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Advice about BC?!
If you decide not to go with the Vancouver Costal Health Authority, try Fraser Health. It covers 12 hospitals from Burnaby, New Westminster, Port Moody, Maple Ridge, to Surrey, Delta, White Rock, and Langley, and further east into the Fraser Valley - Abbotsford, Mission, Chilliwack and Hope. You would be welcome at any of theses hospitals I am sure, travelling time would be less and housing less expensive, too! But then I am a little prejudiced as I work in Fraser Health! The website if you are interested is http://www.fraserhealth.ca
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nursing a calling?
I don't really see nursing as a calling, because for me, the word "calling" has a religious connotation - and please note, I mean for me, because it may not be seen as this by other people. When I decided to become a nurse, it was more of a "drive" that sent me in this direction, and the RN at the end of my education was the goal. I did want a profession that offered me a way to support myself with some flexibility, but the money was only a secondary consideration. I can't deny that a motivation was to find a job in which I could be useful and help others, but I never regarded this as a calling. One last thing that just twigged and probably had a great deal to do with my choice was a counsellor in high school. This was a few years ago, and then she tended to steer the girls toward teaching, nursing or secretarial work. I picked nursing because I saw it as the most useful! Of course my feelings have changed over the years, there are many "useful" professions, but that's how I ended up where I am today!
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This Site has Jaded My View of Nursing
Kimmy, keep that glass half full attitude...keep using this site to learn, to question, and to communicate with other nurses, and even to vent when you need to. I think you will find that the postives far outweigh the negatives! :)
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Where are you from?
Holy smoke! We're probably neighbours! PM me!
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Please Chime In....
True, true, TRUE! The one time I nearly hit the deck was after I poked my thumb with a staple...what a wimp to turn pale and woozy! And I've been an ER nurse for years!
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I'm pregnant and starting a new job, do I tell my employer???
I agree with Steph on this one. If they want you, they'll hire you, pregnant or not. If they just want a body to fill a spot, you will find out pretty quick...and it may not be a place where you want to work. A unit that respects employees takes pregancies and families in stride. While you are under no obligation to disclose, when I have interviewed prospective employees, I have always appreciated honesty. The element of trust is an important one. Whatever you decide, you will pick the right approach for you....congrats on the baby and best of luck to you!
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The Third Way is dead... sort of
have to agree...I hope we have heard the last of it! Much as our current system is not perfect, its still tried and true! The lack of details/plans were major cause of discomfort...
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UK RN needs advice/wise words
Hi there, Just saw this thread...To answer your question is difficult...Fraser Health is a large health authority, divided into 3 regions with 4 hospitals in each. Fraser North - Royal Columbian Hospital in New Westminster, Burnaby General in Burnaby, Eagle Ridge in Port Moody, and Ridge Meadows in Maple Ridge. Fraser South - Surrey Memorial in Surrey, Delta Hospital, Peace Arch in White Rock, and Langley Memorial in Langley. Fraser East - MSA Hospital in Abbotsford, Mission Memorial in Mission, Chilliwack General in Chilliwack, and Fraser Canyon in Hope. The smaller hospitals are in Hope, Mission, and Delta, and have limited surgeries. RCH, SMH, and MSA are the largest in each of the regions. Of these 3, RCH would have the most variety and most of the specialties, but I don't think they do all the heart surgeries (I could be wrong here as I don't work there). So if you are looking for variety, either of these 3 would have it, with MSA being the smallest of the 3 but still must make referrals to SMH/RCH. The one advantage MSA has is they are building a new state of the art hospital which is to open within 2 years. Housing prices are the most expensive in Fraser North and South, and get cheaper the farther you move out into the Fraser Valley (Fraser East). Many choose to live a bit further out, but then have to make the freeway commute across the Port Mann bridge or Patullo bridge which can be a bottle neck! I have worked at SMH, LMH, MSA, and Mission. Langley is a nice community but growing rapidly. The same with Surrey, but busier. White Rock is beautiful, touristy in the summer, but housing is expensive unless you are independently wealthy! In the valley it is a bit more rural and housing is cheaper, Abbotsford and Mission tend to have younger families, and the population is expected to increase over the next 10 years. The whole Fraser health Authority is undergoing organizational change right now, realigning directors etc and just hired a new chief nursing officer. Wish I could be more specific about surgical units, but have not worked surgery for several years! So i hope this info about FH is helpful to you. One thing about FH is that they are very good with supporting nurses for specialy education, so if you apply for a program and are accepted, they pay books, tuition and salary. You should also be offered some relocation assistance the last I heard. Good luck to you! Oh, and the Olympics are coming in 2010...you'll have people coming out of the woodwork wanting to stay with you! :chuckle edited: the link if you are interested is http://www.fraserhealth.ca
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Diluting IV push
It wouldn't hurt to ask your preceptor the rationale for not diluting the med, even though it is recommended in your drug book (not in a challenging way). Perhaps there are hospital guidelines regarding the dilution of meds that you have not yet had an opportunity to learn about. I would check to see if your hospital has a pharmacy medication administration manual. If the question came up with morphine, it may come up again with other drugs, and its much better to be prepared and know where your reference material is.
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How to call a code?
Once an arrest is identified, the code button on the wall above the pts. bed is pushed, and the alarm rings at the station...the unit clerk phones a number that is connected to the overhead paging system, and a code is called hospital wide which alerts the code team. At the same time the nurse usually shouts down the hallway to get help, and enough people respond to bring the crash cart and assist until the code team arrives. Similar situation at other hospitals I've worked at, only some do not have code buttons, and it is usually shout down the hall to summon help and get the code team.
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Douglas/langara/kwantlen/---help
No, not true....a regular program.
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Psych Nurse ="not a REAL nurse"?
Psych nurses are absolutely "real" nurses in the same way that ICU nurses are nurses, and the same for ER, med-surg, L/D nurses etc. I know that there are still some nurses out there that believe that if you aren't working in an acute/critical care area that you couldn't possibly be a real nurse, and I also remember hearing that nurses working in LTC were looked upon as those that didn't want to think too much or work too hard...thankfully these attitudes and beliefs are becoming less and less common. I've been nursing since the days of the dinosaurs, and I've seen the pendulum swing! I wonder if some of this psych 'not a real nurse' is a hold over from the days when mental illness had such a stigma surrounding it, in that mental illnesses could not possibly be as urgent or as 'important' as a real physical illness...just a thought.
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RN Scrubs
The hospital I work at now has no dress code, wear any color and any style...unfortunately, we have a couple of nurses who take this literally and look like they are wearing pyjamas....They get this wounded look if you say anything and say "What are you looking at....they're made out of cotton!" Looks like he** ...very unprofessional looking. The last hospital I worked at, all the units had color coded scrubs, easily identifiable and the staff loved it!
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Most easy job in Nursing?
What area of area of Canada are you referring to? In BC, despite the shortage, we need to at least be enrolled in a master's program to be instructing RN students, its hardly "pretty easy", and last I checked the salary was nowhere close! Can you tell me where they are hiring instructors with no BSN for $80 an hour....I'll pack my bags!
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Atheist or Agnostic?
It will depend on you. If you treat your co-workers respectfully and your patients holistically, and you don't try to impose your beliefs on anyone else, I suspect you will feel comfortable in your work setting. Take the same setting, but you announce to all that you are an atheist, find yourself unable to support your patients or challenge your coworkers beliefs, I suspect you might have a little difficulty and end up defending yourself on a daily basis. My feeling is religion is best kept private in the workplace along with your your sex life and how much money you have in the bank.