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 Telemetry, Med-Surg, ED, Psych.

Harris flush and a rotating enema

Buck's Traction

open wards - some rooms with up to 12 beds - bathrooms where in the main hallway

When visiting hours were over - Visitors HAD to leave (no if's, and's, or but's)

MD order for immediate family to stay with dying patient - friend's or significant others were NOT allowed

Mrs/Ms/Mr/Dr/Student - NO first names ever or get a nasty talking to

Patient TV's could be turned off and removed if the patient did not follow room rules (Yes, there was a time when patients actually had to follow the rules!).

Using sugar on pressure ulcers

Melting the soap bars that other patients had used during a bath to later be used for orthopedic patients needing SSE (soap suds enema's)

In the days before accuchecks, the MD would taste the urine to see if a patient was hyperglycemic

Specializes in Gerontology, nursing education.

In the days before accuchecks, the MD would taste the urine to see if a patient was hyperglycemic

There is a very funny scene about this in the movie Young Doctors in Love, which, BTW, was filmed in the early 1980s during the heyday of General Hospital.

I remember the old enema cans. Ah, 'twas better to give than receive....

Specializes in Gerontology.
When visiting hours were over - Visitors HAD to leave (no if's, and's, or but's)

I miss this. I already got flamed once for saying this but - our unit was on outbreak precautions for 1 1/2 weeks. No visitors permitted (except for 2 very sick pts) and it was heaven. The pts rang less and we could actually get work done without having to work around visitors.

Specializes in Emergency Dept. Trauma. Pediatrics.
Determining glucose levels by testing the urine. We would put the urine in a test tube then add a pill. Urine would change colour and you would determine glucose level by mathing the colour of the urine to a chart. I remember standing there desperately trying to match the colours up.

Croup tents

Humdified O2.

Huge pillows placed between the legs of pts with hip replacements. Kept their legs spread far apart. You needed 2 nurses to turn because the pillows were so big.

Smoking in the nursing station. Pts smoking in their rooms. I remember one pt was a quad and had some special apparatus to hold his cigarette - as a student I would have to put the cigaette in and light it. The first time I could not get the lighter to light - the next day my two smoking friends spent their break teaching me how to light a lighter!

Do they not do this anymore? I know we humidify the O2 a lot and do the pillows to keep from adduction.

Specializes in Gerontology.

Humdified O2.

Huge pillows placed between the legs of pts with hip replacements. Kept their legs spread far apart. You needed 2 nurses to turn because the pillows were so big.

Smoking in the nursing station. Pts smoking in their rooms. I remember one pt was a quad and had some special apparatus to hold his cigarette - as a student I would have to put the cigaette in and light it. The first time I could not get the lighter to light - the next day my two smoking friends spent their break teaching me how to light a lighter!Do they not do this anymore? I know we humidify the O2 a lot and do the pillows to keep from adduction.

We stopped using Humdified O2 after SARS. An occaisionaly pt will have, but most don't.

We do use regular pillows- but these were enourmous abductor pillows. Basically, the pt's legs were kept completely spread apart. Think spreak Eagle width. They were very uncomfortable.

Specializes in Emergency Dept. Trauma. Pediatrics.

We stopped using Humdified O2 after SARS. An occaisionaly pt will have, but most don't.

We do use regular pillows- but these were enourmous abductor pillows. Basically, the pt's legs were kept completely spread apart. Think spreak Eagle width. They were very uncomfortable.

Oh I see. Thanks for explaining.

Specializes in CTICU.

We stopped using Humdified O2 after SARS. An occaisionaly pt will have, but most don't.

We do use regular pillows- but these were enourmous abductor pillows. Basically, the pt's legs were kept completely spread apart. Think spreak Eagle width. They were very uncomfortable.

Ah yes, Charnley pillows. Remember them and the CPM (continuous passive movement) machine for post op TKRs.

The baby bus that came rolling down from the nursery to the postpartum unit , with room for 10 babies all wailing to be fed on schedule. Moms were made to do 10am, 2pm and 8pm care, otherwise they could leave the babies with the nurses because they needed their rest.

Working an isolation unit without disposable gloves. Having immune suppressed patients and contagious rooms side by side and with the same nurse. We handwashed religiously after coming out of every room, every time. And had the lowest infection rate in the hospital.

hear ye, hear ye

Specializes in ICU, telemetry, LTAC.
how totally sad(and unkind)that had to have been. glad i didn't work peds back then; never could've done that.

anyone remember using granulex spray on decubs? gosh, i sure do. it had an oddly reassuring smell....wonder if it's even made anymore....

we used "bag balm"(came in a green square tin originally intended for cow teets) on most all incontinent pts--worked great-as long as the nurses and aides were faithfully applying it! the urine just ran right off the butts with that stuff on it---like water that beads up on a freshly waxed car!

i also recall the "painting" (i.e.,use of milk of magnesia then applying the heat lamp after taping the buttocks either to the side rail or up on to itself)--in fact, i recall how aghast :eek: i was when i watched the rn i worked with train me to do that treatment. it worked though!

we use granulex at my facility! it's now known as trypsin balcast and the little green spray can says tbc on it. it works!

Specializes in Med Surg-Geriatrics.

Wow these shared memories make me feel like a spring chicken!..I do remember metal bedpans though..yikes!..:eek: I read somewhere,something about nurses duties in the 18th century I believe, when they had to shovel coal light the furnaces,mop floors etc..before they even started their shift! If I ever run across the article again I will share it here..and the pay was nearly nothing!

As a new nurse (2 years experience), I'm horrified by the no gloves thing. Did you... did you..... have to give a suppository with no gloves?!? OMG!

No, you could use a glove for that, lol.

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