Easy job??

Nurses General Nursing

Published

i just have to vent a bit here...

i read a lot of allnurses posts, and i see a recurrent theme regarding home health nursing. sometimes it's regarding nurses who couldn't "cut it" in hospital nursing, and are advised to "try home health", or sometimes it's about ed nurses or critical care nurses who need "something less stressful" ... any number of situations. but the more i see it, the more agitated i get.

now, i've been around the proverbial nursing block a time or two. i'm entering my 46th year as an rn. i've done just about every kind of nursing there is, from critical care to nursing home; from med/surg to psych; from teaching to the army... and i tell you that home health nursing is the one job that pretty much incorporates every nursing specialty that exists.

consider this: you see/care for every illness, injury and disease state imaginable. your job involves all ages, from newborns to centarians. you need every nursing skill from fingersticks to infusions to catheters to ports to pacemakers to wound care to staple removal to venipuncture to patient education to g-tubes to tpn.

you are going into people's homes: some fine with housekeepers, but many filthy, roach-infested, stopped-up plumbing, tiny spaces and animals everywhere. nowhere to sit. nowhere to put down your blood pressure or wound care equipment. nowhere to actually wash your hands. a whole new nursing paradigm.

your documentation means the difference in payment and retention of the patient, or non-payment and loss of the patient.

but most important, excellent assessment skills are essential! you are alone. if you can't find a vein, there is not a cadre of other nurses to try. it's just you. you must be able to detect gi bleeds, impending heart and circulation problems, and you absolutely must recognize an emergency. you must recognize patient neglect.

and this just scrapes the surface. to tell a relatively inexperienced nurse that home health might be a "piece of nursing cake" is ludicrous. just my humble opinion, and thanks for letting me vent!

Now, mind you, I consider there to be two "types" of home health: the pop in assess/wound care/put out fires/dash to the next client kind of home health OR the come for an 8 hour shift to manage vent/dialysis/tube feeds/suctioning/meds and so on kind. During the time period I speak of, it was the 8-hour shift nursing that new grads did in the home.

In the "home health" business, shift work is usually not called "home health"... it is usually called "private duty".

And let me clarify: I'm no longer a home health nurse. I did love the autonomy, and enjoyed listening to books on tape in my car between patients. I got too old/tired to do that kind of nursing. Takes lots of energy and stamina. Also, my car got "home healthed out" with sometimes 5k miles/month.

To the OP: What I find is that the "easiest" jobs are the ones that the one talking about it hasn't done. Sometimes you'll find someone in med-surg talking about how easy it is in ICU, because you only have 1-3 patients, not 8-9...never mind that the acuity is different. Someone in ICU will comment how "easy" it is in the ER, because of the "treat 'em and street 'em" mentality....never mind the acuity, etc. Someone in the ER will talk about how "easy" it is in Maternity, because there's only healthy mothers and babies, and the moms take care of the babies anyway...never mind that there's often diseased mothers/babies and real medical issues, etc.

Reminds me of the phrase "the grass is always greener on the other side". :)

Specializes in School Nursing.
Also, I am really starting to get pretty frustrated. I am not attacking anyone, yet everyday I get attacked. I am tired of "get thicker skin".

I've had a slow couple of days this week, so I've been following the new threads/posts pretty closely. I have not noticed anyone attacking anyone. I have noticed some defensiveness when someone does not agree with your suggestions and hints that with experience, your views will likely change. You know the saying "you don't know what you don't know"?

Sorry for the OT, just could not let that slide by unnoticed.

wish_me_luck, I knew that it was you who made that comment but I chose to not name you because I'm not trying to attack you personally. You have good ideas and you're not stupid but the problem that I'm seeing based on your discussions on the messageboards is that, given your inexperience, while you are still entitled to have an opinion you should maybe listen more and assert less.

Specializes in Pedi.
What the...? I didn't even know grown children still would have that! Then again, I know nothing about children.

A 10 year old wouldn't have an open myelomeningocele (they're usually closed on DOL 1) but a child with a history of myelomeningocele would have complications from it for the rest of his/her life. Many of them end up having multiple urology, neurosurgery, orthopedic procedures throughout their lives. In the past few months alone, my floor has seen 2 kids with a history of myelomeningocele who came in for routine urologic procedures (I believe both were creation of a mitrofanoff) and ended up in the hospital for weeks to months because their VP shunts were knicked/infected during the abdominal portion of their surgeries and they ended up externalized, developed bowel obstructions (which obviously complicates putting the shunt back in the belly), ended up on TPN, etc.

I was thinking about doing home health one time. After talking to nurses that have done it, the paper work talked me out of it. I just want to go to work and finish it there, not take it home and worry about getting reimbursed. Every nursing job has its "easy and hard" parts... I work in critical care and before that I worked on the floor. Each have it's taxing parts, but give me a crashing patient vs 5 walkie talkies any day. To each their own.

Hmm I didn't notice people saying home health nursing is easy. If anything I feel like I've read posts that say you need experience to be a home health nurse. Plus, I feel like I've read a few posts lately from newer nurses saying they could only find a home health nursing job after graduation and are not doing well at it.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
A 10 year old wouldn't have an open myelomeningocele (they're usually closed on DOL 1) but a child with a history of myelomeningocele would have complications from it for the rest of his/her life. Many of them end up having multiple urology, neurosurgery, orthopedic procedures throughout their lives. In the past few months alone, my floor has seen 2 kids with a history of myelomeningocele who came in for routine urologic procedures (I believe both were creation of a mitrofanoff) and ended up in the hospital for weeks to months because their VP shunts were nicked/infected during the abdominal portion of their surgeries and they ended up externalized, developed bowel obstructions (which obviously complicates putting the shunt back in the belly), ended up on TPN, etc.

