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Hi everyone,
I am not a new RN. I worked in a Med/Surg unit for 2 years and I will be starting a new job in the Emergency Room as of May. I always wanted to work in a critical care/ emergency setting because I enjoy the constant learning aspect and variety of disease process that this field brings in. Needless to say, I am excited and scared of this new environment. I was researching for extra materials that could help me ease my transition and found this blog. Thank you for sharing your stories and giving newbies like me advice for continuing our journeys.
P.S. Any advice is welcome so I can be as prepared as I can for my first day.
As a RN with 30 years experience in critical care and ER, I'd like to offer a few suggestions. Learn your rhythms backwards and forwards. Never rely on others to interpret for you. Getting others opinions is fine, but it's your license. Never give a drug you didn't mix or draw up. No matter how emergent the situation is. Never close yourself in a room with any type if psych eval patient. Never act like you know it all because your peers will gladly stand by and watch you sink:( Always offer to help others and never sit back and relax unless ALL of your peers are, too! Stay clear of triage for a lonnnnng time. Good Luck!
I love working in the ED (most of the time), especially at an academic facility... great relations with the docs and a team environment with the other nurses unlike anything else I've seen.
One thing to keep in mind: You will be dealing with violent patients and psychotic patients. Watch your back (and face) around these folks. Keep up your guard and listen to the little voice in your head that says "careful..."
As a RN with 30 years experience in critical care and ER I'd like to offer a few suggestions. Learn your rhythms backwards and forwards. Never rely on others to interpret for you. Getting others opinions is fine, but it's your license. Never give a drug you didn't mix or draw up. No matter how emergent the situation is. Never close yourself in a room with any type if psych eval patient. Never act like you know it all because your peers will gladly stand by and watch you sink:( Always offer to help others and never sit back and relax unless ALL of your peers are, too! Stay clear of triage for a lonnnnng time. Good Luck![/quote']OMG..... I am trying my hardest to recognize the rhythms right now.... My philosophy is... I didn't take it out the Pyxis, scan it, put it in a syringe therefore I am not pushing it into a pt. As for triage, I will stay clear as long as I can.... Thanks for the feedback.... Greatly appreciated....
I love working in the ED (most of the time), especially at an academic facility... great relations with the docs and a team environment with the other nurses unlike anything else I've seen.One thing to keep in mind: You will be dealing with violent patients and psychotic patients. Watch your back (and face) around these folks. Keep up your guard and listen to the little voice in your head that says "careful..."
My gut always tells me right, hope I follow it at all time.... Thank you for the advice...
Excellent advice...at least they have a Long orientation.As a RN with 30 years experience in critical care and ER, I'd like to offer a few suggestions. Learn your rhythms backwards and forwards. Never rely on others to interpret for you. Getting others opinions is fine, but it's your license. Never give a drug you didn't mix or draw up. No matter how emergent the situation is. Never close yourself in a room with any type if psych eval patient. Never act like you know it all because your peers will gladly stand by and watch you sink:( Always offer to help others and never sit back and relax unless ALL of your peers are, too! Stay clear of triage for a lonnnnng time. Good Luck!
OP take it all....there is a hige learning curve.!
I agree with this sentiment - and defer to someone with 10x more time-in-grade than me - but I prefer to spin it as "...fine, but it's your PATIENT." Practice the way that you would want your child's nurse to practice, not out of fear for your license... the end result is likely similar or identical but the motivation matters, too.As a RN with 30 years experience in critical care and ER, I'd like to offer a few suggestions. Learn your rhythms backwards and forwards. Never rely on others to interpret for you. Getting others opinions is fine, but it's your license.
This can't be emphasized highly enough... you are totally dependent on each other... be dependable and the one to always offer a hand - whether it's requested or not. A corollary is, they're all your patients... check on alarms immediately... 1000 false alarms are worth the one crashing patient you catch in time to effectively treat.Always offer to help others and never sit back and relax unless ALL of your peers are, too!
Also want to add:
1) Remember that medical/trauma patients may be psych patients, too... don't trust any of 'em too much.
2) Even turkeys get sick... That patient who's presented 20 times for myriad complaints of chest pain or sob may, on #21 be having an MI or PE.
Be honest with yourself. If you find that you are not an ED nurse, then that is okay. Sometimes we have this idea of what a dream job is or what specialty we want to do and find out later that it is not what we thought it would be.
If ED truly is your home, then my advice is to always ask questions. Never be afraid to stand up for what you believe in. Stay in your scope of practice. Even though the ED is fast paced and intense there are somethings RNS are NOT allowed to do. Do not let any doctor or anyone else bully you into doing something because " it is how we always do it". No, don't do it. You will get caught and they will not.
Be a team player. Wishing you well.
CaribeRN
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