Challenging specialities

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As someone was telling me why they thought being a psychiatric NP was was one of the most.Challenging specialities (mentally at least). It got me thinking what about your specialty do you find challenging? Seeing as everyone has Challenges that vary and even more so on one specialty to another I want to know. Venting is also aloud 😊

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

I think doing psych well is challenging because so much of what we do isn't based on labs or concrete data. Unfortunately I also think doing it poorly is easy and it disgusts me that the admission requirements to psych NP are so lax as this is a very vulnerable population. Although I have zero first hand experience I personally admire NICU and Acute Care NPs the most and think there jobs must be extremely difficult.

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

I find nephrology still challenging after 10 years. Most of my issues are not with pt care but rather other providers that don't take into consideration renal function.

Baclofen for instance - if used at all, MUST be dose reduced otherwise it causes neuro-toxicity.

And antibiotics....ugh

Specializes in allergy and asthma, urgent care.

I would find psych to be the most challenging specialty. As JulesA said, there's not a lot of concrete labs or data you can use. I also find emotional pain to be incredibly heartbreaking, and I don't think I could deal with that well or objectively.

I work in asthma and allergy. Most of the challenges for me arise around the issue of non-compliance. Parents who smoke around their asthmatic children and wonder why they're frequent fliers in the ER. Patients who don't take their meds. Patients who don't take food allergies seriously. Parents who won't keep their children on controller inhalers cause they're afraid of steroids, but are quick to ask for oral steroids when their kid has an exacerbation. We educate as best as we can, but there is no magic.

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

Oooohhhhh I hate rashes. If it ain't shingles or calciphylaxis, I'm gonna have to look it up......

Oh the ER visitors expect us to wave magic wands. Especially with rashes or vague pains that defy all diagnostic reasoning.

this is a good point. I know so many patients make complaints or will bash the ED online if they don't get those mysterious things fixed right away in the ER or by discharge from the hospital.

It's a definite challenge when an NP cannot spell or write with proper grammar .

Specializes in ER, HH, CTICU, corrections, cardiology, hospice.

I've been working in a homeless clinic in PHX. Very challenging due to comorbid mental illness, the heat that spoils the insulin we prescribe, the drugs and alcohol issues.

psych patients. psych is hard enough, and psych always has other physical comorbis that goes with it. Not saying psych isnt a physical problem since we learn day by day it is, but you know what I mean.

If you want a challenge hop on the non-compliance bus

So would all of you say being a Psych NP is more stressful and harder to do long term because of the patients, to much stress and not likely the chronic ones will ever improve?í ¾í´”

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.
psych patients. psych is hard enough, and psych always has other physical comorbis that goes with it. Not saying psych isnt a physical problem since we learn day by day it is, but you know what I mean.

If you want a challenge hop on the non-compliance bus

Whaaaat??? I took care of lots of crazy people in ICU!! You mean you can't just take a few classes as a post masters and automatically recognize and treat EPS? or distinguish between psychosis, delirium, trauma or malingering? I'll be fine, my borderline patient with substance abuse issues is really only suffering from ADHD so I'm going to add a stimulant to the benzodiazepines she's getting for the most severest anxiety on the planet and oh yeah btw that 10 year old threatening Mom with a knife is definitely Bipolar and needs Lithium for sure. Said tongue in cheek however I have seen every single one of the above scenarios at the hands of an under prepared NP.

Whaaaat??? I took care of lots of crazy people in ICU!! You mean you can't just take a few classes as a post masters and automatically recognize and treat EPS? or distinguish between psychosis, delirium, trauma or malingering? I'll be fine, my borderline patient with substance abuse issues is really only suffering from ADHD so I'm going to add a stimulant to the benzodiazepines she's getting for the most severest anxiety on the planet and oh yeah btw that 10 year old threatening Mom with a knife is definitely Bipolar and needs Lithium for sure. Said tongue in cheek however I have seen every single one of the above scenarios at the hands of an under prepared NP.

yeah they should have got their DNP then they could fix everything and invent us some time travel along with it because u no that DNP= the best of nursing and doctoring in one degree.

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