TexasCourgette

TexasCourgette

Labor & Deliery

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About TexasCourgette

TexasCourgette has 2 years experience and specializes in Labor & Deliery.


I come from a long, long line of teachers and computer geniuses, and so everyone was kind of shocked when I announced I was going to nursing school. My brother just announced he's also going into a health profession--maybe something was in the water at my house, growing up? I graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with my BSN, and work in labor & delivery, where I'm blessed enough to attend birthday parties every day. I'm so glad to be doing what I'm doing and learning what I'm learning!

Latest Activity

  1. Possible 36 week delivery, hospital has no NICU

    Per allnurses.com terms of service, we cannot give medical advice or help you make medical decisions for you or your
  2. Opening new unit

    Pie in the sky dream: birthing tubs. But maybe there isn't THAT much equipment allotment left? Wireless Tele with water-safe monitors (even without birthing tubs, you can monitor your patients while...
  3. Postpartum Hemorrhage drills

    At my facility, our educator would make jello and put it in ziplocs for drills is visually estimating bloodloss-- we also had drills in which we would weigh pads that had been soaked (water/food...
  4. Documentation

    At my facility we chart q30 for labor without pit, and q15 for pitocin, and q5 when pushing (regardless of pit or not). We also have an intermittent monitoring protocol for patients who are...
  5. I need confidence!!

    Good for you! Know that preceptors don't generally give out that kind of praise very often. She's not crazy, and you're not crazy--you're good at what you do. Does it become less scary? Yes....
  6. Your first OB clinical experience

    There is absolutely a "shock value" that comes with L&D, especially if it's your first obstetric experience. I absolutely love women's health, and knew that going into L&D, and there was still...
  7. Projects in your OB department

    We just started offering birth classes at our hospital, and are increasing the number of tours we give per month. Our unit is in the middle of remodel, and we're gaining an LDR from that. In the last...
  8. Most helpful orientation activity

    We had lots of "drills" with our educator--she'd make jello and spread it on pads and have us guess amounts to demonstrate how hemorrhages are often underestimated, run mock codes, mock neonatal...
  9. Vanderbilt admits, what were your stats?

    I had a 3.5 GPA, and GRE score of 158 verbal (I think?) and 155 for the math portion (I think? This was back in August, and all I remember was trying to make sure I had over 150 in both portions). I...
  10. dealing with the death of a baby

    I can't answer this as a midwife (yet--just got accepted to start in Vandy's CNM/FNP program in Fall 2014), but I've been an L&D nurse for 2 years, and have seen several demises. Most of the...
  11. Question about noisy/open-glottis pushing

    I think it mainly comes from how uncomfortable it is for the OB/midwife/nurses to hear someone making that kind of noise (and truthfully, I see this most with OBs, at least at my hospital). It's not a...
  12. What's the craziest thing a patient or family member has said to you?

    I once had a dad ask me, immediately following delivery, if we could "put a tracking chip" in his son (for child safety, in case he got lost?). His rationale was that "in the military, they do it all...
  13. Oncology nurse turned L&D nurse!

    I'm 9 weeks into my first job, on an L&D unit, and oh my goodness, is there a lot to learn! One of the best pieces of advice I've gotten (after "read everything" and "know as much as you can") is...
  14. nursing policy on handling infant that is not bathed

    At my hospital, we actually draw labs when we start their IV/saline lock (the IV/lock is recommended to everyone, even if they're having a drug-free birth, in the event of an unforeseen emergency) and...
  15. Any US-trained CNMs qualified and working abroad?

    I know in Canada, they require you to be licensed in whatever country you're coming from, and then take a roughly 9-month "bridge" course before registering as a Canadian