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Male nursing moments.



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No. 10
from Roy Fokker
Old May 24, 2009, 03:17 AM

Default Re: Male nursing moments.
Originally Posted by Ariko View Post
Example #1: I love this kind of story, told by a mother about the care her son received from a male nurse at Children’s Seattle.

Her 11 y.o. son was hit by a car while walking in a crosswalk. He was hospitalized for many weeks with lots of rehab. As his neuro recovery progressed, a male nurse gave him a nerf ball and stood at the end of the bed and said “OK kid, hit me.” This became a major focus for the boy’s energy and he practiced constantly. When the nurse passes by the room, he would stand in the door and smile and the boy would try with all his might to hit him with the ball. This was terrific therapy for the boy and helped him recover more quickly.
Reminds me of one of my patients when I did my peds rotation during nursing school.

One of the patients assigned to me was a 14 year old with severe mental retardation. He was there for a severe bowel problem that required surgical intervention. So in between the times I'd assess him, bathe him, empty his urinal and colostomy; we ended up playing video games.

I tell you, this kid might have a hard time putting together a cohesive paragraph... but he was a PHENOM when it came to video games!! I'm not kidding! At first, I tried to play it "easy" and 'let him win' but soon he caught up on that act and became very upset! He refused to talk to me till I apologized and challenged him to beat me at Tetris (a game I'm pretty darn good at).

Let me tell you - he chewed me up in NO time!! I tried my best but that kid was beyond awesome! So I challenged him next in Mario... thinking that since he was younger than me, he probably didn't know the game that well....

WRONG once again!! He thrashed me through and through!

I guess the best part of this whole experience was how often he'd show his silly, lop sided grin whenever I'd show up. He'd run through our assessment with bated breath because once we were done, his agenda was "please play a game with me so that I can whup you again!" And I'd accept his challenge each day, thinking "this time, I'm gonna beat him!" ... only to lose each time again!

His Mother loved seeing him this 'active'. She loved it so much that she made it a point to tell the staff nurses to have me "assigned" to her son whenever I was there for clinicals [and she wasn't the only one apparently. I didn't know till I graduated as to the reasons for "why was I being assigned the same patients"... my clinical instructor told me when I graduated that "all the family members kept asking for you!"]

cheers,
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No. 11
from Roy Fokker
Old May 24, 2009, 03:22 AM

Default Re: Male nursing moments.
Originally Posted by llg View Post
I think Ariko is onto something really important -- and I hope some of you guys pick up on it and add to this thread.
Agreed.

Originally Posted by llg View Post
Men probably DO think act a little differently or approach a patient differently in ways that would be very helpful to be explored and highlighted.
Originally Posted by Elvish View Post
I absolutely think this is true, llg. Men's minds just tend to work differently - not better, not worse than a woman's - just different. And we women would do well to watch and learn from some of the men in our field!
So let's start a discussion right here, on an.com.

Can we present a "sample patient" scenario and analyze how our male members versus our female members approach and react to said "scenario" ? Or do we need something more substantial than that?

- Roy
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No. 12
from nursemike
Old May 25, 2009, 05:33 PM

Default Re: Male nursing moments.
Sorry, I don't have any specific stories off the top of my head, just now. Well, I just woke up and was starting to get ready for work when I suddenly realized I'm off tonight. I'd say I'm having mental status changes, but lately this seems to be my baseline.

So, anyway, I have found that I sometimes do well with confused/combative patients, and also sometimes with PITA patients. We seem to get a lot of both, so it's something I've really worked at. There have been times I've had to dig pretty deep to find the compassion that a needy, demanding patient or family member needed in order to behave appropriately. And, I gotta admit, it has bugged me, occassionally, when one or more female peers have said, "It's because you're a guy." Well, I am, but I'm also a caring, sensitive person who tries to look at what the person needs.
That said, the longer I do this, the more I do see my Y chromosome as an advantage, at times. Some patients/families do seem less inclined to try to bully a male. Others, I think, may be a bit surprised when a male comes to them from a caring perspective--they notice it more than they do with an equally caring female. And, really, with our neuro patients, sometimes just having a deeper voice seems to help. Also, some little old ladies just like having a man fuss over them.
Still, I know a number of female nurses who also tend to do pretty well with difficult patients and families, so I tend to think it has at least as much to do with attitude and demeanor as with gender. I'm middle-aged, too, and that both gets you a little respect that younger nurses don't automatically receive and gives you a perspective that younger nurses don't automatically have.
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No. 13
from Higgs
Old Jun 13, 2009, 04:24 AM

Default Re: Male nursing moments.
I played sword fights up and down the length of the paeds ward with a 10 yr old boy who had just got over meningitis...it was cool...was almost 20 yr ago and still makes me smile...
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No. 14
Old Jun 15, 2009, 12:14 PM

Default Re: Male nursing moments.
I'm a new nurse, but in my 30s, so I have limited examples to give thus far.

Example 1: During my medsurg rotation in school, I had a pt that had undergone a Whipple and she refused to ambulate to the chair. She had told me earlier that I had reminded her of her late husband when he was young. Remembering this, I asked if she liked to dance, to which she replied "yes." I offered to "dance" her to the chair. I stood her up securing her by the waist and shoulders and we sidestepped to the chair. I would come back and ambulate her form the chair to the bed to the bedside commode throughout the shift. My female preceptor questioned me when she saw this "bizarre behavior" until I explained my reasoning. It turns out that she had refused all earlier attempts to ambulate. I got an A.

Example 2: Working in a pediatric cardiac ICU I had a large 16-year-old male pt who required a lot of effort to reposition. I had to take him to MRI and to CT (before we got our portable CT). He was recovering from surgery and was being prepped to go to the floor. He told me, "I like you better than the women nurses." I asked him why. He stated, "When you move me you always make sure my pee tube doesn't pull my thing." In a later conversation he told me that he was scared because he might need a new heart. I told him I would be scared too. I asked him if he had cried at all, and he told me no because he was a boy. I told him that I would cry if I were in the same situation as he. I held his head in my chest as he cried... we then played video games.
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No. 15
from nursemike
Old Jun 15, 2009, 06:01 PM

Default Re: Male nursing moments.
I've done the "dancing" thing, too, although I didn't think of it. When I was an orderly, I was helping a lady to the bedside commode, and on the way she laughed and said, "We're dancing!"

I often have orders to page docs for mental status changes, and used to joke that someday I was going to page to report a pt was AOX3 when they hadn't been. (I work nights, so good news can usually wait until I see the doc on the floor, rather than paging at 0300.) But one morning I really did page around 0500 to report to the neurosurgeon on call that the patient who'd been stuporous for the past 48hrs was sexually harassing me after getting platelets and plasma overnight. He was pleased to hear it.
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