Published
First off, congrats on the job! There are many tricks to starting an IV. First off, it takes time to become good at them... Here's something that I used to do when I was starting an IV: I used to simply pierce the skin and aim for where I want the tip to end up, not where I want it to enter the vein. The other part of that is that I used to pierce the skin very close to where I'd end up entering the vein. Once through the skin, all I'd then have to do is point that needle right at the target. That target, of course, is in the middle of the lumen of the vein.
Hey dont get discourage. Im not a nurse nor a nursing student as yet. However, I work at NYU as a PCT. I never worked in a hospital or health care facility prior to this. Therefore, when I started as a PCT, drawing blood was not one of my greatest skills. I failed many times; nurses ended up doing the blood work for me. Guess what? The more i practiced the better I got. Now, I the one everyone looks for when they encounter a hard stick pt and cant get the vein. just keep practicing. Im planning to start nursing school by january and I know that starting IV is not something you will learn during nursing school. So i have been practicing IV on my cousins. I haven't failed as yet. Just practice and practice. You will get better.
francoml, ASN, RN
147 Posts
So I suck at IVs. I am only hitting like 20% of the one I try... I hit the vein every time but blow it soon after... I am about to graduate and got a job in a level one trauma center and I can't even start a %^$&*#$ IV!!!!!!!