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muffin7

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  1. Hi Everyone, As an RN whos Dad was on Hospice I would like to share my experience with all of you. My Dad was on Hospice for about three months in his own home for End Stage Alzheimers. I feel that my Dad was well taken care, but that at the end of his life the Hospice Nurse really dropped the ball. My Dad's caregiver called us the night before he passed and told my husband that my Dad was a little agitated. My husband told him that he needed to call the Hospice nurse who arrived at miy Dad's house about 30 minutes later. By now it is about 10:00pm and the nurse calls and says that my Dad is a little agitated, but is doing fine and is stable. She was rude and very abrupt and sounded like she really didn't want to have to work. She never told us that she had opened the "comfort kit" and had instructed my Dad's caregiver to give him Morphine q2hrs (for difficulty breathing) and something else for excess secretions. I really wonder if this didn't knock out my Dad's breathing. I was so upset the next am when I got a call from my husband to come to my Dad's house because he wasn't doing well. In fact my Dad had passed, but my husband didn't want to tell me and he didn't want to leave my Dad alone. I arrived 15 minutes after my Dad had passed and would have liked to have been there when he had passed. We knew that my Dad would pass soon, but thought he would have been with us through the Holidays. If we had known he was having breathing difficulty and that the RN had gotten an order from the MD to start the administering the Morphine, etc we would have come immediately to his bedside as well as the rest of the family. As a daughter and a fellow RN, I ask all Hospice RNs to take the time and keep the patient's family informed of there loved one's condition. Don't assume anything!!!! As a new Hospice RN wrote in another post, she was told by her Hospice preceptor "to fake it, until you know it" find another preceptor!!!!!!!!!! That is really bad advice, you have worked too hard for your license!!!!!!!!!!
  2. Hi Vahn Glendale Adventist is a great place to work. I enjoy going to work everyday. The teamwork is fantastic, the benefits are also great. I really can't say enough positive things about GAMC. Let me know if you apply and what you think. Muffin
  3. Hi Tesentas, Congrats!!! This is so exciting. What exactly are you doing? And do you think that I would be able to so something like this after six years as an OR Nurse. I also have a few months of basic HH experience,
  4. As an Operating Room Nurse, I can't imagine putting my post op patient in an infected room, contact or otherwise. The post op patient's body is already stressed and their immunity decreased.
  5. You would be surprised!!!!!!!!!!!! Beware!!! I wouldn't recommend it!!!!!!!!!!!! If it is pulled out, the skin will never be the same. Yo could also have possible ramifications from the patient/family.
  6. Your comment was not necessary!!!!!!!!! Why bother?!?!?!
  7. muffin7 replied to muffin7's topic in Camp
    Everyone else working at camp had one day and one night off per week. The camp nurse should have the same. At the end of my second week the Director went to a meeting for Accredidation and told me that she now realized that I should have had more time off than 30 minutes. She apologized and gave me a full day off after working 24/7 for 12 days. I would be up at night with a 17 y/o while she was having visual/auditory hallucinations, it was very difficult.
  8. muffin7 replied to saribeth's topic in Infectious Disease
    Hi Saribeth, Can you help me: I am taking care of a lovely 87 year old gentleman, with Cdiff (diarrhea and mucous in the stool). After a round of anitbiotics for a UTI d/t BPH he ended up with Cdiff. He was initially treated back in Oct. 2009, with Vanco and Flagyl. He has had four more bouts with Cdiff infection and has only been treated with only Flagyl. He is now being treated by a Infectious Disease Doc with Vanco and Rifampin and seems to be doing MUCH better (history of dementia, HTN, BPH). The family is so pleased. Any suggestions re: diet/contact precautions that I can give the family or caregivers (he is being taken care of at home) so that this horrible infection does not return would be greatly appreciated. They are so afraid that after this Vanco/Rifampin (two weeks) that he will relapse with the infection. I have suggested, Baby Rice Cereal, bananas, apple sauce, Activia (doc recommended), organic chix broth with noddles. Any other suggestions??? HELP!!!!!!!!
