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crysobrn

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  1. I think that babies physiologically NEED to be at the breast when they are brand new. What I tell my moms is "think about it he/she was just in a nice warm, quiet, dark, cuddly place for 9 mos. Now it's cold, bright, quiet and we throw them in a crib and expect that they will sleep for hours on end" I certainly encourage rooming in but if a mom wants to send her baby to the nursery so she can rest. I make it clear that the only way the baby can truely be content may be at the breast and he/she will have to come back out if I feel like they need to. I've only had ONE mom in the last 6 yrs be upset that the baby had to come back out. My babies never left my side while I was in the hospital and honestly they were nursed almost constantly until my milk came in. But I think that's the way it's supposed to be. I think it helped my milk come in faster. I've nursed each of my kids progressively longer. I'm still nursing my 18 mo old and I'm 25 weeks pregnant... She's never even had a drop of formula. Were there days that I thought it'd be "easier" to just plug her with a bottle... YUP. But I get much more satisfaction knowing she has had her mama's milk this long.
  2. In an attempt to keep our unit in business I am currently pregnant with baby #4 lol. Is it the best time financially for us... NOPE... But we decided to not put our lives on hold. We figure that in 30 yrs it will all blow over at our house lol. Another of my coworkers/friends is due two weeks after me... I'm not sure what they will do while we're not there since we have a pretty small unit. Seriously though we are down almost 25% from 2008!! That is a big difference. It means obviously that there are a lot less nurses needed, and way less extra hours available. I think May is supposed to be busy for us... but then June drops off again BIG time.
  3. I actually felt very bad for this girl because she seemed to be having some major symptoms of withdrawl already. She was very believable once she trusted us enough to tell us what was going on. I just hope she can truely get help. After doing some googling. I see that adderall seems to be pretty seriously addicting. And from what she was saying she needed a bigger and bigger dose just to function.
  4. We seem to have more and more women coming in to deliver that are abusing various substances. We are a smaller facility and do not have a nicu. I'm curious what if any protocol you have for drug dependant mothers and then babies that deliver. The other night we had a patient that was not supposed to deliver at our hospital. She drove almost an hour out of her way to come to us... Then after HOURS of complaining of vague complaints finally fessed up that she was dependent on adderall and had been taking 100+mg every day for the entire pregnancy. She was pleading for "help" stating that she just wanted to get off it before her baby was born. She was only 34 weeks and then starts contracting etc... She ended up being transferred to another facility for the possible need for a nicu. Just curious what your facility does for moms like this and nursery protocols too if you know those.
  5. Hi there mama. I nursed all of my kids successfully for a year (three so far and preggers for #4) and pumped at work. I also have several coworkers that have done the same thing. I work 12's although I only do one or two a week BUT I have never had anyone have an issue with me pumping. Other ppl leave the floor to eat or smoke so pumping is really not seen as a big deal. I make sure to eat while I'm pumping so I'm not taking a break PLUS asking to pump in addition to that. On slower nights I'd sometimes pump twice... there is only one night I can remember for sure that I couldn't pump at all and it's because we were super super busy and there was just no way to do it. I also have a double electric pump so that it doesn't take long (with my oldest I thought a manual was fine and it took me a lot longer). I guess it depends on how important it is to you. For me it was important enough that I chose to pump... there are moms I know that once they return to work give formula when they're away and they nurse when they're with their babies... Whatever works. GL.
  6. crysobrn replied to babynurse357's topic in Ob/Gyn
    We have had this come up several times on our unit. We have a new bed BUT we also have these old beds that we use if we have several kids under lights. Our protocol states (the same as the manual) 18 inches BUT our one pedi throws a fit if it's not super close. He basically says that it just doesn't work as well... Again it's been brought up a lot, our protocol has not changed and his opinion hasn't either.
  7. crysobrn replied to elanddeenrs's topic in Ob/Gyn
    I'm 38 wks with baby number three and we decided to NOT find out this time because of this very thing. I had a pt about two years ago that was having number three, was told she was a girl and we joked about what if the baby was a boy, he'd have to wear a lot of pink etc... I knew her as she used to live next door to me... Anyway the baby was born and the doc (who had told her that the baby was a girl) announces "it's a boy" and we all laughed thinking he was joking since earlier in the day we had gone on and on about that very thing... Well it was NO joke. They had a bunch of pink stuff and not even a boy name... I still see them at the store every now and then and they still laugh with me about this.
  8. I actually oriented to our unit at the same time as an older nurse that always thought she wanted to do OB... After our fetal monitoring course she quit and went back to med surg. I talked to her at great lengths about it and she basically said this. 1)She always thought Ob was a happy place to be and it just ended up NOT being like that... There are sad situations that you send baby's home to, then there are emergencies that may or may not have bad outcomes, there are fetal demises etc... She had a pretty rough delivery for a patient one night and although the baby was fine in the end, seeing that baby lifeless and being resposible for her was too much to handle. 2)Unit politics, docs, budgets, coworkers, etc 3)The liability and responsibility in general. We are a smaller unit, we triage our own pt's we have no doc in house. We do our own r/o labors, r/o rom, r/o basically everything... Then the docs are provided with our assessments and they make a poc depending on what WE say... That was too much for her also. All in all I love my job also. There are certainly days that I wish didn't happen but overall it is a great place to work.
