ER Nurses. Read This!

We are always looking for role models. But society is erroneously putting the wrong types of people on the top of that pedestal. We tend to focus on those who "make it big" and are constantly in the news....athletes, movie stars, etc. But what about those who go about their jobs silently......saving lives every day. Although we would all agree that their jobs are more important than those who occupy the spotlight, they don't make the front page, but they are the real heroes. They are Emergency Nurses. Specialties Emergency Article

Updated:  

After circling the drain with compassion fatigue, I stumbled upon this article that was published in the ACEP: read it and tell me you don't feel proud!

Guest Editorial
ACEP News
September 2006
By David F. Baehren, M.D.

For a generation or two, we have lamented the loss of role models in society.

As parents and individuals, we naturally seek out others we would like to emulate. Sadly, a serious search through the popular culture leaves us empty-handed and empty-hearted. Thanks to a long list of legal and moral shenanigans, many entertainers, politicians, and athletes long since abdicated this momentous position of responsibility.

We usually look afar for heroes and role models, and in doing so overlook a group of professionals who live and work in our midst: nurses.

And not just any kind of nurse: the emergency nurse. There are plenty of people involved in emergency care, and no emergency department could function without all of these people working as a team. But it is the emergency nurse who shoulders the weight of patient care. Without these modern-day heroes, individually and collectively we would be in quite a pinch.

This unique breed of men and women are the lock stitch in the fabric of our health care safety net. Their job is a physical, emotional, and intellectual challenge.

Who helped the paramedics lift the last 300-pound patient who came in?

Who took the verbal lashing from the curmudgeon giving admitting orders over the phone?

Who came to tell you that the guy you ordered the nitro drip for is taking Viagra?

The emergency nurse has the thankless job of sitting in triage while both the long and the short buses unload at once. With limited information, they usually send the patient in the right direction while having to fend off some narcissistic clown with a zit on his butt. They absorb the penetrating stares from weary lobby dwellers and channel all that negative energy to some secret place they only tell you about when you go to triage school.

Other kinds of nurses serve key roles in health care and attend to their patients admirably. However, few function under the gun like emergency nurses do.

It is the emergency nurse who cares for the critical heart failure patient until the intensive care unit is "ready" to accept the patient. The productivity of the emergency nurse expands gracefully to accommodate the endless flow of patients while the rest of the hospital "can't take report." Many of our patients arrive "unwashed." It is the emergency nurse who delivers them "washed and folded." To prepare for admission a patient with a hip fracture who lay in stool for a day requires an immense amount of care--and caring.

Few nurses outside of the emergency department deal with patients who are as cantankerous, uncooperative, and violent. These nurses must deal with patients who are in their worst physical and emotional state. We all know it is a stressful time for patients and family, and we all know who the wheelbarrow is that the shovel dumps into.

For the most part, the nurses expect some of this and carry on in good humor. There are times, however, when the patience of a saint is required.

In fact, I believe that when emergency nurses go to heaven, they get in the fast lane, flash their hospital ID, and get the thumbs-up at the gate. They earn this privilege after being sworn at, demeaned, spit on, threatened, and sometimes kicked, choked, grabbed, or slugged. After this, they go on to the next patient as if they had just stopped to smell a gardenia for a moment.

Great strength of character is required for sustained work in our field. The emergency department is a loud, chaotic, and stressful environment. To hold up under these conditions is no small feat. To care for the deathly ill, comfort suffering children, and give solace to those who grieve their dead takes discipline, stamina, and tenderness. To sit with and console the family of a teenager who just died in an accident takes the strength of 10 men.

Every day emergency nurses do what we are all called to do but find so arduous in practice. That is: to love our neighbors as ourselves.

They care for those whom society renders invisible. Emergency nurses do what the man who changed the world 2,000 years ago did. They look squarely in the eye and hold the hand of those most couldn't bear to touch. They wash stinky feet, clean excrement, and smell breath that would give most people nightmares.

And they do it with grace.

So, here's to the emergency nurse. Shake the hand of a hero before your next shift.

Dr. BAEHREN lives in Ottawa Hills, Ohio, and practices emergency medicine.

ER-Nurses-Read-This.pdf

Specializes in TraumaER ,NICUx2days, HEMEONC CathLab IV.
I am a new ED Nurse and somedays I spend the whole ride home tearful and wondering ."What did I forget to do tonight?" This was really great to read, thanks for posting it.

-Cristin, Massachusetts;) :balloons:

Hey, dry up, If the Charge nurse or nurse you gave report to doesn't call you and rake you over the coals after you left, you are fine.

that is why we have shifts. besides, who HASN'T forgot something.

let them cast the first syringe.

Sit down over a Starbucks triple expresso and ask, ok I need some constructive criticism here, :trout:don't eat me alive, but lemme know where do I need to improve. Actually we should all do it.

Life's a Garden

dig it?

joe dirt

Thanks for that post, after the New Years Day Night I had (which rated as one of my worst in 10yrs + in ED) that was great. I have copied and sent to all my ED friends.

Hope everyones New Year is a good one

Schoona[/FO:cheers:NT]

Specializes in surgical, tele, ED.

Just came home from a busy night at work in the ED. Feeling unappreciated, until I read this. So glad some one ( a doctor, no less) "gets it".

Specializes in ER/Trauma.

What a great article. This describes my life as an ER nurse. I had to print this out and share it with my fellow co-workers.

In this day and age where we are holding pt's in the ED overnight b/c there are no beds in the hospital, pt's in hall beds, people waiting for hours to come back from the waiting room, being on divert, staff shortages, trauma's, and the list goes on and on it surely was nice to see something positive and motivating.

Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!

As a new grad starting in the ED very soon, this article makes me so glad I chose the ED!

Tomorrow is my very first shift in the E.D. (as a new grad) and although I do not count myself among the nurses that this doctor is referring, I am honored to be joining their ranks!! I am in awe of the job that I have been hired into. Joining the team of nurses in a level I trauma E.R. at a magnet hospital is humbling as much as it is intimidating. I hope that one day I am as wonderful as the nurses described in this fabulous article!

:bowingpur:nurse::heartbeat:saint::tinkbll:

Wow! I have truly felt that there was something really special about being an emergency nurse, and this article explains it so eloquently that I am all the more resolved to make it my chosen specialty! I only hope that I can live up to all that Dr. Baehren said! :)

Specializes in ER, ICU, CM, Psych..

This is what I needed. Just started in a new Hospital and that Doc's are not the most personable. I copied this to post at work and hopefully encourage others. many many thanks

hi iam new if ther is any linke to help me to get powr point information about er and ccrn

hi iam new i need help about how particepat

very good article..

thanks