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Drug Titration Programs
Thanks for the replies. I am still working on it. I am aware of a few errors already. Luckily they have only been "underdosing" thus far. However, most seem to be getting the hang of it now, which makes it a little more comforting....I think. Still looking though. I spoke with our Biomed and IT depts. and they said if they HAD to, they would put a program together but would be worried about the liability, which is understandable. Our monitor company said "Why don't get the nurses PDAs, then you can get them a drug program for it". Uh....no. JS
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Drug Titration Programs
Actually, I am too. The new monitors do some calculations, they are just set up differently than our previous monitors/program. I actually had one individual ask me to make her a list(she didn't want to do it herself) about how the drugs are actually dosed (mg/kg, mcg/kg/min, ect). I asked her if she was kidding and asked her if during a code, she would say to the doc "Hold on, I need to go get my list" before she administered a drug. My feeling is that if you do not know that about the drug, either you need to go look it up, or you shouldn't be giving it. I don't know, just my feeling. My problem in telling my nurses this is that right now, it is a serious liability because so many of them are dependent on the drip tables. For some reason instead of mg/hr, the monitors print out in mcg/min, so you have to do a few conversions before you actually know your dosage. I am just worried that they won't recognize this and will fail to dose their patients correctly. Unfortunately, I cannot spend 24 hrs a day babysitting them and making sure they are all doing the correct thing. Anyway, it was worth a shot seeing if anyone knew of a program or book that helps out in this area. JS
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Drug Titration Programs
I was wondering if any o fyou out there use computer software to do your drug titration tables, and what type of software is it? Recently we had a change over in our monitoring systems and the company failed to provide us with the right titration software and it won't be available for some time. Hence, I am looking for a program that we could use to enter weights, drugs, dosages and concentrations and get a titration table....ASAP!!! Thanks in advance, JS
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Wearing scrubs home??
My shoes don't go into my house...but the rest of my stuff does. Our hospital does not provide scrubs, nor do they provide a place to change and keep your belongings. On the same token...I'm hoping that other hospitals have a protocol in place regarding isolation. Anything that is potentially virulent, or easily spead and can cause infection is generally on some sort of precaution. If you are visabily soiled, then yeah, you need to get out of your scubs at the hospital...but otherwise the chance of you bringing home something contagious is slim. Like I said, my shoes come off before I go into the house, because they DO go into an isolation room without being covered and you don't know what ends up on the floor. However, unless I know I was exposed to something terribly virulent or I got visibly soiled, I go home in my scrubs. I don't crawl in my bed with them on, and I go home and shower, but otherwise, I don't worry about it. Now that I am in a position that I don't wear scrubs everyday, I still do not have any qualms about wearing my dress clothes into a room if I need to. They come home on me too... JS
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Oddest things found in a patient!
I didn't ask!!!!! All I know is that that was his official diagnosis!! It was quite a few years ago, so it wasn't recently. JS
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Oddest things found in a patient!
We had a guy one time with lead poisoning because he stuck a pencil up his because he couldn't pee....yeah, stick a pencil in there buddy, don't pick anything hollow like a straw...a pencil might help!!! JS
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nurse not giving her meds.. should she be fired?
I believe that a person must consent before having a placebo, which means that they could sign a general consent for a treatment that says that may, or may not receive a placebo instead of the actual drug or treatment. They don't necessarily have to be told that they are getting the placebo, but they do need to consent to the possibility of that happening. JS
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Help!! Need some personal advice (not really medical advice)...
