Irritating things about being a nurse VENT

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I have been a nurse now for about a year and in that short time, I've found some things that I find to be VERY irritating about my job. I work in a very large hospital that has made it onto lists of "top hospitals" in the US so we must be doing something right but there are little things that really chap my cheeks.

Doctors: I hate when I get a patient admitted with a raging UTI and there is no pyridium or anything else ordered. Only once can I remember this medication already ordered. How about some relief, doc? So, then I'm having to call them to get an order for something that, in my opinion, should have already been in place. The same with Tylenol for fevers, etc.

I once had a fresh post op patient, foot amputation, and he had only Tylenol for pain. Really?

These are just examples. I've had many patients who are without orders on things they need. I have them come from ER with only half their home meds ordered. So then, they're mad at me because I don't have their anti-seizure medication that they MUST take every day.

Why do doctors put in notification orders if they're going to get ticked when they're notified? To me, a post op patient who has a steadily increasing fever over 24 hours that isn't being touched by APAP is cause for concern. I was concerned, the patient was concerned, the family was concerned, even the CNA was concerned. When I called about it, the doctor said "Why are you calling me about this?" Hello. There is an order to notify.

That is only one example. I could go on and on. Just the other night I called about a very elevated BP. The doctor didn't even let me finish the sentence before he said "Thanks" and slammed down the phone.

Pharmacy: I am so SICK of being out of medications in the Pyxis and having the pharmacy refusing to send them because they say "its in the Pyxis".

I can't tell you how many times I've needed a medication, sometimes critically, and the pharmacy wants to play Its In The Pyxis Phone Tag for ages before they just send it.

I once needed tubes for a blood draw and went though the same dog and pony show with the lab.

JUST SEND IT.

Patient transfers: This is something I've been hearing a lot of griping about from other nurses lately. We often, of course, get patients transferred from the ER or the observation unit. There have been many, MANY times I've gotten patients with STAT or NOW orders that were written 8 hours before but were never done. Or maybe they had medications scheduled while they were in the ER but the nurse doesn't bother to give them. I've even had ER and OBS nurses tell me in report that they are going to give meds/start fluids/do something ordered before they send them up and surprise! they come up without those things being done. Why say you will do it if you aren't?

I know if I went home without doing orders or giving meds that were ordered, I'm sure I'd be written up. Or worse.

But I swear if I get one more new admit from ED with a BP of 220s/110s, a pounding headache and additional risks for stroke and an explanation of "we didn't want to bottom them out" I'm going to take the patient back down personally. It takes me at least 40 min. to get orders from admitting doc when you have one right there!
Of course, once the admitting doc writes orders, it's no longer the ED doc's patient and it's no easier for me to get hold of the admitting doc than it is for you.
Specializes in Medsurg/ICU, Mental Health, Home Health.

Can we pretty please not make this a floor vs. ED situation? That is nurse on nurse hating!

Let's get back to hating on pharmacy. :wacky:

Specializes in Emergency Nursing.

Transfer staff: Is the patient in room 31 ok to go to CT?

Me: Yes, you can take them.

TS: (takes off BP cuff and pulse ox) Can you unhook them from the monitor? I'm not allowed to.

Really?!? Unhooking 5 clips is outside of your scope? Really?

Can we pretty please not make this a floor vs. ED situation? That is nurse on nurse hating!

Let's get back to hating on pharmacy. :wacky:

One very nice thing about my job... we have clinical pharmacists in the ER... it makes the whole process so much smoother and safer.

After working at small hospitals with no pharmacist at all after hours (yes, I had the key and went in to the pharmacy to pull meds), I'm so spoiled now.

A good pharmacist is priceless in a busy ER with complex cases... ours are integral parts of the team and viewed as "one of us."

That's what I mean...

It is the physician, unless the nurse is not advocating this need and trying to move the patient out....

I am just not sure which one is the issue...

Give coworkers benefit of the doubt.

Transfer staff: Is the patient in room 31 ok to go to CT?

Me: Yes, you can take them.

TS: (takes off BP cuff and pulse ox) Can you unhook them from the monitor? I'm not allowed to.

Really?!? Unhooking 5 clips is outside of your scope? Really?

Frustrating sometimes, but the answer is often "yes, it is."

Our patient-transport folks are not supposed to do anything except transport the patient from one place to another.

In reality, most of them will disconnect (and some will even reconnect) monitor leads after checking in with the nurse. It's done as a courtesy, though.

can't wait, lol

@Isitpossible: It wasn't always this way. Once upon a time in a hospital far, far away, nobody questioned the nurse. What the nurse said was gospel, the law. I don't really know what happened to change that, but nowadays I get flack from everybody. We used to be near the top of the totem pole, but somehow we slid way down to the bottom.[/quote']

This reminded me of older movies where you see the nurses all stern looking and with a stern voice. The nurse was like the disciplinary parent, not to be questioned and respected. I wonder how and why this changed. How we became the ones who are blamed for everything (things we have NO control over). How did we lose the respect the profession once had? Doctor's are one thing, that disrespect has been around for ages. (Don't get me wrong, there are some wonderful ones, I know) But now patients, families and other staff? I'm grateful for this site where we can come together and relate.

I just love when a patient is admitted with anemia and blood was ordered hours ago in the ER but wasn't ready the whole entire time. Now suddenly when the patient is being wheeled up the blood is ready. I even investigated this once with the blood bank. A patient had blood ready get this 10 hours ago and the nurse doing the transfer called the blood bank right before the patient was being transferred to check on the blood. She was told it was ready and had been ready. She calls me and said oh the blood is now ready. So yeah after I investigated she played dumb and said she never received a call from the blood bank. But dumb her the nursing supervisor checked her phone and saw 2 calls from the blood bank. The same times the blood bank said they called her to say the blood was ready. So sick of bedside nurses.

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Bottom line. Do the best you can. In the end the doctor has to order the meds or change them. If something is sketchy and you call the doc and you get hung up on or blown off..............just note that the doc hung up on you in the patients file and move on (try to find another doc to help). If something were to happen to the patient he would get his *&^ sued off. Bottom line here; once the docs see your noting everything in the file they wont hang up on you anymore. They will listen because they know you just threw the ball in their court.

Specializes in LTC, med/surg, hospice.

Having most responsibility and accountability without the respect is irritating. Everything gets deferred to nursing..the room is cold, the floor is sticky, the food is gross, my visitors want coffee.

Take notes on everything that's what I've learned!! I worked with a doc who hated when I questioned her but oh we'll I didn't trust her. If I can get questioned and ragged on so can doc's they are not gods.

I hate that we have to make sure everything is right when ordered but the docs get attitudes when you question them then when they are wrong they get this ****** off "I knew that" face. I hate when docs lie and try to put stuff on you to cover their ass!! Like oh you didn't tell me that!! YEAH VUZ YOU HUNG UP OR WALKED AWAY

WHEN I WAS TALKING!!

I worked on a military facility & radiology would call peds for one of our staff to go hold down a kid because it was our pt and they didn't want to tie up there staff really!!

Lab would send kids back for us to do blood draws because we are better with kids WHAT!!!

Yeah it was crazy there!!

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