  9. crysobrn replied to garfieldrn's topic in Ob/Gyn
    For us it depends on where the doc is... I mean if they're in house we can wait til delivery is pretty close before we call... Generally if they are in surgery for example they call to check on the pt before they scrub so they are aware that they are getting close before they start a case. On the other hand if I know that our doc is at home sleeping I'd probably call and say "she's complete, we're gonna start pushing" and they can make their way in... If things go faster than usual I'd page again and then they know to make their way to the unit faster. For multips on the other hand it's generally so much faster that I would call when 8 like you're saying, or even faster if I don't think I'll have time and things seem to be really progressing quickly. I just try to keep the docs informed. For what it's worth I've never precipt a primips baby but honestly those multips are so fast that it's been known to happen more than I'd like...
  10. We have standing orders for ephedrine at the bedside... The docs generally only stay 15 minutes to MAYBE a half an hour. We only have anesthesia in house during surgical hours so as soon as they are done they're off... Especially if it's nights. I am pretty sure that they sat down at an OB comity mtg to do our standing orders. That way the OB's have a say in what anesthesia is ordering.
  11. Wow, I'm sorry. I have a nurse that works days that is always wondering what we did all night... If I get a pt at 6:50am she'll ask, "why didn't you check her (or spec her or get her IV going... or whatever)... If she gets a pt at 6pm she doesn't do a thing with her. It's such a double standard. We seem to get a lot of the nights vs days...One of the girls I work with on nights always says something to the effect of "if working nights was a piece of cake and all we do is sit around and cross stitch... they pay us a differential... and you are still working days... you are the one with the problem" Hang in there.
  12. crysobrn replied to dodgemama's topic in Ob/Gyn
    Oh no. I also work in a small unit... The docs are occasionally NOT very fun to work with and since there are only 2 (right now anyway) it's not like you can get backup from a doc necessarily if you need it... Our director also has no clue about OB, the unit sort of fell in her lap so she is also not much help... Fortunately for us, the docs realize that we can make their jobs easy or hard. I mean if one of them questions me about what I'm doing or my assessments, I have to ask them to come in... They cover call for themselves 24/7 so they either trust us or come in and check after us. There are no residents, no interns etc... We do our own checks, our own spec exams, sometimes end up delivering our own babies since we have no one in house... I'm guessing it's the same where you are. As a pregnant woman myself I would never let a nurse check me every 30 minutes. I keep my checks to a minimum on my patients. Not sure what else to say... Have any of the OB's been informed of the way this doc is treating the staff... Sometimes they can make more of a difference than the actual nursing staff. We did have a doc not too long ago that was seemingly bipolar. She'd order something and then deny it, she'd yell for no reason etc... We started having two nurses available for ALL orders as well as writing up every incident involving her. She eventually was asked to leave by the other OB's they were just sick of her being the way she was.
  13. crysobrn replied to daulto's topic in Ob/Gyn
    We don't readmit to our unit. Once a pt is discharged she would be admitted to med/surg if she needed to be readmitted (we once had a pt readmitted to ccu who was 7 days pp and pre eclamptic). When they are re-admitted they are provided with a crib from OB and given the option to care for their own baby with the help of family... they are kept in a private room with the option of a family member being present for assistance.
  14. I think it's pretty common in smaller hospitals since an OB unit is made up of all aspects of OB... We do either L&D paired with triaging our own pts, or we do couplets and often have antepartums on our floors as well... We no longer split pp and nursery, unless we have a bad baby and that opens up another whole can of worms.
  15. I work nights and prefer it that way. I have a 10 and a 5 yr old and new baby on the way in about 5 weeks here. Right now, my kids go to school all day, I sleep. Dh is home. He also works nights but we work alternating schedules so that one of us is always home. When I did work days... On orientation four or so years ago I didn't like it... I saw my kids from like 8-8:30 and then they had to go to bed. I'd be gone in the morning before they were even up. Working nights I can eat dinner with them, go to work, dh puts them to bed I'm home to drive them to school in the morning (or on weekends just eat breakfast with them) then I get up about the time they get out of school (or a little earlier if need be) and go pick them up, hang out, make dinner etc. I do not work full time though, I'm sure if I did it would be a little harder to balance everything. Also with the new baby, hopefully by 12-13 weeks when I go back to work he/she is sleeping most of the night, then I can nurse during the day while "sleeping" or "resting" It worked well with my last baby honestly. I can't imagine being away from my kids for full time days... too much time away imo.

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