I Will Never Call Myself Just an LPN anymore!

Working on an subacute floor proved I had more in me than I ever thought possible. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

After all most comments made were negative comments such as "you will never pass A&P", but I did. I also heard, "I don't trust you giving out meds." This comment was made by the Head of Nursing program at the community college I attended who had never seen me give out meds. Prior to that comment I had had my exit interview with my clinical instructor and she stated that "if I did anything right, it was giving out meds". She made these comments prior to my pharmacology final. Later after I got the graded test back and noticed that some of my answers had actually been erased! You get the message. Anyway I was .3 of a point short to continue in the RN program, but not before I heard more negative comments from the same Head of Nursing program. She came and got me out of the hallway! She said, "you think you passed, right?" From there it was a visit to her office where I heard, "we all can't be astronauts,"! What? I thought. Wow is she way off and out of line. As far as I was concerned I had had enough of her and her program. She wanted me out and she got it. When I walked away from the campus I thought a weight had been lifted off my shoulders. This was not worth the demoralizing. All I ever wanted to be since a little girl was a nurse.

But to make a long story short, and even after being denied passing into Nursing II, I thought long and hard finally decided to go for the LPN program. After taking the RN prereqs, LPN schooling was easy!

I already knew most of the info being taught. Unknown then was just how this handy this prior info would be in more years later.

I went onto be a "desk nurse" on a subacute floor. I was the only LPN working the floor amongst all of the RNs, my boss wanted me at the desk to run the floor! I really didn't want to have that much responsibility, I wasn't getting paid for it, but I did learn so much than being a floor nurse.

One Sunday afternoon I was working, an RN came to me telling me a patient had pulled out his trach tube. I had her call RT, in the mean time he was bleeding and I went back to the desk to check his chart, he was an DNR. She did not find him in a passed state so life saving measures were imminent. He was later taken to the hospital once his condition stabilized.

The young girl who was a so called manager called me over to the side and told me he was a DNR. I was aware of that, but you do life saving measures if the patient is still living, which he was.

The next day at work I was called into the office by my boss and he said I did everything right!

That was the day I told myself I would never call myself "just an LPN."

What a great day after being put down so many times by nurses with so much more education than I!

Nursing is a love of people and knowing what is the right thing to do at the right time.

How sad to be treated that way, it still happens. It is as if some of the nurses have gotten so much education and is completely dissatified and have lost something so important - compassion, not all, I get this infor from my sister RN, BSN, MS with 5 certifications. Yes you are a NURSE, to bad someone stopped you in the first place.

Specializes in LTC.

"Wether you are a nurse or LPN as long as you know what you are doing" from johnathan poster.....what exactly does this mean? an LPN IS a nurse, every single one of us LPNs have been through school, we took and passed our pre reqs, we took and passed our nursing programs and clinicals....AND we took and passed our boards to be licensed & practice as a nurse. Sorry, but that sentence just bothers me!

A LPN is a nurse.

Specializes in med surg, geriatric, clinical, pool.
The LPN in charge of my husband after abdominal surgery was amazing; better than most of the RNs who cared for him that week. My dad's nurse was an LPN two weeks before he died and we loved her. She always felt so bad when she had to poke his finger for glucose and it was like she could feel it. She went out of her way to make him comfortable; his hands were so cold and she filled a surgical glove with warm water for him to hold. I will never forget her, and that man's family will never forget you.

Thank you so much for your kind responses!

Specializes in med surg, geriatric, clinical, pool.
Working on an subacute floor proved I had more in me than I ever thought possible. After all most comments made were negative comments such as "you will never pass A&P", but I did. I also heard, "I don't trust you giving out meds." This comment was made by the Head of Nursing program at the community college I attended who had never seen me give out meds. Prior to that comment I had had my exit interview with my clinical instructor and she stated that "if I did anything right, it was giving out meds". She made these comments prior to my pharmacology final. Later after I got the graded test back and noticed that some of my answers had actually been erased! You get the message. Anyway I was .3 of a point short to continue in the RN program, but not before I heard more negative comments from the same Head of Nursing program. She came and got me out of the hallway! She said, "you think you passed, right?" From there it was a visit to her office where I heard, "we all can't be astronauts,"! What? I thought. Wow is she way off and out of line. As far as I was concerned I had had enough of her and her program. She wanted me out and she got it. When I walked away from the campas I thought a weight had been lifted off my shoulders. This was not worth the demoralizing. All I ever wanted to be since a little girl was a nurse.

