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Hi guys! Sometimes when I tell people I'm going to nursing school, they will say, "those nurses don't do anything!":no: Although I'm not a nurse yet, I get irritated when I hear them say that. I read what you guys go through on this website and it definitely seems like nurses do a lot! I was wondering have anyone ever said this to you and how did it make you feel?
True. I've caught maaaaany mistakes by docs that would surely kill patients if I had carried out the orders and not used my brain to think it through.
Next time remind them that:
Without nurses, who will stop the Demi-god doctors from harming the patients? Nurses are overworked and underpaid.
Only two times have comments about what we do gotten under my skin, and both of them were from patients.
One said, as I was introducing myself during hand-off, "I remember you. You waited on me before." I rather tersely replied, "I don't 'wait' on my patients; I provide them nursing care." I also remembered him and his attitude about nurses....
The other was from a patient with a bipolar history who was obviously in a manic phase with repeated, rapid-fire requests for which he would get angry if they weren't done at the exact moment he wanted them done. He saw me sitting at the computer and said rather snidely, "When you are done with your break, I want my Xanax." I replied, "I am not on break. I am charting and reviewing charts, and I will get your Xanax on my next rounds in 15 minutes."
RN_rescue_ninja
46 Posts
I was a nurse aide for 3 years before finishing nursing school. I still work for the same hospital. I'm pretty observant. I feel like the NA's attitudes about nurses largely depends on the culture of the unit. For the day shift group, which is what I worked, I very, very rarely felt like the nurses were being "lazy" when it came to tasks that the aides can also do. However, in the same unit's night shift group, the aides felt like the nurses were "lazy" in that regard; sitting around, gossiping, reading, etc. while ordering the aides to do every bit of primary care to the patients, even when the aides were spread too thin. A nurse I worked with recently got a job on nights on this unit, and she agrees with the aides opinions. In other words, on the night shift, the nurse culture was "that's not a nurse's job, that's the aide's job." Call lights going on for way longer than necessary because most of the nurses felt that it was not their job to answer the lights. Personally, I work ED nights where there is a real community effort to ensure all patients needs/safety are met by all nurses and medics/aides, like there was on the other unit where I worked days. I can't imagine prioritizing chatting with other nurses and enjoying down-time over answering call lights and helping pts to the bathroom, bedpans, etc.