Okay, I just need some opinions as to what to do about this situation, besides freak out. On Tuesday I went in for surgery to have my submadibular gland removed. In January, my allergist felt a nodule/mass right underneath my jaw....and in February, I had a physical from my PCP, mentioned it to her, and she felt it, sent me to a general surgeon. Anyway, he sent me for an ultrasound and a CT scan which showed uptake of dye in my submadibular gland and the report read mass of submandibular gland. So, the general surgeon said I needed to see an ENT. He palpated it, looked at the scans and decided it needed to come out. On Tuesday I went in for surgery and supposedly had my submandibular gland (and nodule) removed. In PACU, I remember saying to the resident "How did it look? Were you able to get the nodule?". And I remember him saying "No, there was no nodule". Anyway, they made me keep the pressure dressing on until today...so when I took it off, I noticed that the incision was much lower than the doc had said it would be. To top it off, the nodule is STILL there, underneath my jaw!! I'm not quite sure what they heck they did if they didn't take the mass out that THREE other docs palpated and he felt himself!!!! My mom is going to call the MDs office in the AM because I am devistated and every time I think about it, I cry and can barely talk! I cannot believe I went through all of this and he didn't even take it out. He felt it in the office and told me the incision would be right underneath my jaw....well it's halfway down my neck!! I don't understand how this could have happened! I am only 2 days post-op and now I am facing another surgery!!! Any ideas????? JS
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Nurses Week
Our facilities celebreates nurses week quite well actually. The nurse managers hand out cards and presents (usually a pen, or calculator, note pad or something....last year we got pedometers). They also arrange for a free lunch or BBQ and have theme day one day, I believe tomorrow is "White out day" where you wear your traditional whites and caps (my class didn't have that kind of stuff though). We also arrange to have speakers come (education dept.) and this year we arranged for a humorist and also a nurse laywer whom I've heard speak before, who will come in and give a talk on nursing legalities and charting problems, ect. So, overall I think they do a pretty decent job at celebrating this week! It's just too bad the union and the nurses are in the midst of negotiations and are threatening to strike!!! JS
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Oddest things found in a patient!
I've got three stories... The first one about me...when I was two, I stuck a piece of yellow chiclet gum up my nose. When my parents asked me why, I told them "Petey did it!" Mind you, Petey was our german shepard. It bought me a trip to the ER where I sat for a good hour and cried, and finally the chiclet slid on out! To this day (22 yrs later) if I do something stupid and my mom asks why, I usually tell her Petey did it!! And the other 2 are from our ER. I usually work ICU but float to the ER sometimes....after the second time this happened, no one made me go back! And, the security officers tried to nominate me for employee of the month, but they really couldn't post why, as you'll see!! The first guy I had came in in a full arrest, he was probably in his mid-forties....anyway, we cut his clothes off and immediately noticed the fuzzy blue hair scrunchie wrapped around his member. So we laughed, took it off and rolled him, only to find a large piece of tape over his orifice....we took that off only to find a tampon lodged up his rectum. We never got an answer to that one!! Now, as I tell this, please keep in mind that I'm quite petite and I look all of 16 years of age running around with my blond ponytail, which made this all the more funny to the security guards who helped me. Our psych area in the ER is called the POD....so of course, that is where they like to put their floar nurses. So, one night I relieved another nurse from my unit and took over her assignment....I read over my charts and found nothing out of the ordinary...a couple of depressions, a drunk guy and one agitation, possible manic. Soon, one of the guys who as obviously the agitation one stumbles out of his room and asks if he could go to the bathroom. Since its the psych area, they are all put in hospital garb and in special rooms when they are admitted...so I told him sure and let him go to the psych bathroom. Now, mind you, our psych POD is watched by 2 security guards and 6 cameras, including one in each room, at all times. So a couple of minutes later, he stumbles out of the bathroom and his hospital pants fall down, only to reveal a Suave (Lavender) shampoo bottle stuck on his friend. Now, it had OBVIOUSLY been there awhile, because he was VERY swollen and had cut the end off so that he could urinate through it!! The security guys and I just stood there! We had no idea what to do. I put him back in his room and went to go get the charge nurse and told her what was going on....and her response was to hand me a pair of trauma shears and say "Go for it!" . When I explained to the guy what I needed to do, he freaked out and it took 4 security guys to hold him down while I cut the shampoo bottle off. Then, when I walked out of the room, there was a small crowd of ER staff who applauded me....and then I finally figured out that they had all watched me through the camera!! To this day when we have floats come back to our unit after going there, they always say "Hey, did you know that once someone floated down to the POD and had to cut a shampoo bottle off of a guys, you know what??". The security guys to this day will remind me that I was the cute young blond that they got a kick out of!! Needless to say, when they tried to nominate me for employee of the month, I didn't get it because they couldn't post why I deserved it, in a public place!!!! JS
