Incompetent nurses

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I didn't know whether to list this as vent or concern, so I guess I'll just let it all out. I have been an RN for about 3 years and was a street medic for 7 years before that. I feel like I might be opening Pandora's box of the paramedic vs. RN discussion that has no easy black and white answer or solution to mutual respect one for another. My concern is the level of incompetence of nurses. Let me give you a few examples, but first some background information of the facility I work for. We have a centralized cardiac telemetry service that monitors the rhythms of all the patients on telemetry on the 3 cardiac units and 3 medsurg floors. It is staffed by either LICENSED paramedics (in my state we are licensed) or by extremely qualified personnel that have had extensive cardiac rhythm education. There is one unit that has a very big ego when it comes to the superiority of RN's and despite the outcome to the patient, refuse to listen to the advisement of a patient's rhythm or change. Every unit in our hospital of 400+ beds has emergency phones located through out every floor for tele services to use in cases of lethal arrhythmias. (examples: v-fib, v-tach, brady 140). Now for the examples of incompetence

1) A patient had an A-V nodal ablation and was totally pacemaker dependant. Shortly after arriving from the EP lab the patient goes in to a slow wide complex tach (WCT) in the 120's sustained. The cardiac floor was notified of the rhythm change via the emergency phones. The nurse and charge nurse ignored the advisement of tele services. The floor was then notified every hour on the hour for about 8 hours (we work 12 hour shifts) of the WCT. The nurse did not notify the EP doc. The patient then codes right at shift change. They coded the patient for about 2 hours and ultimately the patient died. The family files a law suit. EP doc was very livid at the withholding of information from him by the nursing unit (Tele services cannot contact a doctor themselves.)

2) Same cardiac unit different patient and different nurse. Patient was on a lido drip for ventricular ectopy. (big. And trig. PVCs, slavos, short bursts of WCT. ) The patient goes into 2 degree AV block type II (AKA Mobitz II). Again tele services used emergency phones to contact the nursing staff. Again nursing staff does not appreciate the notification of the rhythm change. A follow up call was made to the floor. The experienced charge nurse turns up the lido drip in response to the new arrhythmia. (It is an arrhythmic, but come on people- check your nurse drug guide you had to purchase in nursing school!) Fortunately the tele services employee convinced the charge nurse to contact the doctor. That probably saved that particular patients life.

3) Different patient same cardiac unit. The patient is less than 24 hours post cardiac intervention. The patient goes into v-tach. Again the emergency phone was used to notify the floor. When the patient comes out of v-tach after 55 beats, they are having tombstones. Follow up call was made to nursing unit. Of course the nurse checked the patient. They were snoring (it was at night if you want to give them the benefit of the doubt). So the door was shut and the nurse went back to the satellite nursing station. When advised of the tombstones, patient was found basically dead. The patient was coded but was never resuscitated.

Now my concerns: I have been through both paramedic school and nursing school I know that there are some differences in the ways paramedics treat and nurses are suppose to treat patients. Our cardiac rhythm training in nursing school was very, very, did I say very limited compared to what I went through in paramedic school. Sure in nursing school we are taught the basic principles of common rhythms like SR, V-Tach, V-fib, A-fib/A-flutter, ect. But what about MAT, A tach, PMT, non-conducted PACs, 12 lead interpretation (I do not mean the doc-in-the-box interpretation included at the top of the printed EKG), Juntional Tach, in depth training on A-V blocks. My education as a paramedic was superior in this aspect. One can argue what about lab values, checking for dilation on an OB patient, acid base balance, antibiotics, microbiology, yada yada yada. Thanks for asking. How many nurses actually get to check for cervix dilation other than those that birth babies- how many can remember what a 7 feels like compared to a 10? Lab values- at our facility reference values are printed on the same sheet that the results are printed. Microbiology? Well truthfully I don't remember much from that required prerequisite to nursing school, so I guess I never had much use for it. An intelligent monkey can be taught to hang antibiotics with the use of an IV pump. So I don't think of paramedic school as training. It is education. As a matter of fact, our medical director of my paramedic school actually went through our curriculum and stated "This is the 3rd year of medical school". How many physicians have said that regarding the "education" of nurses? Really if this has happened I would like to hear about it. And this is just my personal experience, but I have met more incompetent experienced RN's than incompetent new grad paramedics. I have been through both. The NREMT-P test is much more difficult than the NCLEX. NCLEX is more of a quiz.

