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I took a part time job as a CCRN with an ambulance company. Sometimes when I go to the ER/ICU, I get strange looks and occasionally talked down to from other RNs until they realize I too am an RN. I manage very critical patients i.e. up to 12 drips, vent, intubation, art-line, chest tube ect so I feel like I am competent in what I do.What are your thoughts?
They always sound tired and depressed. They never introduce themselves and I'm usually wondering "Who the **** is this?" for a while before I finally figure it out. They seem competent enough, but rarely personable.
Most of my admissions do not arrive by ambulance with a nurse, so I admit that my experience is very limited.
They always sound tired and depressed. They never introduce themselves and I'm usually wondering "Who the **** is this?" for a while before I finally figure it out. They seem competent enough, but rarely personable.Most of my admissions do not arrive by ambulance with a nurse, so I admit that my experience is very limited.
I agree with you there that the nurses may be basing this off experiences with ambulance crews who may not be as clinically educated as would be expected from a healthcare professional, but I feel like if I am managing a patient as sick as I do it would give the impression that I am not an idiot just based off that the patient is alive.
Oh well..
Ambulance crews don't get a lot of respect no matter who they are. They are safe targets for people that are targets of someone else. If you derive satisfaction from deference from other medical professionals, find something else to derive satisfaction from because it won't be that working on a ground ambulance doing IFT's
I agree with you there that the nurses may be basing this off experiences with ambulance crews who may not be as clinically educated as would be expected from a healthcare professional, but I feel like if I am managing a patient as sick as I do it would give the impression that I am not an idiot just based off that the patient is alive.Oh well..
So why aren't you introducing yourself right off the bat? You're giving report, aren't you? Your report will display your competence (or lack thereof). My husband was a transport nurse -- ground and air -- and pretty much everyone in the ICUs and ED at our huge, referral hospital KNEW he knew his stuff and respected him. (Even before they knew he was my husband).
ClayH
71 Posts
I took a part time job as a CCRN with an ambulance company. Sometimes when I go to the ER/ICU, I get strange looks and occasionally talked down to from other RNs until they realize I too am an RN. I manage very critical patients i.e. up to 12 drips, vent, intubation, art-line, chest tube ect so I feel like I am competent in what I do.
What are your thoughts?