But to make a long story short, and even after being denied passing into Nursing II, I thought long and hard finally decided to go for the LPN program. After taking the RN prereqs, LPN schooling was easy!

I already knew most of the info being taught. Unknown then was just how this handy this prior info would be in more years later.

I went onto be a "desknurse" on a subacute floor. I was the only LPN working the floor amongst all of the RNs, my boss wanted me at the desk to run the floor! I really didn't want to have that much responsibility, I wasn't getting paid for it, but I did learn so much than being a floor nurse.

One Sunday afternoon I was working, an RN came to me telling me a patient had pulled out his trach tube. I had her call RT, in the mean time he was bleeding and I went back to the desk to check his chart, he was an DNR. She did not find him in a passed state so life saving measures were imminent. He was later taken to the hospital once his condition stabilized.

The young girl who was a so called manager called me over to the side and told me he was a DNR. I was aware of that, but you do life saving measures if the patient is still living, which he was.

The next day at work I was called into the office by my boss and he said I did everything right!

That was the day I told myself I would never call myself "just an LPN."

What a great day after being put down so many times by nurses with so much more education than I!

Nursing is a love of people and knowing what is the right thing to do at the right time.

Wow! I wish I had written this a long time ago, Thank you all! This proves that education is never a waste of time or effort.

I've heard people say that practical nursing is one step above a CNA; don't know how true that is at this point, I'm just starting out. But if it is, how big is that step? Apparently, it's not any lower than an RN...it can be confusing where my place is going to be when I'm an LVN.

An LPN/LVN is a nurse. I hate it when people say you have to be an RN to be a real nurse because an LPN is a real nurse. Some of the best nurses I have seen in my life were LPN's before becoming an RN and some of them are still LPN's while they continue their education.

You did a good job and you should always be proud of yourself for becoming an LPN. :)

Specializes in LTC.

Whether your an RN or LPN you are still a nurse and thats all that matters. Be proud of what you have accomplished and do your best. I'm an LPN and proud of what I do.:yeah:

Specializes in Med Sur, LTC.

Years ago as an experienced LPN of 16 years, shortly before going on to become an RN, I was working charge on a skilled unit in a nursing home setting. This was back in the day where 30 patients per nurse ratio was not uncommon. (Yup, crazy)...Never will I forget for the rest of time someone telling me "Oh you are an LPN not a REAL nurse?" Excuse me, I am in charge of all these residents in a busy skilled unit how "REAL" would you like me to be. Of course this was only stated in my mind as I walked away down the hall to continue my med pass, biting my tongue the whole way. Be strong, you will do well in your career.:)

I am currently working as a RN. I had 7 years of prior experience as a LPN and 20 as a CNA. I would consider LPN's an invaluable asset to the nursing field. I am a floor nurse of 100+ patients on the night shift with no one but myself to fall back on. The facility I work at currently has no LPN night positions in place. Let me tell you, I would give my right leg at times to have a LPN on the floor to take some of the burden off of my repsonsibilities. I think too often people tend to categorize themselves according to titles and don't stop to realize just how important their role is in the nursing process. I would be one of the first to admit that I have encounterd several LPNs that were every bit as, if not more competent than some of the Rns I know:)

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..

Although CNAs are important, they have nowhere near the education a Licensed Practical NURSE has. I know, I have been both. However I was a nurses aide long before the CNA program began, and let me say I did a lot of work. As my nursing instructor once said, "A nurse is a nurse, is a nurse. How dare people look down their ignorant lofty noses at an LPN!

Specializes in PACU, CARDIAC ICU, TRAUMA, SICU, LTC.

Your perseverance is commendable! :up:

In the early years of my nursing career, I worked in an inner city hospital's SICU. There were four seasoned LPNs on staff in the unit; each one of them was "sharp as a tack." I was fortunate enough to have had one of them as my off shift preceptor; talk about a wealth of knowledge! After my first year working in the SICU, I was placed in the off shift charge nurse rotation role. When my week came up to assume the "charge" role, the LPNs never wavered from supporting me, an RN with only three years of M/S experience at the time. I credit these nurses for the sound knowledge base of ICU nursing I acquired; more importantly, I learned the meaning of "humility." They were the best! :yeah:

As for the word "just;" it should be removed from the dictionary. To define oneself as "just" a nurse is, IMO, belittling. Whether you are an LPN, LVN, or RN, you are a nurse who has worked diligently for your education. Delete the word "just" from your vocabulary!