And lastly, I would like to pay my solemn respect for ancillary staff that assist us RN's and making our job a complete circle of care. CNAs you have no idea how much I respect you. You know the patients. You are an invaluable set of eyes and ears to me. You see the slightest changes from baseline of a patient. I want to sincerely apologize for the other RN's that treat you as if all you know is how to wipe a butt, or empty a Foley catheter. Maybe one day when all the CNAs on your unit get blue flu, and the nurse must get out of the satellite nursing station and take their own vitals, and give all 7 of their patients a bath, they will have the same respect for you. (not to give anyone ideas.) To the unit clerks: I wish I possessed your knowledge on entering orders into the computer, or who to call when my patient needs a hepabilliary scan. Thank you for your job well done. To the cafeteria worker: what a blessing to see a smiling face when all has gone to hell, and I get a 10 minute break. To the supply clerk: I greatly appreciate you speediness when you get my X-large latex free gloves to my floor right after my c-diff patient has a BM the size of Texas. Nursing students: don't let these high minded individuals give you reason to become the same way. I understand that someday you may be hanging a lido drip on me or my family. Don't let these RN's give you any hell for asking questions to educate yourselves. Field medics: If I am in a car accident and the RN in the car behind me want to help, please have them block traffic. They are not in their controlled environment with a specific order written for a specific patient, so they probably don't know what they are doing. LPN's I believe you are the better nurses. Nothing heals like a caring touch- yes human contact- not an automated blood pressure cuff activated from the station. You have obtained a huge amount of knowledge. If I or any other RN's is doing something detrimental to a patient, stop them, don't put up with this higherarchy BS that they have taught themselves.

RN's get over yourselves! You are not God's gift to modern medicine! Without the full circle of staff, we could not provide patients with any type of continuum of care. (I do understand there are more like me, so this is not to include everybody. But those that needed the previous statement- you know who you are.)

I know there are some very appreciative, competent RN's out there. I'm sorry if I have offended you this was not my intention. I wanted to try to explain the whole circle of care from pre-hospital to discharge nurse. Are there any suggestions on how we can correct these problems?

Keith Smith, NREMT-P, RN

I'm with Piglet. It sounds like you should have addressed these issues with administration- not vented like crazy for most of your post and then tried to smooth it over on the last couple of lines.

Sorry.

Specializes in med/surg, TELE,CM, clinica[ documentation.

I would like to know how Keith knows about these incidents? Was he the person calling the floor to tell the nurses of the changes? or he is he repeating a story he was told.... also a big question, WHY NOT CALL THE NURSING SUPERVISOR? or better yet-- CALL THE DOC YOURSELF!!! so what if tele techs and aides etc. aren't supposed to call---WE are talking about saving a life! I have been a nurse for 2 years and 7 months and before that I was a lab tech for nearly 20-----I learned not to judge other professions until you walk in their shoes. I said negative things concerning nurses and then I became one and realized how wrong I was.

Keith, life is too short. If you are so very unhappy (sure sounds like it, and bitter too), go back to being a paramedic-----BENJAMINS aren't evrything. ALSO STOP BAD MOUTHING NURSES!!!!!!!

Why can't we all get along when it comes to providing care for our patients?:angryfire:o:madface::uhoh3:

I didn't know whether to list this as vent or concern, so I guess I'll just let it all out. I have been an RN for about 3 years and was a street medic for 7 years before that. I feel like I might be opening Pandora's box of the paramedic vs. RN discussion that has no easy black and white answer or solution to mutual respect one for another. My concern is the level of incompetence of nurses. Let me give you a few examples, but first some background information of the facility I work for. We have a centralized cardiac telemetry service that monitors the rhythms of all the patients on telemetry on the 3 cardiac units and 3 medsurg floors. It is staffed by either LICENSED paramedics (in my state we are licensed) or by extremely qualified personnel that have had extensive cardiac rhythm education. There is one unit that has a very big ego when it comes to the superiority of RN's and despite the outcome to the patient, refuse to listen to the advisement of a patient's rhythm or change. Every unit in our hospital of 400+ beds has emergency phones located through out every floor for tele services to use in cases of lethal arrhythmias. (examples: v-fib, v-tach, brady 140). Now for the examples of incompetence

1) A patient had an A-V nodal ablation and was totally pacemaker dependant. Shortly after arriving from the EP lab the patient goes in to a slow wide complex tach (WCT) in the 120's sustained. The cardiac floor was notified of the rhythm change via the emergency phones. The nurse and charge nurse ignored the advisement of tele services. The floor was then notified every hour on the hour for about 8 hours (we work 12 hour shifts) of the WCT. The nurse did not notify the EP doc. The patient then codes right at shift change. They coded the patient for about 2 hours and ultimately the patient died. The family files a law suit. EP doc was very livid at the withholding of information from him by the nursing unit (Tele services cannot contact a doctor themselves.)

