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. !

Oh, I love this...how about placing sandbags on both sides of the head of cataract patients, and feeding them. Also,MI patients were not allowed to raise their elbows off the mattress. We had to feed them, and give total bed baths for weeks. The urinary catheters were red rubber, adhesive taped to rubber tubing leading to a 2 liter glass bottle on the floor which inevitably, we kicked over spilling urine all over the floor, under the bed and had to mop up while keeping a starched apron off the floor!

The "sippy diets " were for gastric ulcer patients: 30 ccs of cream every 30 minutes to dilute the hydrochloric acid.

I loved the Chinese urine glucose story!!!

I love to hear the stories!,,I got into the field as a student(Jr.High)volunteer, wore blue and white pinstripe uniforms,passed out snacks at a local county nursing home (dark and scarey)later I was a nurse aide at another county home,on 3rd, shift I was clueless to what was OK and what was Illegal!They had me passing out pre-poured meds. to patients! We also layed down and slept at night,(I followed the older aides and knew I had better do what they did.They also would tell me to give a "few drops of Mellaril" to a lady when needed.I also took care of a colostomy of a man and I did not know WHAT IT WAS,The same home also called me in to be a COOK when they needed.AND I was a social director a couple of times and actually drove a vanload of people to a Tammy Wynette(sp) Concert!(I will never forget THAT)No special driving license or insurance oh,my that place was crooked, now that I look back!I also remember when I first worked at the hospital, all nurses would jump up to give a doctor a seat! We have "Come a LONG way Baby!" ..imaRn ;)

Come on you guys- nurses are aging everywhere! I remember most of this sstuff and I am only the mean age (46). Remember giving enemas with metal buckets and then you had to clean out the red rubber tubing with Que-tips? How about post-op orders that would say give 4 liters of NS, so you ran them in wide open and then just D/C'd the IV. I hired in at $4.80/hr and thought that was alot of money! :rolleyes: I'm involved in collective bargaining now so don't think we older nurses don't think the pay, conditions,respect and of course retiree benefits need to improve!! I hate to remember when we were expected to standup and give a Doc our seat. I used to have big bruises on my legs from tripping over huge O2 tanks and Gomco suction machines at the bedsides. I can still feel the tug of my hair when my cap used to get hung up on cutains! Remember when everyone worked together and it was fun to go to work? But I have to say I still love nursing- and thats what keeps me doing it! ;) Hang in there sistahs!!

Specializes in ORTHOPAEDICS-CERTIFIED SINCE 89.

It DID use to be fun to go to work. And folks DID work together.

It's still fun to chat about old stuff though. I'm "only 56" and there is a lot that I have seen and done, some I wouldn't repeat some I relish. My first salary as a nurse was $232.00....a MONTH! Best job I ever had working for a GP in a rural medical office. When I left my last job I made more in a day...and it wasn't near as pleasant or

fulfilling.

Anyway...suction...using a faucet on full flow and a Y connector...made great suction.

Plastic Pillows...now they're disposable paper....

And oh the enema cans..and in a pinch they made neat rectal tubes with "music" provided....

The caps always fell into the bedpans after they got caught on the trapeze bar or the curtains.

Hospital rooms were $14 for private and $12 for semi-private. (Semi was anywhere from 2 to 6 in a room.)

My first child in 1968 cost me $88 for the OB and $114 for 7 days in the hospital. My niece just paid 20 times that for her last one.....And she didn't even stay 24 hours.

Oh and my tuition at the hospital school was $100..a YEAR. When I got to University it was $13 a semester hour!

RE: the pressure ulcers...we had a doc who swore by "sugar-dyne"..that's betadine and granulated sugar. Pack that wound and watch it granulate....it worked. As for the placenta...well don't they contain stem cells? And don't stem cells replenish whatever they are placed in? Everything old is new again.

I loved being a nurse, I love nursing. I just don't like what it has done to us what it has come to....

I can't work anymore, but this is a trip down memory lane for me.

:)

Specializes in Vents, Telemetry, Home Care, Home infusion.

Started in SNF in 1973 as NA: We did all wound care, Gastrostomy feedings via gravity and 60 CC Syringes,and bowel regeime:rectal disempaction if indicated.

