Published Jun 2, 2005
lisamc1RN, LPN
943 Posts
I had a Spanish speaking woman, g3p3, who could only say "thank you" in English. She was as sweet as could be. I went in to do her full assessment after report. As I was checking for Homan's sign in her left leg, she flinched. I looked up at her and asked "do you have pain?". I don't think she understand, so I dorsiflexed her foot one more time and she moved up the bed and flinched again. I stopped the exam and went and got my instructor, who came and did the same thing. Poor woman did the same as before. I finished my assessment and my instructor informed the doc that our patient was having lower leg pain. He checked her and gave orders to put her on heparin and a k-pad. The patient was a real trooper. I was trying my hardest to explain why we had to put a shot in her stomach and she was trying her hardest to understand us. The nurse and I kept pointing to her leg and trying to explain. We all laughed several times as we were trying to communicate with each other. :) It was a pretty good morning, all in all....and THEN.... I got yelled at by the doctor. :chuckle I was asking my nurse how to chart on the flow chart where it says "redness, warmth, pain". I was pointing to the word pain as I was saying that my patient had this. The nurse was getting ready to answer when the doctor jumped on me and told me that I had better not document redness or warmth because there wasn't any. Okkkkkkkkk. I wasn't going to, but thanks. The nurse gave me little looks as the doc gave me a mini lecture on charting correctly and then she pulled me aside and said that he is like that with everyone. The thing is, I wasn't upset at all. He didn't intimidate me. I hadn't written one word down that wasn't as completely accurate as I could be and that hadn't met with approval from either my nurse or my instructor. I had done nothing wrong and I knew it. My nurse told me congratulations for making it through my first chewing out! :rotfl: I think I was just initiated! Heh heh! Anyway, later I hear the doc chewing someone out over the phone and I knew that I was in good company. I read the chart of my patient and guess why heparin was administered ...phlebitis... Heh heh. I made sure that when I charted that I only charted pain, no redness, no warmth, because I didn't notice any, but how on earth does a person have phlebitis without it? Is it just that the doc suspected it, or that it was the beginnings of it?
To wrap it up, I could happily park myself in postpartum/nursery from this point on! I've loved my clinicals and I cannot wait to get out there and learn more. Thanks for listening if you made it this far!
SmilingBluEyes
20,964 Posts
Ahhh welcome to the wonderful world of nursing. You sound like a gem to me. Good luck to you.
kellyo, LPN
333 Posts
I start my rotation Monday. I'm so excited, I can't sleep! I feel like I did just before I got married--a mixture of pure excitement and joy, coupled with fear of the unknown. I keep going over little scenes in my head of me helping a mom breastfeed, or explaining why we palpate the fundus postpartum--almost kind of "acting it out"! I'm really looking forward to all of the teaching.:)