The nursing profession, as a whole, as well as the role of the nurse have evolved dramatically over the past several decades. I personally have witnessed the changing face of nursing during my 30+ years in the profession. Gone are the days when nurses were thought of as little more than helpers or assistants for physicians. Today's nurses are healthcare professionals in their own right, playing an important and vital role in providing excellent healthcare.
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Looking back to when I was in nursing school, and then starting my nursing career, I remember many things that are no longer in use, or things that have transformed over the years. Gone are the days of paper chart, replaced with electronic medical records. Gone are the nursing caps that distinguished the nurse from the rest of the healthcare team.
Here is a partial list of things I remember from days gone by.
Feel free to add items that you remember from the past, even if that past does not seem that long ago. Changes are occurring at an even faster pace in the digital and electronic age of today. What do you think of some of the changes???
remember enemas till clear and I mean clear sometimes you had 8-10 a day and the nursing assistants did themas a night nurse remember when a patient rolled over in their sleep and the whole IV infused
in nursing school they had just gone to pants and so we weren't allowed to wear hats as students sinc they did not go well together
remember mixing the IV antibiotics and the IVs
Back surgery recovery was 10 days and they weren't out of bed for several days.
no food until you actually heard bowel sounds
i will stop there.
Yes I remember all of that.
Feel free to add others.
I love this stuff!! LOL
Anybody else remember when the Ladies' Aux cart used to make its rounds with various items for sale from the Gift Shop?
And on 3-11, we used to make up a stretcher (or cart) with all kinds of bed linens, snacks, beverages, toiletries, etc and make PM rounds. Two staff would 'buddy up' together and start one end of the hall and go room to room passing out refreshments and doing real PM care ie. we'd freshen up linens as nec, pass out snacks and EVERYBODY got pulled up with a real backrub. (Oh, those were the days when we had time...)
Anybody else remember when the Ladies' Aux cart used to make its rounds with various items for sale from the Gift Shop?And on 3-11, we used to make up a stretcher (or cart) with all kinds of bed linens, snacks, beverages, toiletries, etc and make PM rounds. Two staff would 'buddy up' together and start one end of the hall and go room to room passing out refreshments and doing real PM care ie. we'd freshen up linens as nec, pass out snacks and EVERYBODY got pulled up with a real backrub. (Oh, those were the days when we had time...)
Places I worked back in the day it was volunteers or the nice ladies from the gift shop. This was great for patients who either didn't have regular visitors and or couldn't otherwise get down to the place themselves. Male patients especially liked their daily newspaper.
What is Gumco suction?[/quoteSspelling = gOmco; gomco.
Before the days when wall suction was readily avail on the regular floor units, we had an old fashioned glass bottlevacuum suction system. It was a big bottle connected to pt's nasogastric tube to drain on high or low suction pressure. Used for GI bleeds, post-op abdominal surgeries, stomachs needing decompression, etc. It was on its own rolling cart and it pugged into an electric wall socket. Similar to the table-top glass suction systems we all still use in LTC facilities.
Reading through various posts about needlestick injuries and I had another 'flashback' moment. Before the days of 'Universal Precautions', remember when we routinely recapped needles, esp in facilities that require us to do 'sharps counts'. Then we all progressed to those red 'needle cruncher' boxes.
tnbutterfly - Mary, BSN
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No problem to have duplicates since some won't read every post.