Published
I have an absolute passion for discharge teaching, especially with new meds and diagnoses.
Sometimes compliance really does depend on convenience.
Cerner is stupid. A one-time stat dose of a med IV will cancel itself and mark itself as complete when that dose isn't given within an hour. The problem with this is if the dose is ordered in the ED and isn't immediately given because the patient needs fluid boluses, dopamine and atropine first, they come up to the floor and it looks like either someone discontinued the med, or administered the med. If anyone less neurotic than me got this med, they wouldn't have spent the half hour I spent going between ED nurse, hospitalist and pharmacy trying to figure out what happened.
Had a patient who is fairly new to alcoholism. New enough that no real damage has been done yet. He came in HR in 30s, SBP in 60s, after falling out in the kitchen. He is the first alcoholic patient I've had that I genuinely believe may be quitting. He's been scared sober.
After sitting on it for nearly two years, I have finally decided on grad school, which one and how to approach it. What I learned from this decision is that I'm probably really going to miss my unit. It's the most chaotic, busy unit in the hospital, and some days are soul crushing, and yet, I just love the people (usually).
If you have an LPN doing an admission assessment, first, make sure it got signed by an RN, but also, actually make sure what was charted is accurate.
If a cardiologist blows off intervention on a patient who has had a ridiculous number of 4-9 second pauses over several days, that patient may become brady and hypotension to a dangerous degree, right before shift change, causing her to need a temporary pacer before she gets the permanent one she was scheduled to get the next day.
AND, if that same cardiologist blows off an intermittent heart rate in the 200s for two days before deciding cardizem might be nice, probably an incident report would be a good idea.
AND, my favorite, most helpful cardiologist has left my favorites list and gotten onto my ess list.
When the generally lazy CN actually tries to "help", she may actually make things SO MUCH WORSE.
When upper management is entirely made of nurses, I genuinely believe this contributes to a wonderful work environment.
Did I mention I love patient teaching?
Four discharges going in simultaneously for four impatient patients makes for a horrible day. HORRIBLE. And of course, discharging 4 means more terribleness. Brace yourselves. Admissions are coming.
When your patient has been saying literally the entire day that she will sign out AMA if she is not discharged, expect her to pull a bait and switch while her husband talks to you at the nurses' station. Also, expect to get security involved when you can't actually find her anywhere. Expect her to be hiding around the corner of the building chain smoking, literally leaning on the "no smoking sign". Expect her to flip out when she thinks security is approaching to force her to go back inside. And then expect your coworkers to be confused when you tell them you had to find her to get her IV out. Dude, I'm not giving her free access to a vein.
(Also expect that to happen at shift change as well.)
Benzos and opiates can metabolize so quickly that ED doses may not pop a UDS positive that evening. I didn't even want to send the UDS to lab because the most likely meds to pop positive on, she'd just gotten in the ED. Unless, of course, grandma is doing coke, meth and ecstasy.
I'm really lacking patience for a couple of posters in the controversy vaccination thread.
Some patients have no problem whatsoever being really nasty to everyone EXCEPT their nurse when they feel the nurse should have done something that that nurse chose not to do. For instance, patient complained of headache and noted there was a nitro patch on, with no order to continue nitro patches. Removed it, waited a little while to see if that worked. The tech goes in and the patient tore him a new one over not getting pain medication. Every time I went into this room, the patient was sound asleep. She got medication and tea with her 2200 meds, and hers were given last because she stayed asleep. When I woke her up, not one single complaint. It's just weird.
I'm incredibly disappointed when floor nurses identify a need, and case management blows it off.
Got a song stuck in my head. It's not all instrumental, I promise. And the lyrics are.... Well, you'll hear. Enjoy.
It's actually a grey Jessica Simpson quilted purse/tote with 3 divided sections and pockets on the inside, sooooo much better than trying to use my purse or a book bag though!
I need a new tote. I have an old Vera Bradley bag my Employee Health friends bought me. I've never really been a Vera Bradley fan. Some patterns are nice, but meh.
Looking for new one.
This week, I learnt I like my manager and supervisor in the PACU, out of all the supervisors and managers I've had in my short career. I had my review, and it was the most positive review I've had. There were no negatives that were made up, like has been the case with previous reviews. Both my supervisor and manager keep it short, simple and focused. As long as I do my job, they are happy, and don't go out of their way to find negatives.
