Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

allnurses

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

mer_RN

Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  1. mer_RN posted a topic in Ob/Gyn
    I have heard people talk about the Bradley method. They generally speak poorly of it. One doctor told me that she heard people who wanted to do the bradley method of labor, were told my their instructor not to tell their OB until they walked into the hospital in labor. This doctor was beyond being ticked off. What exactly is this controversial Bradley method?
  2. We do the Duramorph then pull the epidural/spinal after delivery and they can have perc, motrin, or tylenol prn. the pts. really itch like crazy with the duramorph and some of them vomit a lot. anesthesia orders also have meds for these side effects. the pts who had general anesthesia for c/s get PCA's, usually dilaudid. i have never seen the pca provide much pain control at all. it just seems to make them very dizzy. when it gets to be about 18-24 hrs post op i usually call anesthesia and get the pca d/c'd for po perc and motrin. once they start taking the po meds they all say they feel 100% better and actually want to get up and walk in the hall and actually hold their baby!
  3. I get so irritated when pts. say... "I want to give the baby my breast." I don't know what it is about that simple statement that just makes me want to jump through the ceiling! The other thing is when the family/visitors arrive to the unit before mom and baby because PACU can't stand it anymore. So you explain they can wait in the room, but when the pt gets here we need them to step out for 5 minutes so we can talk to mom and dad and make sure the baby is ok. They are always most receptive to this and very agreeable, but as soon as the stretcher rolls up you could light a fire under there butt and they wouldn't get out of your way!
  4. call HR and ask the status of your application. I did this when I was a new grad and didn't get any callbacks. Many times they apologized for not calling and set up an interview immediately.
  5. I worked in postpartum for 4 years when i got out of school and am now making the jump to L&D. PP was a good place for me to start because I am someone who likes to start "slow" and work my way up. But don't think PP is slow, at least not where I worked. The pt. turnover is so fast, usually 24 hours, it is just a lot of work admitting and discharging. I never realized when I was in school just how "sick" the pts. can be. In 4 years I have encountered PP hemmorhage (all PP nurses preferred emergency over all others), seizures, active TB, stroke (pt. still in nursing home), postpartum cardiomyapathy, heart attack (totally out of nowhere, i still worry about seeing that pts name come up on the labor room census again, she was advised not ot have anymore kids), PE (ending in death), Amniotic fluid embolism (died)...all of those have happened to my patients and then of course the patients with pre-existing medical problems-paraplegics, strange clotting problems, and of course all the ridiculous social and emotional problems people have today. It is a LOT of work and responsibility and a lot of pts are totally ungrateful but then you have those first time parents that are so thankful for evererything they make up for all the others and make it all worth it. As for the doctors, don't worry about them yelling at you, it doesn't matter what is best for the doctor or for you, it is about what is best for the pt.
  6. i have found i always start feeling this way when i haven't gone on vacation lately. seriously, you really must take a week off about every 6 months. i have only been a nurse for 4 years but i have definitely noticed an increase in pt/family demands beyond reasonable nursing care.
  7. our census in OB has been way down for about 4 months now. management tells us this is the case all over the country and no one has an explanation. summer has always been busy for us.
  8. I'm sorry you feel like the nurses and the CNA's don't work as a team. The CNA's on my unit sometimes also say that the nurses are lazy. It is concerning that you feel the only things you aren't doing that the RN is, is assessments and meds. that is actually a huge part of what a nurse does and takes the most amount of time and responsibility for me personally. From the RN's point of view, at least on my unit where the CNA's primary responsibility is to get the pts. to the BR, do their vitals, we feel like we will be darned if we will go respond to the pts. call bell to go to the BR instead of doing our assessments or giving the pts meds they asked for while the CNA talks to her friends on the phone. But then again, I guess everyone also thinks "the grass is greener on the other side"
  9. I reccomend working at Inova Fairfax Hospital and living in the West Springfield area. trust me you don't want to live anywhere near Belvoir, lorton or Woodbridge. West Springfield is a decent commute to the base and to the hospital (20 minutes). get in the west springfield high or lake braddock school district (not hayfield or lee) and stay away from north springfield! you basically want to live right around the rolling rd/old keen mill intersection. look into orange hunt or cardinal forest neighborhoods. if you are trying to buy an avergae house expect to pay at least $400,000-500,000. when i left the hospital i was making $28 with 4 years experience and they have great shift diff there. $8 more per hour for night weekends! good luck!
  10. if you are miserable then STOP! the great thing about nursing is that you can work in so many different areas in various settings. If you want to do NICU you should definitely look into shadowing...but I reccomend working on a postpartum mother/baby unit first so you can get the whole picture. it's a lot easier to spot something wrong in a newborn once you know what is normal. good luck!
  11. When living near Washington, DC as a new grad my base was $21.35/hr (that was changed to $24 a year after I started). Rent on my one bed apt. was $1250. Average price of a 3 bed townhome was $400,000-500,000. Forget a single family house for under $650,000. I recently moved to south carolina and my husband and i are both making about $3,000 more per year than we were in DC and out rent is $800 less per month. My last rent when I left DC was $1800 for a 2 bedroom! i would suggest moving to atlanta if you want decent pay and cheap housing. but if you already own a house then why not stay in florida...
  12. mer_RN posted a topic in Ob/Gyn
    I just went for my new employee physical and I am confused about the NP asking me about "fit testing." I told her that at my last job I "failed" the fit test because i could always taste the saccharine and bitter stuff when it was sprayed while wearing the mask. She was concerned because I will be working in L&D and obviously will have to wear an OR mask. The fit testing I was referring to was for the N95 (I think) TB mask. Why would I have trouble wearing a mask in the OR for C/S? Are the masks worn in the OR the same N95 TB masks? Having not worked in an area where i needed a mask I realized there may be many different kinds and we were possibly talking about a different type. I have no trouble breathing or anything like that while wearing anykind of mask. any insight?
  13. OMG, for a second i was sure we worked at the same place! i would consider leaving, maybe doing something outside of the hospital-school nursing, health dept, something like that, you certainly have the experience to do it. but seriously, administration doesn't care what we think, the bottom line is they will save a dollar at the expense of every employee in the system!
  14. I don't live in greenville or spartanburg, but i went to nursing school at Clemson, which is about 30 minutes from g-ville (before moving here you must choose Clemson or USC, there is no neutral here! :-) ) after graduating and moving back to virginia from south carolina i don't think a week has gone by that my husband and i didn't want to move back to south carolina. after 4 years we ended up in charleston which is on the other side of the state from greenville and we LOVE it! i definitely reccomend SC and greenville is a really nice town, everything seems very safe and clean, not very run down and very affordable housing. good luck!
  15. i understand your pain. i too am terrible at chemistry. i think it totally depends on the teacher you get. i ended up taking chem 1, 3 times. and it didn't make a bit of difference. i have yet to be denied my first choice job based on my chemistry grade. and the only thing chemistry has been good for, for me personally is just knowing what KCL and NaCL stand for so i get the correct IV fluids! chemistry doesn't even teach you the norm K and Na levels as it pertains to humans. it may be important if you maybe get a job in oncology or dialysis, but even then i think you would be hard pressed to find a unit that would not teach you what you need to know to be successful in their unit.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.