2) Same cardiac unit different patient and different nurse. Patient was on a lido drip for ventricular ectopy. (big. And trig. PVCs, slavos, short bursts of WCT. ) The patient goes into 2 degree AV block type II (AKA Mobitz II). Again tele services used emergency phones to contact the nursing staff. Again nursing staff does not appreciate the notification of the rhythm change. A follow up call was made to the floor. The experienced charge nurse turns up the lido drip in response to the new arrhythmia. (It is an arrhythmic, but come on people- check your nurse drug guide you had to purchase in nursing school!) Fortunately the tele services employee convinced the charge nurse to contact the doctor. That probably saved that particular patients life.

3) Different patient same cardiac unit. The patient is less than 24 hours post cardiac intervention. The patient goes into v-tach. Again the emergency phone was used to notify the floor. When the patient comes out of v-tach after 55 beats, they are having tombstones. Follow up call was made to nursing unit. Of course the nurse checked the patient. They were snoring (it was at night if you want to give them the benefit of the doubt). So the door was shut and the nurse went back to the satellite nursing station. When advised of the tombstones, patient was found basically dead. The patient was coded but was never resuscitated.

Now my concerns: I have been through both paramedic school and nursing school I know that there are some differences in the ways paramedics treat and nurses are suppose to treat patients. Our cardiac rhythm training in nursing school was very, very, did I say very limited compared to what I went through in paramedic school. Sure in nursing school we are taught the basic principles of common rhythms like SR, V-Tach, V-fib, A-fib/A-flutter, ect. But what about MAT, A tach, PMT, non-conducted PACs, 12 lead interpretation (I do not mean the doc-in-the-box interpretation included at the top of the printed EKG), Juntional Tach, in depth training on A-V blocks. My education as a paramedic was superior in this aspect. One can argue what about lab values, checking for dilation on an OB patient, acid base balance, antibiotics, microbiology, yada yada yada. Thanks for asking. How many nurses actually get to check for cervix dilation other than those that birth babies- how many can remember what a 7 feels like compared to a 10? Lab values- at our facility reference values are printed on the same sheet that the results are printed. Microbiology? Well truthfully I don't remember much from that required prerequisite to nursing school, so I guess I never had much use for it. An intelligent monkey can be taught to hang antibiotics with the use of an IV pump. So I don't think of paramedic school as training. It is education. As a matter of fact, our medical director of my paramedic school actually went through our curriculum and stated "This is the 3rd year of medical school". How many physicians have said that regarding the "education" of nurses? Really if this has happened I would like to hear about it. And this is just my personal experience, but I have met more incompetent experienced RN's than incompetent new grad paramedics. I have been through both. The NREMT-P test is much more difficult than the NCLEX. NCLEX is more of a quiz.

And lastly, I would like to pay my solemn respect for ancillary staff that assist us RN's and making our job a complete circle of care. CNAs you have no idea how much I respect you. You know the patients. You are an invaluable set of eyes and ears to me. You see the slightest changes from baseline of a patient. I want to sincerely apologize for the other RN's that treat you as if all you know is how to wipe a butt, or empty a Foley catheter. Maybe one day when all the CNAs on your unit get blue flu, and the nurse must get out of the satellite nursing station and take their own vitals, and give all 7 of their patients a bath, they will have the same respect for you. (not to give anyone ideas.) To the unit clerks: I wish I possessed your knowledge on entering orders into the computer, or who to call when my patient needs a hepabilliary scan. Thank you for your job well done. To the cafeteria worker: what a blessing to see a smiling face when all has gone to hell, and I get a 10 minute break. To the supply clerk: I greatly appreciate you speediness when you get my X-large latex free gloves to my floor right after my c-diff patient has a BM the size of Texas. Nursing students: don't let these high minded individuals give you reason to become the same way. I understand that someday you may be hanging a lido drip on me or my family. Don't let these RN's give you any hell for asking questions to educate yourselves. Field medics: If I am in a car accident and the RN in the car behind me want to help, please have them block traffic. They are not in their controlled environment with a specific order written for a specific patient, so they probably don't know what they are doing. LPN's I believe you are the better nurses. Nothing heals like a caring touch- yes human contact- not an automated blood pressure cuff activated from the station. You have obtained a huge amount of knowledge. If I or any other RN's is doing something detrimental to a patient, stop them, don't put up with this higherarchy BS that they have taught themselves.

