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I was on orientation when my patient went into v fib arrest. My preceptor, charge nurse, attending, and a few other nurses were in the room already when he flipped. I'm being 100% honest my first instinct was to walk away!! In my mind I was thinking "Alright it's time to let the adults save the day I will get out of the way." I obviously wasn't thinking clearly lol. I wound up helping with compressions.
I've learned that everyone has their role in a code and they're all important; whether it's checking a finger stick or pushing epi. It's all about working together.
I'm a new grad and I work in the ICU. I had my first code today and honestly it wasn't as scary as I thought it would be. It was organized chaos and everyone had their own jobs to do. There were about 15 people in the room between doctors, nurses, respiratory therapy, and the nursing supervisor. You're never alone in a code situation, always call for help. just try to think, the worst has happened already, now you have to fix it.
I was on orientation when my patient went into v fib arrest. My preceptor, charge nurse, attending, and a few other nurses were in the room already when he flipped. I'm being 100% honest my first instinct was to walk away!! In my mind I was thinking "Alright it's time to let the adults save the day I will get out of the way." I obviously wasn't thinking clearly lol. I wound up helping with compressions.Lol, well we don't know if we'd not feel the same for our 1st code too! I'm worried about that day. I already probably spend too much time thinking about scenarios and imagining how I'll *actually* handle it. I did witness one as a student and was surprized at how calm I was, though. The patient was 20 minutes post-open heart op and so, maybe I wasn't allowed. The team was working on the pt. when I arrived (3 of us students were told to 'go and watch') Unfortunately, the man didn't make it through. I will never forget it and still think about that patient, hoping he made it to the 'other side' okay, eventhough I never saw him in an awake state.
quote from [COLOR=#003366]nursecait "just try to think, the worst has happened already, now you have to fix it."
I like that advice:) Now tell me how you got to be so lucky as to be a new grad working in the ICU pleeease, lol:)
kcoats2
4 Posts
I am a new grad and wanted to know everyone's first "Code blue" situation and how you responded to it. Is there any advice you can give me to successfully deal with them?