I am sitting here getting ready to start my week and can't get a conversation out of my head. One of my DH's friend's wife is an LVN and former school nurse. She works in home health now. They came over this weekend and we started talking about nurse stuff. She mentioned how nice it must be to have an easy nursing job like school nursing. My initial thought was to respond "if it was easy for you, you weren't doing it right", but I bit my tongue. Actually I just kinda laughed it off and said something like "not at my school!", then changed the subject.
It made me think a lot about my job, it's demands, and the perceptions of others. I can honestly say that my job is less physically demanding than many nursing jobs. But, is that the only measure of hard/easy? I can also honestly say that my job is more emotionally demanding than my prior hospital or other nursing jobs. It is difficult when a child comes to you with problems like abuse, death in the family, or divorce. All you want to do is take the pain away and that is the one thing you cannot do. The frustrations of parents who do not behave in a manner that we would deem appropriate also take a toll. It would seem common sense to keep your phone number updated, would it not? Not in my school. Students that need glasses and never get them (despite the FREE vouchers I hand out like candy), the uncontrolled diabetics whose parents never answer the phone, the ones you have to fight with to have them keep testing supplies, or catheters, or whatever in your office...I could go on (as you all know). This all takes an emotional toll, specifically because we care so much, perhaps to a fault.
Another aspect I thought of is how intellectually demanding my job is. There are limited resources and great need, so I need to be creative to get things done. I am the only healthcare provider on site, so I must have excellent assessment skills, and there is no one to back me up or to bounce ideas off of. In an emergency, I cannot slap on the O2 and call a code team or rapid response. I am the code team or rapid response until EMS arrives! My skills have to be top notch, and I have to be prepapred at any moment for anything, from a teacher collapsing to a new student enrolling with muptiple medical issues and procedures. Even during the down times, this job keeps me on my toes because I have to be constantly prepared to handle anything that walks through my door.
So, I guess my response to her should have been that my job is less physically demanding than the other nursing jobs I have had, yet it is more emotionally and intellectually challenging. This was just my experience, of course, your mileage my vary
Whew. If you stayed with me through that, bravo! I just have to get that off my chest. Anyone else have thoughts on the hardness or easiness of school nursing?
Featured Replies
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later.
If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
I am sitting here getting ready to start my week and can't get a conversation out of my head. One of my DH's friend's wife is an LVN and former school nurse. She works in home health now. They came over this weekend and we started talking about nurse stuff. She mentioned how nice it must be to have an easy nursing job like school nursing. My initial thought was to respond "if it was easy for you, you weren't doing it right", but I bit my tongue. Actually I just kinda laughed it off and said something like "not at my school!", then changed the subject.
It made me think a lot about my job, it's demands, and the perceptions of others. I can honestly say that my job is less physically demanding than many nursing jobs. But, is that the only measure of hard/easy? I can also honestly say that my job is more emotionally demanding than my prior hospital or other nursing jobs. It is difficult when a child comes to you with problems like abuse, death in the family, or divorce. All you want to do is take the pain away and that is the one thing you cannot do. The frustrations of parents who do not behave in a manner that we would deem appropriate also take a toll. It would seem common sense to keep your phone number updated, would it not? Not in my school. Students that need glasses and never get them (despite the FREE vouchers I hand out like candy), the uncontrolled diabetics whose parents never answer the phone, the ones you have to fight with to have them keep testing supplies, or catheters, or whatever in your office...I could go on (as you all know). This all takes an emotional toll, specifically because we care so much, perhaps to a fault.
Another aspect I thought of is how intellectually demanding my job is. There are limited resources and great need, so I need to be creative to get things done. I am the only healthcare provider on site, so I must have excellent assessment skills, and there is no one to back me up or to bounce ideas off of. In an emergency, I cannot slap on the O2 and call a code team or rapid response. I am the code team or rapid response until EMS arrives! My skills have to be top notch, and I have to be prepapred at any moment for anything, from a teacher collapsing to a new student enrolling with muptiple medical issues and procedures. Even during the down times, this job keeps me on my toes because I have to be constantly prepared to handle anything that walks through my door.
So, I guess my response to her should have been that my job is less physically demanding than the other nursing jobs I have had, yet it is more emotionally and intellectually challenging. This was just my experience, of course, your mileage my vary
Whew. If you stayed with me through that, bravo! I just have to get that off my chest. Anyone else have thoughts on the hardness or easiness of school nursing?