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HELP!!! Has anyone done this? Advice needed
At our facility, holidays are worked on a rotational basis. You have a "holiday partner" for which you work one holiday, they work the other (on one, off one). The following year, it is switched around. You can offer to switch or work two holidays in a row. Sometimes we even have too many nurses on and so we take offers to have nurses come off the holiday. Our vacations and other things are done by seniority, but working holidays, everyone does their fair share. JS
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How to handle nurses who "Don't get it"....? (Kind of long)
tjsmom123: I'm glad that you found confidence in what I said. I truly hope that your experience is a great one, and remember, its what you make of it too!! I haven't had a chance to work very much with this particular nurse....for one reason and one reason only: I was promoted to Nurse Educator/CNS for the entire ICU (we recently combined all of our units under one new roof and see them as one ICU with different subdivisions). With this new job, I will be responsible for creating a mentoring program, which I hope will keep some of the newer people on track. I just started my new job about 2 weeks ago and already love it and have not even thought about the amount of hours I spend at the hospital working because I really do enjoy it that much. Hopefully I can continue to help people (patients AND staff) and make a difference. Thanks for the reponse.... Jen
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What did you learn today as a nurse?
Today I learned that there is at least one nurse manager, one director of critical care (MD), and at least 3 committees full of people who reviewed a policy and not one of them can spell the word dysrhythmia. I was looking over some material to teach a CTS class and ran across a policy (that I don't use much) that was changed over the past few months...and the 3rd line of the policy refers to "disrhythmias"....apparently these are MUCH worse than DYSrhythmias. JS
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What did you learn today as a nurse?
The other night (at 1am mind you)....I was helping another nurse bring her patient to CT Scan and as we were going down, her I-Med kept beeping. Anyway, I saw her keep pushing a few buttons and then it would stop for a few min, then beep again. Well...since it was her patient, I thought she had control of things. Anyway, it CONTINUED to do this t/o the entire scan. So finally, I went in there to see why and if the line had infiltrated or something and wasn't running properly. So...I go in and it was a double pump. On one side, she had labeled "KCL" for a mini-bag and the other side was IVF. So I look at the pump, and the KCL mini was set at 100ml per hour, running and beeping occulsion, and the IVF pump was off. Since it had beeped a couple of times already, I looked at the site, then followed the line up thinking maybe it was clamped or something. Nope, not clamped. Kept following the line up, and then ;aughed and said to the nurse "I'm not even going to tell you what is wrong here!!!" and made her come fix it... she had the KCL (which was on and running at 100ml) going through the pump and then hanging up on the IV pole with a cap on the end (not even connected to the patient) and had the IVF connected to the patient and not even running. I just laughed again and promised not to tell anyone when we got back upstairs! Don't worry - it happens to all of us! JS
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What did you learn today as a nurse?
A couple of weeks ago we had a kid who almost died because of a fentanyl patch. He didn't freeze it, but he did scrape the gel off and chew on it. After we saved his life and discharged him, the narc guys were in and it was all over the news that a pharmacy about an hour south of our hospital had a few boxes of fentanyl patches stolen and then they reported that one kid almost died from chewing on the patch (the kid in our ICU). Go figure. Also, I went to a legal conference last week and there were reports of people extracting the liquid fentanyl from the back of a patch with a needle before applying it to the person. I always check location and integrity of the patch, guess I never thought to check for pinholes or to make sure the med was actually there. As for what I learned today, is that sometimes you just have to go with the flow and let other people help you out...and its okay to say "I defer to you, I don't know what to do"...(regarding how to tell my boss that I thought it was ridiculous for him to ask me to teach an open heart class on MONDAY....good thing HIS boss told him it was ridiculous for me to do...and I didn't have to do it!). JS