A chance encounter with my nurse manager led her to tell me she's heard nothing but good things from my co-workers about me (I started at a new hospital last December), and she hopes I stick around.The next day I ran into the director of behavioral health, who I've met a dozen times, and he looked at me quizzically and asked if I was new. I get it, universe. Ego constrained.
I had nursing students. I'd forgotten how much I love nursing students. They were so excited to give insulin and pop hot packs. If I ask a nurse to check a CBG they're doing me a favor. If I ask a student to check a CBG I'm doing them a favor.
I still like popping hot packs.
I learned that every code I have been involved in throughout my career has no discoverable cause and always ends in the patient dying.
I learned that I can still hear the screams of my patient's grieving wife to this day. And it's horrible.
I learned that maybe I'm not cut out to be a preceptor, and I am somehow going to have to learn to deal with it, and not allow it to decrease my confidence in my knowledge.
I learned that 8-hour shifts are sometimes more exhausting than 12-hour shifts. The same amount of nursing care expected in less time.
I learned that everyone deserves to be handled with kid gloves at some point in their lives. If you see someone is feeling fragile; be gentle to them.
I learned that as much as I love the weight I have lost, going for full work weeks in a row without eating a single meal only makes me sick, grouchy, and miserable to be around.
I've learned that there are people I work with who have the courage to bring up the big issues when we finally get a meeting with the ivory tower powers that be. Created an entire (bad word) storm, but maybe it'll actually get something done.
I've learned that it's okay to call off work and take care of myself.
I've learned that it's okay to go ahead and keep that vacation day even after calling off two days before.
ixchel, I'm so proud of you for going on in school. I know you have a lot to juggle. I have faith in you! As long as you take mega doses of Vitamin C, you will be fine! :)
I thought cancer was what vit C is for. No?
I'm sorry about the Alzheimer's. I'm thinking about taking Thanksgiving dinner to grandma and grandpa this year. I want to so badly and yet, I'm terrified of what I'll recognize in her decline.
Pretty sure grandma came out of the closet last time my mom was there. My mom didn't appreciate me laughing when she told me the story. I need to remember I have to turn off dark, twisty nurse brain when talking to "civilians".
He gave me his debit card and unfilled scripts and I took them to the dispensary so he could at least go home with his rx.
And THAT is what "customer service" entails, not whether someone has sufficient straws or gets red jello instead of green jello.
You did a mitzvah. It was a good thing.
I've learned that there are people I work with who have the courage to bring up the big issues when we finally get a meeting with the ivory tower powers that be. Created an entire (bad word) storm, but maybe it'll actually get something done.I've learned that it's okay to call off work and take care of myself.
I've learned that it's okay to go ahead and keep that vacation day even after calling off two days before.
I think I should learn to be okay to take a mental health day. Perhaps if I had, work may not have been so unbearable this week.
I had nursing students. I'd forgotten how much I love nursing students. They were so excited to give insulin and pop hot packs. If I ask a nurse to check a CBG they're doing me a favor. If I ask a student to check a CBG I'm doing them a favor.
I totally remember being a student and being legitimately excited to toilet patients. Seriously. Maybe because early on in nursing school that was really the only thing I could do that was actually useful.
If a pt is yelling at me to go f myself about his meds, on my re approach I should stand kinda far back, especially if he's been combative in the past. Getting hit for trying to help isn't fun or conducive to me having a good shift.To remember it's a disease process and not a personal attack no matter how upset it makes me.
That management doesn't always want to hear you when you say someone needs psych care not SNF care.
Amen to that. I am pretty sure that admissions thinks our Alzheimer unit is a geri-psych unit in disguise. Seems like better than half the residents have sever psych diagnoses.
Plus side we are full now so unless somebody is moved off the unit they can't admit anymore. We at least have mostly stable residents now, only one is truly at risk for violent behavior. Of course that one is the biggest, strongest and most mobile man on the unit.
Dogen
897 Posts
A chance encounter with my nurse manager led her to tell me she's heard nothing but good things from my co-workers about me (I started at a new hospital last December), and she hopes I stick around.
The next day I ran into the director of behavioral health, who I've met a dozen times, and he looked at me quizzically and asked if I was new. I get it, universe. Ego constrained.
I had nursing students. I'd forgotten how much I love nursing students. They were so excited to give insulin and pop hot packs. If I ask a nurse to check a CBG they're doing me a favor. If I ask a student to check a CBG I'm doing them a favor.