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Just wanted to know if others thought that too many nursing student's expectations of nursing are maybe jaded by the nurses on ER or other t.v. shows? We are almost done with our first set of clinicals, and one girl dropped out of the program last week because as she said "I'm sick of seeing BM and lifting and moving pts. This is not what I expected of nursing." :angryfire What did she think--we were going to go in, fresh into nursing school & clinicals to boot, and start giving medications? Call me simple but I love when the family members thank me for doing whatever I did to help their sick loved one. Not to mention the fact that we have also learned trach care, PEG tube flushing, NG tube insertion, and lots of other things hands on. Guess its just different strokes for different folks.
I'm in my first med-surg clinical rotation. The first day was spent with a woman incontinent of bowel and I had to fight to stifle my gagging. Since then, I've had quite a few cleanings to do. Fortunately, I discovered the best secret ever - a dab of Vicks under your nose and you won't smell a thing! I have had a container of Vicks in my pocket (along with everything else I need to get through a shift) ever since!
I assisted a nurse by helping move her patient onto the commode. When he got up he had this huge swirl of poop! It was so large! Even the nurse commented on the size. The nurse emptied it, thankfully. If she would have asked me to, I would have gladly scraped it out of the container and flushed it....while holding my breath.
This makes me laugh. There was young man with a Spanish accent - I am not sure where he was from - in my A&P class. He had already started his clinicals. When the prof was handing back our first major test, he was not there. One of the students in his clinical group said he quit yesterday. Apparently he refused to "wipe bottoms." He stated, "nurses do not wipe bottoms." When asked who he thought does - he said, "aides."
We all got a chuckle - but really, it is sad that he came this far and had no clue what nurses do!
Maybe they should ask a question about poopy stuff in the admission interview???? :rotfl:
This may sound crazy but during the first semester I was so afraid of doing something wrong the I welcomed a poopy bottom to clean. If I was cleaning up a patient then I knew what to do for the next few minutes and wasn't afraid of getting in trouble. Yes it stinks, but I feel so bad for the person lying in it that I don't have any trouble cleaning it up. By the time I became more confident in clinicals I was used to cleaning up patients.
I started as an aide -- so I knew how "poopy thngs" worked. Fortunately, I started my illustrious career with a couple of fantastic LPNs who never left all the nasty stuff for us aides. There were no "little people" on that wing -- we all worked together and worked HARD to make sure our gang got the best care we ALL could provide!!
Yeah, it smells bad sometimes, but like the last post said... I feel so bad for the poor soul laying in it that I can overcome the smell and see the person. Really, that is what we nurses can and should do better than most people -- look past the smells, the blood, the disease processes and see the PERSON!! It makes doing the "poopy, yucky stuff" easier when you can see the person not just the body! Of course, ther eare those days when even that is REALLY hard to do -- but for the most part -- if you see WHO someone is, it can help get you through the nasties!
No KIDDING!!!! I'm on 15 and counting!!!Babe, it'll be much longer than a year.
I'm sick of butts and nuts duty but as said earlier, you gotta do what you gotta do. I just took a job as a per diem tech on med/surg and I'm thinking of taking myself off my current schedule till summer when I can limit my exposure to this sort of demanding physical labor to just a day or two a week. It's not so much the BM's that get to me... its everything that goes with it. The lifting, pulling and log rolling and the bed changes that never end.
Yes, wear a gown. Many don't but I learned a lesson just a couple of days ago when my nice white uniform shirt was an apparent magnet for messy diarrhea stool. Not pretty and not appropriate to walk anywhere out of that room like that.
I liked the vicks idea!! I will get me some when the time comes. This is such a great place to come and find out all these things from everyone. It's great for someone who just doesnt' know what it will be like. I can't wait to go through all these things regardless of how gross, stinky, sad or whatever it is....Thanks everyone!!
i'm sick of butts and nuts duty but as said earlier, you gotta do what you gotta do.
baaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhaaaaaaaaaaaa!! :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: rnkittykat..this one made my day...lol
i can remember several years ago when i worked with pmh (profoundly mentally handicapped) in special ed..plenty of poop cleaning of young adults (16 - 21) - male and female...i didn't think i would ever get used to it..but you do...especially when it's an every day occurrence..
you just put on your gloves and nike shoes and just "do it" and move to the next...lol
TopCat1234
238 Posts
i love my nephew to death, like he was my own. his diapers still stink. and i was so lucky to have changed three of his poopy diapers over the weekend! this is me afterwards --->:stone
topcat