RN's get over yourselves! You are not God's gift to modern medicine! Without the full circle of staff, we could not provide patients with any type of continuum of care. (I do understand there are more like me, so this is not to include everybody. But those that needed the previous statement- you know who you are.)

I know there are some very appreciative, competent RN's out there. I'm sorry if I have offended you this was not my intention. I wanted to try to explain the whole circle of care from pre-hospital to discharge nurse. Are there any suggestions on how we can correct these problems?

Keith Smith, NREMT-P, RN

I worked on a cardiac unit right out of college (I have an RN associate). I was not trained well enough to work this unit, neither in nursing school or on the unit. The supervisors were helpful, though and would intervene if needed.

KAF

i can think of a few responses, keith.

however, i think i'll just give time a chance.

because eventually, you're going to hang yourself.

and it's going to be a very long fall off that high pedestal of yours.

leslie

Just want to say thanks for this response.

I didn't know whether to list this as vent or concern, so I guess I'll just let it all out. I have been an RN for about 3 years and was a street medic for 7 years before that. I feel like I might be opening Pandora's box of the paramedic vs. RN discussion that has no easy black and white answer or solution to mutual respect one for another. My concern is the level of incompetence of nurses. Let me give you a few examples, but first some background information of the facility I work for. We have a centralized cardiac telemetry service that monitors the rhythms of all the patients on telemetry on the 3 cardiac units and 3 medsurg floors. It is staffed by either LICENSED paramedics (in my state we are licensed) or by extremely qualified personnel that have had extensive cardiac rhythm education. There is one unit that has a very big ego when it comes to the superiority of RN's and despite the outcome to the patient, refuse to listen to the advisement of a patient's rhythm or change. Every unit in our hospital of 400+ beds has emergency phones located through out every floor for tele services to use in cases of lethal arrhythmias. (examples: v-fib, v-tach, brady 140). Now for the examples of incompetence

1) A patient had an A-V nodal ablation and was totally pacemaker dependant. Shortly after arriving from the EP lab the patient goes in to a slow wide complex tach (WCT) in the 120's sustained. The cardiac floor was notified of the rhythm change via the emergency phones. The nurse and charge nurse ignored the advisement of tele services. The floor was then notified every hour on the hour for about 8 hours (we work 12 hour shifts) of the WCT. The nurse did not notify the EP doc. The patient then codes right at shift change. They coded the patient for about 2 hours and ultimately the patient died. The family files a law suit. EP doc was very livid at the withholding of information from him by the nursing unit (Tele services cannot contact a doctor themselves.)

2) Same cardiac unit different patient and different nurse. Patient was on a lido drip for ventricular ectopy. (big. And trig. PVCs, slavos, short bursts of WCT. ) The patient goes into 2 degree AV block type II (AKA Mobitz II). Again tele services used emergency phones to contact the nursing staff. Again nursing staff does not appreciate the notification of the rhythm change. A follow up call was made to the floor. The experienced charge nurse turns up the lido drip in response to the new arrhythmia. (It is an arrhythmic, but come on people- check your nurse drug guide you had to purchase in nursing school!) Fortunately the tele services employee convinced the charge nurse to contact the doctor. That probably saved that particular patients life.

3) Different patient same cardiac unit. The patient is less than 24 hours post cardiac intervention. The patient goes into v-tach. Again the emergency phone was used to notify the floor. When the patient comes out of v-tach after 55 beats, they are having tombstones. Follow up call was made to nursing unit. Of course the nurse checked the patient. They were snoring (it was at night if you want to give them the benefit of the doubt). So the door was shut and the nurse went back to the satellite nursing station. When advised of the tombstones, patient was found basically dead. The patient was coded but was never resuscitated.