Hers was never completely "closed" it was covered with skin, there was always the "bulge" where the spinal cord was. She was paralyzed and about the size of a small 5 year old. Lets see, I cared for her in the early 80's and she was 10 then so she was born 40 years or so ago. Trach, vented, sp tubes, g-tube colostomy.....She got TPN, lipids , seized ALOT. They Didn't do mitrofanoff then. Sick kid.....her Mom (a non practicing nurse)had an ICU in their finished lower level....generators for power and all. She was such a happy child...her smile could light you the darkest night, her mother on the other hand could be a piece of work.

No home, care is not for the inexpereinced nor the faint at heart.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
A 10 year old wouldn't have an open myelomeningocele (they're usually closed on DOL 1) but a child with a history of myelomeningocele would have complications from it for the rest of his/her life. Many of them end up having multiple urology, neurosurgery, orthopedic procedures throughout their lives. In the past few months alone, my floor has seen 2 kids with a history of myelomeningocele who came in for routine urologic procedures (I believe both were creation of a mitrofanoff) and ended up in the hospital for weeks to months because their VP shunts were nicked/infected during the abdominal portion of their surgeries and they ended up externalized, developed bowel obstructions (which obviously complicates putting the shunt back in the belly), ended up on TPN, etc.

Hers was never completely "closed" it was covered with skin, there was always the "bulge" where the spinal cord was. She was paralyzed and about the size of a small 5 year old. Lets see, I cared for her in the early 80's and she was 10 then so she was born 40 years or so ago. Trach, vented, sp tubes, g-tube colostomy.....She got TPN, lipids , seized ALOT. They Didn't do mitrofanoff then. Sick kid.....her Mom (a non practicing nurse)had an ICU in their finished lower level....generators for power and all. She was such a happy child...her smile could light you the darkest night, her mother on the other hand could be a piece of work.

No home, care is not for the inexperienced or the faint at heart.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
i just have to vent a bit here...

i read a lot of allnurses posts, and i see a recurrent theme regarding home health nursing. sometimes it's regarding nurses who couldn't "cut it" in hospital nursing, and are advised to "try home health", or sometimes it's about ed nurses or critical care nurses who need "something less stressful" ... any number of situations. but the more i see it, the more agitated i get.

now, i've been around the proverbial nursing block a time or two. i'm entering my 46th year as an rn. i've done just about every kind of nursing there is, from critical care to nursing home; from med/surg to psych; from teaching to the army... and i tell you that home health nursing is the one job that pretty much incorporates every nursing specialty that exists.

consider this: you see/care for every illness, injury and disease state imaginable. your job involves all ages, from newborns to centarians. you need every nursing skill from fingersticks to infusions to catheters to ports to pacemakers to wound care to staple removal to venipuncture to patient education to g-tubes to tpn.

you are going into people's homes: some fine with housekeepers, but many filthy, roach-infested, stopped-up plumbing, tiny spaces and animals everywhere. nowhere to sit. nowhere to put down your blood pressure or wound care equipment. nowhere to actually wash your hands. a whole new nursing paradigm.

your documentation means the difference in payment and retention of the patient, or non-payment and loss of the patient.

but most important, excellent assessment skills are essential! you are alone. if you can't find a vein, there is not a cadre of other nurses to try. it's just you. you must be able to detect gi bleeds, impending heart and circulation problems, and you absolutely must recognize an emergency. you must recognize patient neglect.

and this just scrapes the surface. to tell a relatively inexperienced nurse that home health might be a "piece of nursing cake" is ludicrous. just my humble opinion, and thanks for letting me vent!

i'm glad there are people who want to do home health, because it sounds like an absolute nightmare to me! i don't want to take care of newborns and children, don't know anything about ports and have no desire to go into other people's homes. i like my nice, clean icu just fine thank you! home health seems to me to be an incredibly difficult job that requires top-notch assessment skills, critical thinking and time management and i'd be scared to death to take it on. no way i'd want to be without my colleagues! kudos to anyone who can take on home health and do it well!

hello i am an AVID student and i need to interview a Nurse for a career project..is anyone available to answer my questions please i need help asap... i will need your email and contact info just incase my teacher wants to contact you to make sure i interveiwed you....

Specializes in PICU, Sedation/Radiology, PACU.
hello i am an AVID student and i need to interview a Nurse for a career project..is anyone available to answer my questions please i need help asap... i will need your email and contact info just incase my teacher wants to contact you to make sure i interveiwed you....

Hi joejoe. I see that you are new here. Just a few words of wisdom:It's good etiquette to comment on a thread when you want to respond to the original topic posted. If you need to start a new post about a different topic, please create a separate thread in the forum where you want to post.

Regarding interviewing: your instructor gave you this assignment for a few reasons. 1. So you could learn more about nursing. 2. So you could learn interviewing skills. 3. So you can practice communication techniques.

When you're a nurse, it's very important that you are able to effectively communicate with many other people- doctors, staff, families, and patients. You won't always be comfortable doing this and nursing school is a great place to practice. You can't learn to communicate via the Internet.

Trust me when I say that your instructor did not intend for you to send a list of questions through email to a person you will never meet in order to do your assignment. She wants you to step outside your comfort zone, think outside the computer, and interview a real person.

Does your school have a nurse? Are their nurses in your doctor's office? Are your instructors nurses? Do you know someone at your work or church who is a nurse? Does your town have a Family Planning or free medical clinic? All of those are great places to locate a nurse and set up an interview. Take this assignment S an opportunity to practice communication with a real person. You will learn far more than just posting on the Internet.

+ Add a Comment