Professionalism....name your irritation here!

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This is a bit of a vent, but a timely one. I love working with a very diverse team on a busy med/surg floor. As we are now in Spring, we have many new orientees and again I have been asked to bring a few of them along as a preceptor. Every year it just strikes me how more and more irritated I get with some basic professional behaviors that normally don't tick me off this bad, but really get my hackles up when I find myself saying to a new nurse "well, the professional way to handle this is..." Sheesh! I shouldn't have to even have that conversation with a new grad when observing behaviors and interactions with our existing staff! Here are my top two for Spring 2015:

1. Our shifts are 0645 - 1915. I have worked nights and days and still CAN'T STAND IT when it comes to being on time for either shift. If you are coming off shift, I get that sometimes patient care delays being ready for report, BUT when you are the oncoming nurse, there is no excuse. "On TIME" means ready to take report right at 0645 or at 1845.. It does not mean, "I clocked in at 0645, but let me set my bag down in our locker room and get my stuff and fill my water bottle/coffee cup/etc."

2. It is isn't appropriate to have your smart phone out on the floor. I don't care if you were using the calculator function, or the drug look up. Those tools are available on our mobile carts and are provided by our employers (which BTW, you SHOULD be using resources provided and approved by your employer per most P&P!) But let's be honest, there is a different "tap" to being on FB, twitter, or texting than there is to using a tool. As a school teacher friend of mine once said to me, "I tell my students that I always know when they are texting on a phone. It just seems unnatural that you have been looking at your own crotch for that long while smiling, smirking, and laughing."

Any others for this spring? Feel free to add on!

Agreed. Mutual respect is a must.

Specializes in ER, progressive care.

Wearing perfume. Personally I don't think any healthcare worker should wear perfume because of the patients...but it's also irritating to me when someone is wearing some God-awful scent and I have to smell it for an entire 12 hours....

Specializes in Critical Care (ICU/CVICU).

Daily nursing huddles or "quick" team meetings FIRST THING IN THE MORNING!!!! Why do managers think 8am is the best time to stop all of us to talk about stupid things? It lasts up to 30 minutes and makes us so behind the rest of the day.

We have a bunch of newly hired CNAs from the same vocational school who rub me the wrong way entirely. I'm pretty lighthearted and have fun while I work but this new culture on our unit is just tacky. We're so desperate for warm bodies with current CNA licenses that no one is given consequences for their actions. I was in a patient's room with the door closed and overheard one CNA in the hallway telling several others about the new breathalyzer ignition on her car. :up:

Specializes in Critical Care, Med-Surg, Psych, Geri, LTC, Tele,.
Wearing perfume. Personally I don't think any healthcare worker should wear perfume because of the patients...but it's also irritating to me when someone is wearing some God-awful scent and I have to smell it for an entire 12 hours....

This is why I try to be careful with scents!! Jerrgens, Baby oil and antiperspirant only for conical days!!

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