Now my concerns: I have been through both paramedic school and nursing school I know that there are some differences in the ways paramedics treat and nurses are suppose to treat patients. Our cardiac rhythm training in nursing school was very, very, did I say very limited compared to what I went through in paramedic school. Sure in nursing school we are taught the basic principles of common rhythms like SR, V-Tach, V-fib, A-fib/A-flutter, ect. But what about MAT, A tach, PMT, non-conducted PACs, 12 lead interpretation (I do not mean the doc-in-the-box interpretation included at the top of the printed EKG), Juntional Tach, in depth training on A-V blocks. My education as a paramedic was superior in this aspect. One can argue what about lab values, checking for dilation on an OB patient, acid base balance, antibiotics, microbiology, yada yada yada. Thanks for asking. How many nurses actually get to check for cervix dilation other than those that birth babies- how many can remember what a 7 feels like compared to a 10? Lab values- at our facility reference values are printed on the same sheet that the results are printed. Microbiology? Well truthfully I don't remember much from that required prerequisite to nursing school, so I guess I never had much use for it. An intelligent monkey can be taught to hang antibiotics with the use of an IV pump. So I don't think of paramedic school as training. It is education. As a matter of fact, our medical director of my paramedic school actually went through our curriculum and stated "This is the 3rd year of medical school". How many physicians have said that regarding the "education" of nurses? Really if this has happened I would like to hear about it. And this is just my personal experience, but I have met more incompetent experienced RN's than incompetent new grad paramedics. I have been through both. The NREMT-P test is much more difficult than the NCLEX. NCLEX is more of a quiz.

And lastly, I would like to pay my solemn respect for ancillary staff that assist us RN's and making our job a complete circle of care. CNAs you have no idea how much I respect you. You know the patients. You are an invaluable set of eyes and ears to me. You see the slightest changes from baseline of a patient. I want to sincerely apologize for the other RN's that treat you as if all you know is how to wipe a butt, or empty a Foley catheter. Maybe one day when all the CNAs on your unit get blue flu, and the nurse must get out of the satellite nursing station and take their own vitals, and give all 7 of their patients a bath, they will have the same respect for you. (not to give anyone ideas.) To the unit clerks: I wish I possessed your knowledge on entering orders into the computer, or who to call when my patient needs a hepabilliary scan. Thank you for your job well done. To the cafeteria worker: what a blessing to see a smiling face when all has gone to hell, and I get a 10 minute break. To the supply clerk: I greatly appreciate you speediness when you get my X-large latex free gloves to my floor right after my c-diff patient has a BM the size of Texas. Nursing students: don't let these high minded individuals give you reason to become the same way. I understand that someday you may be hanging a lido drip on me or my family. Don't let these RN's give you any hell for asking questions to educate yourselves. Field medics: If I am in a car accident and the RN in the car behind me want to help, please have them block traffic. They are not in their controlled environment with a specific order written for a specific patient, so they probably don't know what they are doing. LPN's I believe you are the better nurses. Nothing heals like a caring touch- yes human contact- not an automated blood pressure cuff activated from the station. You have obtained a huge amount of knowledge. If I or any other RN's is doing something detrimental to a patient, stop them, don't put up with this higherarchy BS that they have taught themselves.

RN's get over yourselves! You are not God's gift to modern medicine! Without the full circle of staff, we could not provide patients with any type of continuum of care. (I do understand there are more like me, so this is not to include everybody. But those that needed the previous statement- you know who you are.)

I know there are some very appreciative, competent RN's out there. I'm sorry if I have offended you this was not my intention. I wanted to try to explain the whole circle of care from pre-hospital to discharge nurse. Are there any suggestions on how we can correct these problems?

Keith Smith, NREMT-P, RN

WHAT BROUGHT YOU INTO NURSING, AND WHY ARE YOU STILL INTO IT? I REALLY THINK YOU SHOULD GO BACK TO STREET MEDICS OR WHATEVER YOU CALL IT.

Specializes in geriatrics and hospice palliative nursin.

Pretty insulting to the nursing profession I think. Met a few paramedics like yourself too along the way who look down on the nurses. Wondering why in the workd you became one if we are so incompetent.

I personally think I am a great RN and that all of my co-workers are also so I don't know where you work or what kind of people you work with but if you hate your damn job so much then quit and go back to being a paramedic. I work on a trauma floor so you better be damned that I would know what to do with someone that's been in accident so i wouldn't be directing traffic. And with the whole PCT thing, we actually throw our PCTs appreciation parties because of their hard work. Not every institution is the way yours is and if you are so miserable i would find another job or quit. We have been told by many patients, doctors, and families that our unit is the best unit in the hospital with the best nurses. Our unit is always full and it rare to get downstaffed. I'm sorry if you hate your job buy realize that their are people out there that love their job and work really hard at it and don't appreciate being grouped with those that hate their job and are lazy.:madface:

Specializes in Dialysis, ICU.

