Does anybody remember when??............

Nurses General Nursing

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When I started my first nursing job-which was as a nursing assistant(before being certified was required), gloves were an unecessary expense.We used our bare hands to give bed baths, clean up vomit , feces, etc.Granted; this was before AIDS was a big issue......Soap and water was enough.It was the norm to have about 10-15 nursing home residents(confused,combative, and total care)to take care of on the day shift, more on eves and nights.When I later became an LPN, my first job was in a hospital float pool.It was not uncommon to have anywhere from 10-14 med-surd, peds or tele patients on the night shift, and since the RN's had to hang all of my IV antibiodics(LPN's couldn't do that in Illinois)I would generally do all of their accu-checks and dressing changes in exchange because I thought the poor things were terribly taxed having to hang my IV meds!(now I know, I really gave them a deal!)Back then, laparoscopic surgeries were not done, so the post-op cholecystectomy pt. had the works-sterile drsg changes, T-tube, NG, foley.....these were heavy patients ! I guess I am living now in an area that must be so totally removed from what I hear so much about here on this BB that it is difficult for me to understand.I am now an RN.At our little hospital here, we usually do not have more than 7 patients on med-surg, and some are "swing bed" pts just waiting on LTC placement.I dont find this number at all difficult.Dressing changes are not nearly the taxing event they used to be-no montgomery straps or big retention sutures or open, packed wounds on a regular basis.Not only is OT not mandatory here, but discouraged-somebody else might be short hrs this week that could work the extra shift !I dunno-I must truly be far removed from the real world here in Aurora,Mo. !

Specializes in Pediatric Rehabilitation.

We STILL have a doc who uses the one bottle chest drainage system. I actually like the one bottle (not much troubleshooting with it..lol). He's old as dirt and needs to retire(72yo surgeon!). All our beds are crank b/c it's peds and ^risk of injury with electric beds, sooooo i KNOW what you guys mean about letting the beds up and down.

Remember when we use to give Brompton's Cocktails for cancer pain. It contained cocaine, methodone or morphine, and an antinausea med. It came in a big bottle and sat on the med cart. We didn't even lock it up! I swear someone was taking nips off that stuff, because we sure went through it awfully fast! I also remember those stupid specific gravity do-hickeys and metal bedpans! Oh this is fun!!

Hello out there. In the hospital that I work in, we still use crank beds, glass thermometers for pts in isolation, and just a month ago recieved inservice on Pleuravac chest tube system. I did my training in another part of the country, and I remember my instructor saying "You'll never see the glass bottle chest tube bottles" guess she was wrong !

Any other Canadian nurses out there?

Specializes in Everything except surgery.
Originally posted by feistynurse:

Remember when we use to give Brompton's Cocktails for cancer pain. It contained cocaine, methodone or morphine, and an antinausea med. It came in a big bottle and sat on the med cart. We didn't even lock it up! I swear someone was taking nips off that stuff, because we sure went through it awfully fast! I also remember those stupid specific gravity do-hickeys and metal bedpans! Oh this is fun!!

BROMPTON's Cocktail..dang you're good! How could I have forgotten that one.. :D! Gee you guys have great memories! And yeah the do-hickeys were stupid...lol...and we did it.. :eek:

Brownie

I thought of a couple more. stainless steal trachs.Had a pt code on a metal bedpan once, I kept yelling she's on the pan and everyone looked at me like she was crazy. She had a beaut of a defib burn on her backside!now I have one does anyone remember the drips into the fat you had to give an injection to the site first. used for rehydration can't rememeber the name of it and everyone thinks I'm crazy.

Specializes in ORTHOPAEDICS-CERTIFIED SINCE 89.

Hypodermoclysis!

I remember my sister had to have that in 1951-52. Tiny child with these huge water filled buttocks!

Hi. Anyone remember the days before Lifepak 1? Post cardiac cath patients on 24 hours of bedrest?

Specializes in NICU, Infection Control.

The stuff you used before the hypodermoclysis is Wydase--we still use it for IV burns in babies, when we can get it.

thanks both of you! I knew I wasn't nuts.

Some doctors still do hypodermoclysis for terminally ill homecare patients, or if someone is dehydrated and has poor veins. I haven't used Wydase yet, but did suggest it for this one patient... And I did my clinical in a very old hospital which still had an automatic bedpan washer, and metal bedpans.

I know there's no one on the board who's been nursing this long, but maybe you had a mother or aunt who nursed during WWII?? I write fiction as a hobby, and am doing a war story, and I've got a few ??'s about meds. When did acetaminophen (Tylenol)come into common use? What did they have for motion/airsickness back then? (This was pre-Gravol, I'm sure!) How was morphine packaged...in glass ampoules, or as tablets that had to be dissolved, as someone mentioned above? Any info will be greatly appreciated!

Here comes another brain fart--I recall mixing mustard (Kraft-only the best will do!) with MOM, applying to decub and then heat lamp. Also, an orthopedic doc who decided decubs on his patients would heal by using human placenta--it would come to our unit frozen and we'd cut off pieces of it, let it thaw then place it in the wound--this must have been in the late '60s...jeez,loueez! :rolleyes:

I have to say, this is a fun learning experience as well as a fun walk down memory lane! I have never heard of this placenta rub-thing! I do remember M & M and a heat lamp though.I was a N.A.-had to wash that stuff off.I remember more and more stuff everytime I come back to this post.I worked in a nursing home back in the early 80's as a N.A. where the nurses would put the meds on the patients meal trays at breakfast before the trays left the rack and it was the assistants responsibility(or so we were told) to make sure that the residents took their meds with breakfast,Can you believe this was done?!There was also a 5 bed ward in this home that had all NG and G-tube feeders in it and in order to get the feedings done in a timely manner they had a mixture of available nurse's aides, and nurses to each take one and we had to sit there and administer these intermittent tube feedings with a 60cc syringe.I remember the nurses telling me how high to hold the syringe up to make the ensure(or whatever)flow in at the right speed.I can't believe the stuff that went on! This doesn't still happen , does it?!

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