Published Sep 28, 2005
waterfall
3 Posts
Hi Everyone!
I am new here, but I have been reading some posts. A lot of them have been working in the field for a long time and it seems some of them like the working environment in the old days better than now. I am just curious about what differents between being a nurse in the old days and now?
I like to know more about the old time things and compare it with today's.
I think it is very interesting.
gobblers
12 Posts
Hi Everyone!I am new here, but I have been reading some posts. A lot of them have been working in the field for a long time and it seems some of them like the working environment in the old days better than now. I am just curious about what differents between being a nurse in the old days and now?I like to know more about the old time things and compare it with today's.I think it is very interesting.
Yes, I believe it was better in the old days. Care was centered on the patient, whereas today, it is about the dollar.
When I was registered in 1967, I can truly say that I practiced holistic nursing. Today with time constraints and constant budget demands, it is not possible to practice holistic nursing.
When I found a charge sticker on a bandaid, I knew that we were in troublt.
Ask someone what TLC means and many will not know.
Just recently we have gotten new glucometers. And guess what? A device for charging the pt as you are doing the fsbs had been built in. The patient is charged before you even get the results.
I think that in the olden days there was more comaraderie between the departments. When I worked as a new grad in a large metropolitan medical center, I can say that the departments shared a common goal, and that was the best possible care for the patient that had been entrusted in their care.
If I could, I would return to the good old days in a heart beat. I would throw computer nurses notes out the window and write mine out in long hand.
So much for one very old tired RN who does not think that we are doing our patients justice.
Nursing today is a BUSINESS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :uhoh21:
Yes, I believe it was better in the old days. Care was centered on the patient, whereas today, it is about the dollar.When I was registered in 1967, I can truly say that I practiced holistic nursing. Today with time constraints and constant budget demands, it is not possible to practice holistic nursing. When I found a charge sticker on a bandaid, I knew that we were in troublt. Ask someone what TLC means and many will not know.Just recently we have gotten new glucometers. And guess what? A device for charging the pt as you are doing the fsbs had been built in. The patient is charged before you even get the results. I think that in the olden days there was more comaraderie between the departments. When I worked as a new grad in a large metropolitan medical center, I can say that the departments shared a common goal, and that was the best possible care for the patient that had been entrusted in their care.If I could, I would return to the good old days in a heart beat. I would throw computer nurses notes out the window and write mine out in long hand.So much for one very old tired RN who does not think that we are doing our patients justice.Nursing today is a BUSINESS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :uhoh21:
They even charge sticker on a bandaid ??....wow
I am sorry, I am so new on the field, I don't know that.
It is very sad.
I am so understanding that how you would like to go back in the old day!!!
Retired R.N.
260 Posts
Well, it was very different back in the earlier days. When I graduated in 1952, a 3-yr diploma nurse was a very respected person in the community, although she was expected to dress "appropriately" and full uniform dress in those days included white shoes, hose, and a cap except for special job sites like OR, L&D, newborn nursery, or isolation.
We needed a different set of skills in those days when suction was accomplished by means of a Wangensteen arrangement, and all IV rates had to be hand-calibrated. Antibiotics were a brand-new idea, and the first penicillin I saw was the aqueous variety that had to be injected every 3 hours around the clock.
The first major change was the introduction of Medicare which gave us many more geriatric patients who were able to get treatment because the program would pay the hospitals and doctors for services rendered. DRG was introduced later in an effort to control costs to the hospital by making them "more efficient" in discharging patients quicker but sicker, while allowing them to collect a predictable fee based on the admitting diagnosis.
The biggest change in nursing, however, came from the infamous (!) "White Paper" from the ANA (American Nurses Association) creating the division of Registered Nurses into Professional (with a baccalaureate degree) and Technical (those with an Associate degree from a community college). Because most universities would give some credit for associate degrees but not for hospital RN programs, this effectively spelled the end of the hospital schools, even though many of the hospital school graduates routinely outperformed college educated students on the state board exams.
The graduates of a 3-yr hospital program were well grounded in clinical skills and were frequently in charge of a floor on 2nd or 3rd shift while they were still 3rd year students. There were no 12-hour shifts in those days, and nurses (at my school, anyway) were constantly reminded that one of their professional duties was to keep themselves in good health by taking the time to get enough sleep and eat decent meals. I can still remember my favorite clinical instructor saying, "Every time you go to work, you lay your license on the line. Why would you ever want to put yourself in danger of losing it by trying to work while you are too sick or too sleepy to be able to think straight?"
What I remember best of all, however, is the way we nurses cooperated with each other and did everything we could to make the workplace as pleasant as possible for all of us. Ah, nostalgia! When I read some of the horror stories here at Allnurses, I really wonder why those nurses did not receive the kind of practical education that would help them avoid such terrible situations.
Tweety, BSN, RN
35,406 Posts
Yes and no.
Today we have better technology to help us along. I remember how happy I was when I didn't have to take vital signs manually when I was a tech back in the old days and we got a machine.
Back then too we didn't have the flow sheets we have now, we used to have to write things like "lung clear" rather than check a box, or chart by exception.
There's been good and bad as time has gone along.