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allstudentnurses

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  1. They'll change their tunes when they start getting sued.
  2. I would also recommend this book very highly: Amazon.com: Fast Facts for the ER Nurse: Emergency Room Orientation in a Nutshell (9780826105219): Jennifer Buettner RN CEN: Books
  3. I have had patients tell me they came to my hospital because they had been waiting at Grady for 18 hours, not sure if that's true, but I have seen Grady have 80 or more patients in triage at a time.
  4. Congratulations, now be ready to learn a whole new way or nursing. :)
  5. I have to agree with Runner, I don't feel like I'm restricted in my E.D., I order a lot of things based on my nursing judgment and that is why I love the E.D. and will never work anywhere else unless I'm unable. E.D. is completely different from any other dept. in the hospital. I moved from med/surg to the E.D. as a tech and it took me a while to catch on with how things "worked" down there, but once I understood how things worked, I was hooked. Now that I'm a R.N. now, I love it even more. The E.D. is very stressful, you have to be able to keep your cool and manage stress well, otherwise you will not last. I admit, I get crabby at times when at work, but outside of work I'm usually extremely happy because compared to E.D. life, regular life is relatively stress-free. :-)
  6. Okay, I think I have the best one yet. Two days ago, a man came in via ambulance, chief complaint was he ran out of his prescription medications. Seriously, he wasted a 911 call on THAT. Why he didn't call his physician is beyond me.
  7. We use the GEM ring cutter system, works great for us. http://www.ringcutter.com/Index.asp
  8. I work in the Metro Atlanta Area, have worked in downtown Atlanta and can give you lots of information about all the hospitals and pay around here, message me privately and I'll help you out.
  9. That's why when I hand out pills, I ALWAYS tell them to hold their hand out, palm up and I drop the pill in their hand. If they drop it, they feel it's their fault and they find it themselves, has always worked for me
  10. Triage checks the temperature and unless they've been running a fever we don't re-check it as routine.
  11. @ DeadHeadRN, you're lucky. I rarely get any paperwork from the Nursing Homes at all.
  12. Had one the other night, had a "injury" to his arm, he came in via ambulance. It was a very minor bruise. He was triaged and discharged in all of about 15 minutes.
  13. I personally make an effort not to care if the diagnosis is valid or not, if someone comes in and says they are having pain, no matter where it is, I do everything within my nursing power to resolve the situation. I try really hard to leave the determination of valid or invalid diagnosis / drug seeker or not a drug seeker up to the physician. There have been times where the patient was an obvious drug seeker and so I told the physician that I felt they were seeking, but that's usually only in obvious cases. But... We, as humans, still know very little about the human body (especially the brain) and for some to say fibromyalgia is a crap diagnosis boggles my mind. How can you give a definitive opinion about something when you don't fully understand what you're giving an opinion about? It would be different if "you thought" you fully understood something and gave an opinion on something based on what you "thought" to be factual, but everyone knows we don't understand the human brain and it's a great mystery at this point in humanity, I think it's very presumptuous to say Fibromyalgia is a crap diagnosis, how do you really know? Especially since the brain is where all pain in interpreted and relayed. I hope I haven't offended anyone with this post, but I felt the need to say it.

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