  9. muffin7 posted a topic in Camp
    My advice to all new camp nurses is that when you are applying/negotiating, make sure that you negotiate your days off per week. I worked last summer for two weeks and was totally taken advantage of. I had about three-four hours off per week. It was ridiculous!!! Make sure to clarify breaks and days off!!!! I didn't know any better.
  10. I am taking care of a lovely 87 year old gentleman, with Cdiff (diarrhea and mucous in the stool). After a round of anitbiotics for a UTI d/t BPH he ended up with Cdiff. He was initially treated back in Oct. 2009, with Vanco and Flagyl. He has had four more bouts with Cdiff infection and has only been treated with only Flagyl. He is now being treated by a Infectious Disease Doc with Vanco and Rifampin and seems to be doing MUCH better (history of dementia, HTN, BPH). The family is so pleased. Any suggestions re: diet/contact precautions that I can give the family or caregivers (he is being taken care of at home) so that this horrible infection does not return would be greatly appreciated. They are so afraid that after this Vanco/Rifampin (two weeks) that he will relapse with the infection. I have suggested, Baby Rice Cereal, bananas, apple sauce, Activia (doc recommended), organic chix broth with noddles. Any other suggestions??? HELP!!!!!!!!
  11. I am taking care of a lovely 87 year old gentleman, with Cdiff (diarrhea and mucous in the stool). After a round of anitbiotics for a UTI d/t BPH he ended up with Cdiff. He was initially treated back in Oct. 2009, with Vanco and Flagyl. He has had four more bouts with Cdiff infection and has only been treated with only Flagyl. He is now being treated by a Infectious Disease Doc with Vanco and Rifampin and seems to be doing MUCH better (history of dementia, HTN, BPH). The family is so pleased. Any suggestions re: diet/contact precautions that I can give the family or caregivers (he is being taken care of at home) so that this horrible infection does not return would be greatly appreciated. They are so afraid that after this Vanco/Rifampin (two weeks) that he will relapse with the infection. I have suggested, Baby Rice Cereal, bananas, apple sauce, Activia (doc recommended), organic chix broth with noddles. Any other suggestions??? HELP!!!!!!!!
  12. muffin7 replied to saribeth's topic in Infectious Disease
    doc, sounds like a flake!!!
  13. God Bless all of you!!!!!!!!! You are all very special!!!!!!!!!:loveya:
  14. Yes, OR nurses are real nurses, but PACU nurses can't walk into the OR and do a case and OR nurses can't recover. As an OR nurse, I wouldn't even think of working in the PACU without plenty of training. I have spoken to my manager and they are going to make sure we are cross-trained to work PACU. I work in an Ambulatory Surgery Center and they would never have us recover without training.
  15. One of my 17 year old campers medical form forgot to mention that she had both auditory and visual hallucinations. What a joy that was. One night she was sent via ambulance to the ER (severe dehydration, she was unresponsive), when she returned the next AM she told me that she and her Mom had decided that she did not need to take her ADHD meds anymore. The two counselors (that accompanied her to the ER) neglected to hand her meds back over to me when they returned(I ended up finding them in the camp office), but of course I needed to confirm this with her Mom. So I called her Mom who said that there was never any kind of discussion about her daughter discontinuing her meds. So the Camper out and out lied to me!!! Does anyone know if a "camp" loses accreditation if their campers have two many ER visits? I had several other situations where I felt the camper should have gone to the ER and the Director said "no." :clown: Also, can a Camp Director take medical advice (over the phone) as to whether a camper should be taken to the ER???????????? Well mine did, it was the craziest thing.:banghead: The thing of it was was that this camp was not cheap. In fact it was pretty expensive. I would have thought that they would not hesitate to go to the ER if I thought the camper needed to go. Which was one of the reasons I chose to apply there.

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