Wow-If I felt about my fellow nurses this way I would CERTAINLY resign and return to EMT status. I feel sorry for you. It must be hard to be so superior to all the people yopu work with. you need to find a new faciltiy and a new career!

Specializes in Critical care, neuroscience, telemetry,.

Wow.....sounds like you've had a couple of scary nights there, medicrnguy.

It CAN be scary at night when you look around ye old hospital and notice that the level of experience is not all you would like for it to be. I've noticed, however, that it is usually just that - inexperience - as opposed to out-and-out imcompetence. About the only folks I think of as incompetent are the ones who insist that they know what they are doing when in fact they don't have the slightest idea and no clue as to their own ignorance.

Unfortunately, we do have a few of those, and I would even venture to say that most of us have occupied that space a few times in our careers - hopefully, with less disastrous results than the ones you mentioned. I will remember to my dying day the first time I gave meds through an NG tube as a new grad. The patient was three days older than dirt and had aspirated barium a few days prior. His son, a handsome guy of about 40 (I was 22!) was sitting there in the room, just watching. I was very proud of myself for remembering that I needed to keep the pt. in a sitting position and check for tube placement before I gave the meds. (I had read that in one of my textbooks. So smart!)

Sooo....I whipped out my trusty 60 cc syringe, explained what I was going to do to dear old Dad, and tried to aspirate stomach contents from the tube. No luck. I tried again, and listened for bowel sounds and all of the other things that I had been taught to do (like a trained chimp). No go. After 5-10 minutes of this, I excused myself and scurried along to my preceptor, who was moving to Alaska that same week, no doubt to get away from preceptees like me. I explained the situation, and she advised me to inject a little air into the tubing to dislodge it from the stomach wall.

I strode back into the room, smiled beatifically at cutie-pie, and laid out my plan and theory. The patient, of course, did nothing, because he was pretty much gorked, which was better than being terrified of having me as his nurse. I pushed in some air, and attempted to aspirate, but still nothing came out. I had kept up a non-stop blather about various reasons why the tube might not be working when Adonis decided to put me out out my (and his, no doubt!) misery.

"I don't mean to tell you your job", he said, as he reached over and pulled the cap off of my 60 cc syringe.

I kind of slithered out of the room....after I gave the meds....after I FINALLY aspirated some stomach contents.

Hey, my intentions were good, my theories were good, my outcomes were (Thank you, God!), good as well. My level of experience was nil, and I was just to damned inexperienced to know what I didn't know. I find that's usually the reason when we're called in the middle of the night (ICU does rapid response where I work) to assess a struggling pt., and we find that's it's med related. or something was given that shouldn't have been, or that somrthing is up and the nurse doesn't know what to do and they're afraid. They're good nurses, but none of us as all of the answers all of the time. At least they've usually taken the cap off the syringe!

I know from experience that it can be easy sometimes to dismiss other nurses as being less than competent. I also know that I have stood in that same place, that hindsight is 20-20, and that my crystal ball hardly ever works right at 3 am.

Nursing is more than strips and drips, which is fortunate, because I got almost none of that in school. About the only things I remember are neuro assessment, washing a bedridden pt's hair, and lying about seeing my roommate's tonsils when the instructor asked me about them. (You should have seen my face....) Sounds like paramedics get a very thorough grounding in all of that, which has to happen if you're going to be a first responder.

Despite our apparent lack of grounding in basic EKG assessment, the learning curve in nursing is steep, and it never stops. I've been a nurse for 20 years, and I can't imagine doing anything else. You're there for the best and worst moments of people's lives, and you have a front row seat to the best and worst that the human experience has to offer. I have my "incompetent" moments along with everyone else, and I hate it when I screw up. That being said, I do my best, take responsibility for my mistakes, and extend the same grace to myself that I would extend to others. It's the only way I'll suvive another 20 years as a nurse.

After reading the original post my head is spinning.

Specializes in icu, er, transplant, case management, ps.

I remember a few paramedica who were attending the same university as I was, in order to get their degree and qualify to take their licensing exam. They thought pretty highly of themselves too. I have often wondered why they go on to get nursing degrees when they think so little of us.

Woody:balloons:

Specializes in LTC, Med/Surg, Peds, ICU, Tele.

I don't think all paramedics take a dim view of nurses. From what I was told by one whom I worked with, nurses often make more than paramedics, that's why he changed to nursing. He was a rather incompetant, not very confident fellow, so I also suspect he may have had difficulty being accepted by the other guys.

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