Do you carry around your stethoscope?

Nurses General Nursing

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I carried my stethoscope when I first started my job on the floor. I was being the "good new nurse" and did head-toe assx, check for PERRLA on a regardless of patient's neurostatus, checked for 4 points pulses, auscultated for breath sounds, APETM, etc etc, then I stopped using stethoscope completely for quite long time.

Especially at the ER, I feel that stethoscope was almost of no use. When I was on ER transition, I listened to breath sounds but soon recognized that it was almost waste of time mainly because almost everyone gets chest xray. But I started carrying stethoscope again recently and this is why. I feel that when I actually listen to the patients' lungs and breath sounds, it seems that patients trust me more, they like it more than me just coming in, hooking them up to monitor and asking mundane questions. That is actually the biggest reason I use my stethoscope now. In terms of outcomes, of course it serves no use because doc will order xray and know if there's effusion, atelectasis, or pneumo, but one, I like to be able to depend on skills instead of imaging tools to know what's going on, and two, patients react positively to that. I see that this is why docs put stethoscopes on patients "just as act" even though I know for sure he/she's not listening, but somehow that probably assures the patient.

Anyways, that's been my experience with stethoscopes. Do you carry yours and use them, do you think it actually matters? I don't but I use them for above reasons. What do you do?

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.

I have a really good stethoscope, Littmann Master Cardiology. I don't use it every day, but then I am in a SNF and don't always have a need for it with a generally stable population. But when I do need it, it is an invaluable tool. While I don't keep it around my neck, I do keep it on my med cart and easily accessible.

Specializes in Emergency, Med/Surg.

You can't possibly be serious.

How are you supposed to know if a patient is moving air better after a neb? How about if lung sounds are becoming more clear after diuretics?

Cutting corners is going to seriously harm a patient. Think about how you would want your loved ones to be treated and act accordingly.

Lungs are listened to Q shift, and more importantly in a surgical unit, bowel sounds are assessed. You need to listen for these things. I feel that I don't know the patient until I have done a head to toe assessment.

I do understand about doctors. The physical exam has lost its prime place in medicine. Xrays, EKGs, scans, labs and other diagnostic tests have taken over from the physical exam in making diagnosis. If you read some old medical texts, careful interviewing of the patient and top-notch physical examination skills were a big part of medical training.

It still is in nursing. Careful observation and assessment skills are a big part of our skill set.

Specializes in Emergency/Cath Lab.

CXRs take too much time. I can listen with my stetho in no time flat and know what is going on with my pt.

Specializes in NICU, PICU, PACU.

Wonder how legal would be if something ends up in court and your routine care protocol wasn't followed. Just asking for trouble.

Specializes in Neuro ICU and Med Surg.

You OP cannot possibly be serious. We had a nurse fired recently after her coworkers noticed she never had a stethoscope. She was charting complete assessments and with lung sounds. Falsification of documentation. I have never not had my stethoscope with me. How can you say your asthma patient improved after that neb? Or how can you say your CHF pt got better after you gave that lasix?

Honestly your post scares me.

Dead give away of a new grad -The stethoscope Also, doctors ( even seen docs fake listen ) don't use them - they just order an expensive test or treatment. Ok,ok, for an NG tube placement or ET tube, and can't count how many times MDs ask ,"Anybody have a scope ?" . That's about it. So , I don't carry one . Plus, I dare you to lay down that expensive Littmann -gone

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
Dead give away of a new grad -The stethoscope Also, doctors ( even seen docs fake listen ) don't use them - they just order an expensive test or treatment. Ok,ok, for an NG tube placement or ET tube, and can't count how many times MDs ask ,"Anybody have a scope ?" . That's about it. So , I don't carry one . Plus, I dare you to lay down that expensive Littmann -gone
Not that it matters one iota ...I'm disappointed BTDT....sigh

I guess after 35 years I am still a new grad.

I also have had one Littmann for 30 years. You just send it back to them for a face lift

Yes. And while I may be a new grad, vets of 30+years carry concealed in our ED. Concealed because it can easily become a garrote ;)

BSN GCU 2014. Waiting to take my boards.

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Specializes in Oncology.

The question is asked again.....what do you chart? What happens if there is an emergency or trauma and your stretch is nowhere near you? I don't understand how you can be so lackadaisical about listening to your patients. What happens if someone comes in with SOB and asks "aren't you going to listen to me?" Do you tell them it's not important?

I absolutely carry mine, and use it on each patient I have. Bowel sounds to identify constipation, ileus, diarrhea; LS to identify fluid overloads, consolidation, hemo/pneumos. Also I'm listening for bruit at AV sites.

I switched from carrying it on my neck to on a hip holster.

I made the mistake of setting mine down in a cubby outside an isolation room once just a month or two after I started working. It was promptly stolen. Now it never leaves me. EVER.

I do not carry mine around my neck, but it is always within arms reach. If I feel like I might be needing it, into my jacket pocket it goes (I have a $20.00 that I LOVE). They don't have to be pricey, but they do have to get used to be effective. I can't imagine the documentation of those who feel using in isn't important. You couldn't document bowel sounds, heart sounds, lung sounds, etc if you aren't listening to them. :cautious:

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