Re: (Long winded response)
Racing-mom:
I also am a new grad in the ICU. I have been working in a busy general ICU for about 3 months, where we see everything, form fresh hearts to ETOH withdrawal on ativan gtts. Today was my 3rd day off orientation, and I can relate to your frustration. Here is my $.02
Accurate, timely, and relevant documentation is a necessary and very important skill of our job that is developed over time. It is necessary in order to protect our licenses as well as provide vital information to those who use it in their decision making processes, including the nurses following our shifts.
As new graduates in the ICU we are constantly faced with novel procedures, diagnoses, and situations that consume a great deal of time. Our number one concern is taking the best care of our patients possible, and documentation can take a back seat to giving that next med, turning that patient, providing oral care every 2 hours, managing alarms, and spending
unhurried, quality time with our patients and their families.
Many experienced nurses that I work with have stated to me that it can take
at least 1 year to begin to feel comfortable in the unit. Think about it... We are learning a new language (several for that matter), a new culture, and a new way of thinking. We are expected to remember enormous quantities of information with each patient and then we are expected to be able to process that information and provide precise, succinct information to those who need it inthe blink of an eye. (i.e. the information needed by the pulmonologist is not the same information needed by the consulting infectious disease doc, the charge nurse, or the psychiatric evaluator).
I chose to work in the ICU because I knew it would be a challenge, and I'd be willing to bet you did the same. I remind myself of that fact regularly. That fact keeps me motivated and helps me to work through difficult situations. Remember that every time you are faced with a situation that completely overwhelms you, you will be better equipped to handle similar situations in the future.
Here are the best tips that I can give you from the perspective of a fellow novice:
1) Set small goals for yourself... start with the basics and add a new goal as soon as you have accomplished the last one (ie. today I will provide q2h oral care without fail, or today I will not miss a single pt turn, or today I will have my initial assessment, meds, and initial charting done by 10am)
2) Chart as you go! (That next task always seems more important than charting, and often times it is, but
if it can wait even just one minute, use that minute to CHART. Once you get behind with charting it is hard to keep up let alone remember what happened for the last 6 hours!!!)
3) Find your resource people at the beginning of every shift. (You know who they are... the people you can count on, the people who know you're green but love you anyway). They may not be in your "pod" but they are in the unit. Know who they are every shift and utilize them. Make friends with PT/OT/RT/Case Management/Pharmacists/MDs) If you want to learn and you make it known, they will want to teach you as it is to their benefit as well.
4) Don't slack on basic pt care... ever. If you slack now, you will develop bad habits. USE HAND GEL, and wash your hands until they hurt, but use non-petrolium based lotion if they do hurt. You don't want to have to wonder if that pt who got VAP got it because you didn't have time to clean the bugs off of your hands from the pt next door. Change expired IV tubing when you notice it. Label
everything with date and time. Turn and oral care q2h. Basic skin care always. Ensure VAP prevention, DVT prophylaxis, GI prophylaxis, etc...
You can and will become more efficient!! You are already more efficient and proficient than you were 5 months ago. Take stock in yourself. Be confident (especially when asking "dumb" questions). Take pride in your work, and your patient care skills. Strive to learn every day. Strive to get your patients out of the ICU and take amazing care of them and their loved ones while they are under YOUR wing. We can and will do it!!!
Best wishes...
-AP
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