Re: ER nurse entering uncharted waters tomorrow....I'm being induced!
As a postpartum nurse who has taken care of many nurses, docs, and other healthcare folks, I talk with them when we first meet and say, "I want to treat you as a patient first, then as a medical person. I will gladly supply any information you would like--labs, bilimeter readings, vital signs--but I would like to give you the opportunity to relax and be the recipient of our care." Most of them are quite happy to "be a patient" and let the medical personna take a back seat. This is especially true as 95% of them work in another specialty area.
Medical people get the terminology and pick up on concepts quickly, so I use a little more technical jargon than I would with a non-medical person, BUT I do offer the layman's version to family members who are not medical.
This is what I ask for when I am a patient--
Please answer my questions and give me the information I need to let go and have confidence that my needs are being met.
Go ahead and use the technical terms, but understand that I might still need an explanation of procedures or test results or anything else that I don't deal with on a regular basis.
Don't assume that because I'm a nurse that I'll do some of my own care or that you don't need to go over the plan. The same rule applies if one of my family members is a patient. I'm not there as a nurse, but rather as a wife or a mother or a daughter. I may jump into nurse mode if circumstances warrant, but I'll try to keep that brief and non-confrontational.
I'll try to be sensitive to your workload, but don't lay a guilt trip on me if I'm crabby or apprehensive or in pain. I may be a nurse, but I'm still human.
Please, don't take my questions as a challenge. I promise I'll try not to present them that way. I need a certain amount of information to reassure myself that, yes, things are okay, and I can turn my attention back to getting better or being with my loved one.
Let me thank you, profusely, for doing what you do, day in and day out. It's a tough job at times, and most nurses want to do their best. I know it means the world to me when someone actually recognizes that.
I hope your induction goes well and you have a happy, healthy baby. And a quick recovery afterward.
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