Trach care: Metal trach is known as Jackson trach and was secured with twill tape. Trach care was done with three steel,then later plastic basins. Patients needing trach collar had a lound air compressor attached to large green oxygen cylinder.

How about those Oxygen tents and iron lungs?? Anyone use transnasal oxygen catheters?? IPPB machines and those early respirators,Bird, LP- green machine needed lots of parts...

1976 as LPN I learned how to assemble glass syringes and deburr? needle in case plastic syringe was in short supply.

Remember hyperdermcylsis stopped around 1980 but I still used itin Hospice in early 90's if poor access and pt uncomfortable; Subq button used with IV morphine great if no vein access and PICC/Hickman contraindicated.

Got RN in 82.In 1985, started in homecare when patients on IV narcotics had to have 24hr nursing in case problem with pump to prevent narcotic overdose...boy those CADD pumps sure stoped that practice.

Fought many a night with a submersable pump in metal trash can lined with lg trash bag and filled with ice as a cooling blanket pump. Can remeber a nun having an open meeting re question/concerns in early eighties, what can she do to help improve our practice?? I had just spent 1 hr fighting with that pump and old portable gomco machine---had to clean out green mold from around ball to get suction; I was the only nurse to attend meeting and requested new equipment that I had seen in RN magazine. I showed her a copy and three months later new gomco, wall suction and automatic cooling/heating blankets arrived!!!

Still swear by milk and molasses enemas in case of severe fecal impaction---they have never failed me!

Are Cantor tubes with mercury baloons still in use??

Can't ever forget the smell of PO and IV Geocillin!

What other memories out there?

I can remember nurses telling me of the need to scub the eggs as students prior cooking to prevent samonella ?sp. Also airing mattress was someting I did in 70's.

Scultetus binders pre Montgomery straps.

Remeber fondly heat lamps ( melting curtin if t got to close!) All decubitus TX: M&M(maalox& methiolate), betadine and sugar,wet-dry saline and peroxide, 1/2 strength Dakin's solution, egg yolk tx, mustard plaster, then elase and travase ointment; need to keep wd bed dry! Karya paste and powder, debrosan beads...Moist wound healing with hydrogel for non-infected wound seams to be the best/quickest TX of all of theses if good circulation.

How about Circo-electric beds, Stryker frames, and all the different types of tractions!!

And I'm only 45! Boy what changes. TEAMWORK was the key.

Starting in the early 80's, if a patient was on a vent and had muscle tone we ALWAYS got our pts OOB into High baked chair, even if we had to tape their heads to chair to keep them upright:had 98% success rate in weaning vent dependent patients, esp COPD'ers. My former night colleaguesays that never happens now. How sad.

That back rub was so important along with PM care...time to bring it back.

WE NEED TO RECLAIM OUR NURSING PRACTICE!!!

The time is ripe now. Let's have bedside nurses become CEO's!!

Karen

What a trip down Memory Lane! I started as an aide in spring 1977 and remember about 90% of the aboe mentioned, now archaic items. We still did our own bedpan sterilization in our own autoclave on our unit till about 1990, now send all our metal bedpans, emisis basins, washbasins and measuring graduates to central steril to be done. I do applaude our hospital on not going to disposables and filling up the landfills! I remember giving enemas with the metal can and reusable red rubber enema tubings, using leftover Ivory soap bars we saved when pts went home. Remember giving everyone Dalmane for sleep, using Posey chest resraints nightly on some folks and everyone coming in the night prior to surgery? I graduated from a 2 yr nursing program in 1981 that my institution sent several of us to and paid for, T.G. or I never would have gone, I started out at approx. $2+ an hour when I started and thought I was rich when I graduated and made $6+ an hour :D Sometimes I think looking back to where we've been and what we had to work with helps us to see how far we really have come... and so far to go.

I wanted to post in memory of a terrific lady (Schully) who taught me so much about the science of nursing and so much more about the art of nursing. We worked nights together and I used to love her stories about mixing up mustard plaster, sharpening needles, and sterilizing syringes. I used to HATE chest tube bottles!! I think I am dyslexic--I invariably got them backwards!

Hi. Remember manual setups for cardiac outputs? I believe that's where I got some good bicep and tricep strength from?

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