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From my knowledge, they do have to wipe behinds every now and then and perform injections, but do nurses also have to clean up vomit? Sorry for asking this or if it may seem like a "duh" question because I'm leaning more towards the answer being 'yes', but I want a definite answer. Preferalbe from nurses who have had to do it. How was the experience? How to you deal with it? I think I would vomit myself just from the sight of it, let alone the smell
Speaking of alcohol wipes....if you want to control the patient's vomiting, try putting one of these little guys over his/her nose. I learned that trick when I worked OB, and have used it successfully for the most part ever since. I don't know why it works, but it has for about 75% of the people I've tried it with.
Speaking of alcohol wipes....if you want to control the patient's vomiting, try putting one of these little guys over his/her nose. I learned that trick when I worked OB, and have used it successfully for the most part ever since. I don't know why it works, but it has for about 75% of the people I've tried it with.
What do you mean, "over" the nose? Like resting on top of it? I've never heard this before. I'll have to give it a try with some of my c-section patients who are a little bit queasy but don't want to take anything for it "just yet."
Thanks for the tip.
What do you mean, "over" the nose? Like resting on top of it? I've never heard this before. I'll have to give it a try with some of my c-section patients who are a little bit queasy but don't want to take anything for it "just yet."Thanks for the tip.
Yep, just unwrap that sucker and fold it over the bridge of the patient's nose. I have NO idea why this works more often than not, but I've used it on patients from 18 to 80+ and the relief is amazing.
From my knowledge, they do have to wipe behinds every now and then and perform injections, but do nurses also have to clean up vomit? Sorry for asking this or if it may seem like a "duh" question because I'm leaning more towards the answer being 'yes', but I want a definite answer. Preferalbe from nurses who have had to do it. How was the experience? How to you deal with it? I think I would vomit myself just from the sight of it, let alone the smell
Hate to break the news sakiohma, but we do clean up vomit. The vomit actually doesn't bother me compared to the diarrhea of an older man with CDiff. However, I guess this goes by a case by case basis.
Hate to break the news sakiohma, but we do clean up vomit. The vomit actually doesn't bother me compared to the diarrhea of an older man with CDiff. However, I guess this goes by a case by case basis.
Looks like the teachers in the nursing school she went to lied to her. OP you will get use to it. It takes time. Good Luck.
rn/writer, RN
9 Articles; 4,168 Posts
As someone else said, forget the dainty little curved emesis basins. They are the one place a serious vomiter won't hit. Instead, use a large, round bath basin if there's time to grab one. Otherwise, a trash can come in handy. When using a basin, line the bottom with 3-4 brown paper towels or a washcloth. This prevents splashing, and you can just peel it all out when the fun is done.
With projectile puke, however, all bets are off.
You'd be amazed at what you can get used to.