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Duke FNP Fall 2015
I have not purchased books yet. I am still trying to have an approved MAT plan. My previous education decreases four classes I have to take and I am still awaiting word if I need to take an elective. What program are you beginning this fall at Duke? I am in the post-masters FNP certificate.
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Duke FNP Fall 2015
I am attending the on-campus orientation.
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New Grad-Recovery Room Position
I work in the recovery room currently. New grads do well with a good orientation in the recovery room. You need good supportive nurses working near you and very supportive management. You can do this if you like working in a fast-paced environment and focus on ABC's primarily and surgical assessment. Purchase the Perianesthesia Nursing Core Curriculum book and the Perianesthesia nursing "A critical Care Approach". This is a good start. Know your anesthesia drugs. Pulmonary assessment is very crucial. Know how to be able to insert oral airways, do proper jaw thrusts/chin lifts and recognize bronchospasm, laryngospasm and negative pulmonary edema. I am not sure if you will be doing pediatrics, but they often have laryngospasms. Recognizing dysrythmias is also crucial. The great thing about working in the recovery room, every day is a new patient load with new experiences. It is an exciting job and very rewarding. I started in the CVICU as a new grad and did very well, and so did my patients.
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Which exercise is best?
That is easy, ask yourself, which one provides more weight-bearing activity. You can eliminate two easily. Then, take the last two and decide which one provides the most full body weight-bearing exercise.
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University of Phoenix MSN Program
Hello all UOP Alumni and current students! I was a graduate of their RN-BSN program in October 2006. I am extremely happy with UOP and learned so much. I was so happy with the BSN program, I am going to start the MSN-ED online program next week. My BSN program was on campus, so I am looking forward to doing the MSN online. If anyone else is starting this program, please let me know, we can compare notes. Heidi also... All my counselors at UOP have always been helpful and promptly returned my email or phone calls.
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12 Hr Shifts Kick My Butt
I exercise, eat really healthy (eat protein, it will keep you going longer) and make sure I have spare time for resting. Getting enough sleep is half the battle. Exercising and eating healthy help sleep though. Eating foods that are closer to its natural form is best, stay away from the processed foods. Do not indulge in the junk in the nurses lounge, candy, donuts, cake, soda... this stuff is poison to your long 12 hour shifts. I do drink coffee in AM when I wake up, but will switch to a healthy tea in PM if needed.
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Non-medical family who think they know everything!!!!!
Tell them oral hygiene is more important than hair hygiene. A clean mouth prevents an array of infections and mouth sores. Ask them if you had to go without brushing your teeth for 3 days or washing your hair, which one would it be?
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Has ACLS been 'dumbed down'?
ACLS isn't "dumbed down". ACLS is set up where everyone will get through their weaknesses before they leave the building. Everyone I know including me have studied hard to pass the written test and we take it seriously. Perhaps ACLS should be considered more percise rather than "dumbed down".
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Working with angry unstable incompetent RN
I personally would drug test her.
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Help..RN-BSN Nurses
I worked full time and went to school for the BSN. I finished last October at the University of Phoenix and was very pleased with the program. The classes are one day a week in person (if you live in AZ) for 18 months for core classes. It took me 20 months because of some co-requisites I had to fullfill and I was able to test out of one class. It was a lot of work and I had some sacrifices to make with family and personal time. It was all worth it in the end and I don't regret it at all. There is a lot of presentations in power point, papers in APA format, reading and class projects. Clinicals were fun because we could choose where we wanted to do them. Getting your BSN makes a difference in your personal and professional life in many aspects. It is also a nice bridge to have in place when you are thinking of going back for your Masters degree. Regardless of the controversy, I strongly believe that getting your BSN helps nurses in many clinical aspects and can only improve care for patients. Good luck
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highly educated, but underpaid?
hmm...BSN adds statistics, nursing research, more leadership, healthcare policies, family and ethics are just a few things. You definitely increase your presentation, paperwriting, educating patients and research skills. Getting your BSN does make a difference. I did the RN to BSN route. It took me 20 months.
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nurses and fake nails
I'm sure bacteria can harbor on chipped nail polish, but I think the length of the nails is the most concern. The longer the nails, the more likely chance of increased bacteria as well. Also, rings are another culprit for harboring bacteria. The less rings the better. It would be ideal if there were no rings present.
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Pt dies on BSC today
Death by defecation, or death by elimination. I tell my patients not to bear down, especially if they are cardiac patients.
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Non-Nurses calling themselves a Nurse
Regardless if she calls her self a nurse or not, she is making a diagnosis, something a nurse should not do, especially a school health aid.
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Scripting Nurses?
You would be lying if you said "I have the time for you". A 1:7 ratio obviously should have a script that says "I don't have the time for you". Can you imagine what the patient will think when they hear 2-3 different nurses telling them that in one day? I think it is quite inappropriate.