2:

Oh yea... I remember those double shots! How about oral polio doses? Used to be the only kids that got injectable doses were the ones with immunocompromised households (or immune problems with themselves)

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
i think it proved more dangerous than helpful? dropping the bp too far/too fast

and it killed a few people with o2 shunting.

Specializes in ER/Tele, Med-Surg, Faculty, Urgent Care.

Ok those of us who remember nursing before velcro was invented? No velcro on BP cuffs, it was a long tapered fabric tail?

Scultetus Binder anyone? The design of the scultetus binder--or "many-tailed binder," as it is commonly known--was originally a unit of straps or bandages, held together by a central strap in the back to which the "tails" were attached. The straps, being of equal length and numbering up to five straps per side, would be of sufficient length to meet the opposite corresponding strap centrally over the abdomen. The first binder straps were usually made of flannel, later being made of elastic when this material was invented.

Bucks traction with ace wraps? Not the foam & velcro used nowadays.

Alcohol drips for preterm labor? My first job in 1977 in L&D included the "poodle prep" (shave prep of pubic hair of the perineum but leaving the supra pubic hair) and giving every mom a soap suds enema with castile soap.

The medication tray & using different colored cards for prn's/routine meds/ po/Iv's and putting the cards in the next time slot in the med room?

Actually counting every narcotic?

Mixing every piggy back,making your own labels?

Intra-cath IV needles(had to go in the antecubital site)

ICU nurses carried a carpenters level on a string for CVP manometers.

Anyone remember the "circo-electric bed" and what the purpose of that was???

As for the white Clinic shoes, those were standard issue for female Navy officers when I was a Navy nurse in 89-92. I don't know if Navy nurses still wear that type of shoe.

Some things I have seen in the past 2 years that are really old: & already mentioned.

Glass bottles for chest tubes, Blakemore tube &football helmet.

Speaking of nurse's uniforms and what not, time was within a few block radius of any major hospital one could find a well stocked store catering to nurses and usually other medical staff as well.

Everything from caps, bobby pins (white usually, but often also silver as well), cap cases, slips, petticoats, white nylons (they came in cardboard boxes containing several pair, one purchased one, two or the lot), suspender belts, sanitary belts, various nursing related jewllery ranging from watches, generic pins and so forth, stethescopes, uniforms and so much more.

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
QUOTE=DogWmn;4197854]I remember those things, they were awful, I ALWAYS had them lay down after learning the hard way they most always grew "faint"...easier to start prone:rolleyes:. Those shots hurt like the dickins too...hope that taught 'em a lesson:cool
:

QUOTE=seasonednurse78;4197862]Oh man! Thanks for reminding me about the "double shot" penicillin (2.4 mu - 1 injection for each side). I gave a few of those back in the day working for a family practitioner and had absolutely no qualms giving them either. My thought was if you play around you're gonna have to pay for it one way or another. I always had the guys lie down for the injections too. Sure didn't want them passing out on me and hitting the floor!

The thing I always wondered about was if any of those guys told their sex partners they were treated for gonorrhea? Probably not. :crying2:

This is so funny, because when I wrote about it I left out the part "you play, you pay" because I thought I might be called a bad nurse for even thinking something like that, lol. But yes, we sure did make comments like that amongst ourselves!

DogWmn- always layed them down, too. Also, some of those guys were so skinny I found it easier to get the landmarks right that way. I hope they followed their good instincts and told their partners, too.

Specializes in IMCU.

did they use the lapel pin watches in this country? i love those -- keep thinking i will get one. surely better than having one on your wrist...no?

yes timex has one for under $30,

Surprised no one mentioned this, or maybe they did and it was lost in all the fun! *LOL*

Anyone remember using bars of carbolic soap for everything from routine handwashing to surgical scrubbing?

Ascultation of fetal heartbeat using fetoscopes that had those wide metal bands which fitted over one's head. Happily this preculded wearing a cap in L&D for the most part.

Remembering to check IVs for flow-control-clamp "derangement"

Setting up "piggy-back" IVs with glass bottles secondary always higher), backcheck valves and CAIR clamps

Dial-a-Flow, Master IV Dual Lock IV controls

Montgomery Straps

Penrose tubes with safety pins used as a taut clamp

When DON's offices were staffed with nurses (everything from secretarial and or clerical work to supervisors assistants), all in starched whites and caps.

"Actually counting every narcotic?

Mixing every piggy back,making your own labels?"

This still happens where I work. The nurses have to manually count all the controlled drugs and mix their own IV infusions- sometimes Pharmacy will make them for you, but its rare.

Specializes in med/surg; LTC.....LPN, RN, DON; TCU.

Thanks P RN. I have one that was doomed for the dumpground that I rescued when I was an EMT/FF. We had just got our new hare traction splints. I lost the bag of triangle bandages that went with it. My niece's oldest son just passed his EMT state exam and he can't believe some of the stories we tell. He is the 4th generation EMT. I remember getting up to date dial-a-flows because IV pumps didn't work that well in the back of a moving ambulance. Vehicle extracation was done mostly with hand tools and hand operated hydrolic pumps. Nurses in the ER were allowed to wear all white scrubs because of the environment and possibility of making emergency transfers in the back of the ambulance. Choppers were rare and only at big cities. Most of the EMS instructors were Vietnam vet medics. Male nurses either failed out of medical school, could not make the grade, or were army medics or vets. At least in this area. 8 track playing Abba in the ER on a slow nite.............!!

Specializes in Emergency Dept. Trauma. Pediatrics.
Speaking of nurse's uniforms and what not, time was within a few block radius of any major hospital one could find a well stocked store catering to nurses and usually other medical staff as well.

Everything from caps, bobby pins (white usually, but often also silver as well), cap cases, slips, petticoats, white nylons (they came in cardboard boxes containing several pair, one purchased one, two or the lot), suspender belts, sanitary belts, various nursing related jewllery ranging from watches, generic pins and so forth, stethescopes, uniforms and so much more.

I am curious, why on earth were nurses wearing petticoats??

Another poster mentioned counting all narcotics, that is the way it's done all places I have been. At the hospital they are counted in the pyxsis and in the LTC facility where they didn't have the pyxsis, both nurses counted when switching shifts.

Is this something different you are talking about?

Specializes in Obs & gynae theatres.
Dogoodthengo, your post has made me smile. Not sure that it's a good thing though :D

Now does that make me old school or just old :D:D:D

No, that just means you work for the NHS :D
Specializes in Obs & gynae theatres.
"Actually counting every narcotic?

Mixing every piggy back,making your own labels?"

This still happens where I work. The nurses have to manually count all the controlled drugs and mix their own IV infusions- sometimes Pharmacy will make them for you, but its rare.

You also work for the NHS and I claim my £5.

I wonder how far behind the US the NHS is? 5 years? 10??

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