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Is it ok to bring something like a box of doughnuts for the unit I'll be in, as a thank you? I know their day would be a lot easier if I weren't there poking my head in everything they do and grilling them with questions all day. If not doughnuts, is there something I could bring, or is this frowned upon?
Thanx!
Cool. Excellent ideas all, thank you! I've picked up a couple containers of those costco mini brownie things, very dense, very chocolaty, but nice and clean! I'll be doing surgery center and a few others for just one day each, but I thoutht it would still be nice to bring each unit i'm in this quarter (5 in all) something for their troubles. And if it buys a little extra patience (which I'm sure they will need with me) then all the better, heh:)
Yes, we did this all the time when I was in nursing school. Like others have said, do it on your last clinical day. We would all chip in as a group to defray the cost, but when I did my final senior clinical, I bought a box of Christmas cookies and a Thank You card of my own money and gave it to my unit (it was December.)
It's definitely OK, esp. if you bring powdered creme filled doughnuts...powdered chocolate creme filled doughnuts gets you bonus points.
And I would hide the food from the interns. They have a tendency to descend on treats like a plague of locusts, only to vanish as soon as the food is gone. You''ll never get a bite of it if they get wind of it.
If you are especially appreciative of the staff..bringing in food is a nice gesture.
But another gesture to add to the food is a simple thank you card for the staff, have all the students sign it. And I alway make sure a quick note to the NM also goes out thanking her/him and her/his staff for 'tolerating' us students and thank her/him for the experience. If a particular nurse was especially helpful or went above and beyond be sure to name that person in the note to the NM.
I once was waiting in line at Dunkin Donuts, and just was casually scanning the trays of donuts when I saw a 2+ inch long cockroach standing just as proud as you please on a chocolate eclair looking out at all of us in lineI just turned around and left the store.
At the place I worked the room where they made the donuts was filthy and disgusting. The floor was so dirty and full of ants. One of my co-workers had no qualms about smoking in that room and her ashes would drop into the vats of donut glaze. I once watched as she dropped an unfrosted donut on the dirty floor, pick it up and "dust" it off on her dirty uniform then proceed to frost it and put on on the rack to go out into the case.
So that is why I laugh when I read comments from people who won't eat someone's homemade treats because they are afraid of how clean and sanitary they are at home and who believe that eating a donut or some other treat from places like DD is a lot more safer.
rumwynnieRN
272 Posts
My final clinical day of nursing school, my classmate and I brought bagels. They were gone before lunch:) along with the spreads -- almond, pumpkin and low-fat regular.