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.

Trauma1RN

Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  1. Applied to 3, got into the first two I interviewed at.
  2. Because it's a Friday at 3:30pm and the MDA wants to go home...
  3. On my unit we use mannitol for increased ICP's, not to prevent swelling. If a CT shows cerebral edema we hang a hypertonic saline like 3%, and in extreme cases I have seen 24% used. If a bone flap was removed soon enough I have seen good outcomes, but the majority of the time I see it major damage has been sustained and it significantly effects the patients quality of life.
  4. If I were your friend I would take the extra learning opportunity and make the best of it. As long as she works hard her competence will show itself on its own. I doubt she will have to explain herself to anyone because most people will come up with their own conclusions. I remember new nurses staying late to finish things up and tidy up their assignment, and they end up being strong nurses. Its the ones who refuse to stay late and have that "shift worker" mentality that are the ones to be concerned about.
  5. Typically before someone herniates their brainstem their HR with go through the roof along with their blood pressure. Your first instinct is to grab some labetalol, but if you push it you will be sorry in a few minutes. They will brady down shortly after usually.
  6. What is the respiratory rate? Are they over loaded? Do they need lasix? Do they have COPD? If they have COPD you could knock out their respiratory drive with a NRB. Being a new grad in the ICU you need to ask questions, the ones who don't are the ones who get into trouble. Ask your respiratory therapist for suggestions, they may know the patient from previous hospitilizations, and should be aware of the problem if the patient is already on HiFlow. My suggestion is to find yourself a few reliable/knowledgable resources on your unit and develop a relationship with them. It takes a long time to be comfortable in the ICU as a RN, but keep at it and it will be rewarding.
  7. I work at a 1,100 bed teaching hospital and I am good friends with a RRT nurse. We have 2-3 RRT RN's on at any given time. They go to codes, get rapid response calls, and a variety of other things. As an ICU nurse I call them to accompany my patients to CAT scan or when traveling, its hit or miss when they have the time, but it helps when they do. The help out a lot on the med surg floors, if a patient goes bad on the floor then 2 RRT's come and take them to where ever they need to go, they are not allowed to leave until the patient is in the hands of another ICU RN. They also responsible to go to every fall occurence in the hospital and take them to head CT ect. They are heavily untilized in my hospital and I really believe the positions are justified and profitable to a health system. RRT's in my hospital have been ICU RN's for a long time, usually over 10 years. They don't necessarily get paid for what they do, they get paid for what they know.
  8. You know your a Neuro RN when: You SDH patient's BP sky rockets and their heart rate goes to about 180 and your first thought is "better get some Atropine"
  9. I will have a year this week in the SICU at Royal Oak. I am happy with my unit and job. I see a lot, and the pay is competitive. My manager holds people accountable, is fair, and leaves you alone. At Royal Oak the critical care tower is as follows: 2 East is a 20 bed Cardiac SICU, 3 East is a 14 bed Neuro/Trauma SICU with 6 Surgical Progressive beds, 4 East is a 20 bed MICU, 5 East is a 20 bed Neuro/Trauma SICU, and 6 East is a 20 bed non-surgical CCU. We are a Level 1 Trauma center. There are plans to build a addition to the EC, a new OR, and a new 40 bed critical care area(so we hear). Oh yeah, midnight shift diff is $2.50. Weekends and Afternoon shift diff is $2.00. Hope this helps.
  10. Do you have a large population of penetrating injuries? Thats the one thing I wish I saw more of.
  11. My unit is a 20 bed Level 1 Neuro/Trauma unit. We use invasive monitoring such as swans, a-lines, bolts, caminos, continuous bladder pressures, CVP's etc. Our neuro patients seem to come in waves, summer is trauma season so we have more currently. We have our fair share of thoracic patients as well. Some of the more interesting things I have done is open bellys at the bedside, I have witnessed cardiac massage, ran two level one infusers at once(put about 30 units of blood and 30 liters of fluid), and have been in many codes. Some procedures are done at the bedside, such as trachs and pegs. However, its not always guts and glory. We have the patients that should have transfered days ago... and have people admitted that don't need the SICU, and get the medical overflow occasionally also. Our penetrating injury population is low, about 5%, because we are a suburban hospital. Thats mine, so whats your unit like?
  12. It honestly surprises me how many people are losing respect for M.D's these days. Nurses especially, if you are going to act like you know everything a M.D does then go to medical school and stop complaining about you pay.
  13. Hey guys and gals. I am a Macomb from 07'. My tip would be to get a N-CLEX review book and study the specific sections before your test i.e the Cardiac chapters for the Cardiac exams... duuh.:nuke: While I was studying for the N-CLEX I was slapping myself when I would read questions from the review books that were almost verbatem on the exam. Macomb is honestly the best school around, be proud that you are in the best school in southeast michigan.
  14. I guess the way that I look at it is... you aren't going to solve their problem by not sending them home with a PICC line, and you most likely won't be able to find access when they need the abx if they didn't have the PICC. If they are not serious about giving up the drugs they will get high with a PICC, or without one.
  15. I totally agree with the above poster. I started as a new grad in a neuro/trauma SICU in January as a GN. I did have two years prior experience on a med surg floor as a aide and then a tech. Seems like all of the staff is telling me that I am doing great and are impressed with me so far. However, another one of the GN's I started with on my unit was let go last week because they were not picking it up according to the higer ups. I think it depends on your personality and prior experience. There is no doubt that I am where I am supposed to be. I hope it works out for you.

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.