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I hope you recuperate soon! Also, thank you for the reminder to place ourselves in the shoes of our patients.I am currently a patient, recovering from a serious accident that required emergency surgery at our regional trauma center. I'm on leave, recovering at home now. This has been a life changing experience.
Great post! I remember when my first child was born- my breastfeeding instructions were "Oh, you're a nurse? Five minutes on each side and you're good." I was a psych nurse, very young and mortified to think I SHOULD have known this. Needless to say - I failed, miserably.
I hope you are soon back in the saddle!
One thing about being a patient is that it's scary. I'm just getting back some of my psychological strength back a little, as long as I get a good nap. I'm a brave person, but this has reduced me to feeling like a helpless baby, easily upset. But I need my naps.
I know what you mean, I bet a lot of us do. I had an accident once, horse related that laid me up, I hated that loss of control, caused all sorts of anxiety.
Oh yes. Becoming the patient can be an eye opening experience. When I had my last son I quickly became, "that patient." I would have never thought that it would be me. There was a lot of anxiety about the unknown. When you work in L&D and no one can explain to you, or provide written material on Pitocin, then that is a problem. That is why I try to explain everything to my patients when I encounter them. I saw things that reinforced to me that I was the type of nurse that I wanted to be. I wish you the best in your recuperation.
Emergent, RN
4,304 Posts
I am currently a patient, recovering from a serious accident that required emergency surgery at our regional trauma center. I'm on leave, recovering at home now. This has been a life changing experience.
I have a new perspective on pain, and a new insight into how vulnerable our patients feel. I want to say, the nurses, techs, surgeons, paramedics were all so kind to me, I'm so grateful. I was treated with such tenderness, I'll never forget it.
Don't forget, keep instructions simple for patients on narcotics, and never assume that if your patient is a nurse that they know anything. And don't forget that catheter holder thing for foleys, without it that balloon is really irritating. Fortunately they got that dc'd quickly.
When I return to work I will be a better, more humble and compassionate nurse, for sure.