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Pts who assault, is there any protection or policy?
I don't work in a hospital, the MI pts I see live in the community and walk in to our center, kind of like a doctors office. Or we use our vehicles to transport them ourselves. Our pts are the same small group, so we know them very well. For the most part. I'm wondering if any workplace has a policy for when pts inappropriately touch staff, or even threaten to violently assault staff. I understand the pts are mentally ill, and our site deals with the severely MI, but are we expected to overlook the assault just because the person is MI? Is there any kind of protection for bmed staff, like if staff refuse to be alone (totally alone in the office, or in the car) with pts who have a history of assaulting or intimidating of that staff? Surely, there must be some kind of protection for us, esp in the event of a pt with a history with certain staff. What does everyone else do? As you can tell, I'm just a little upset over this. I came here to post this question first before trying to "make waves" with my employer. I really like my job, except for the couple of "touchy" pts, and I'm hoping I have something to back me up on this.
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Throwing out Med Bottles, What else can I do?
After sitting for almost an hour using a sharpie to black out names on pharmacy bottles, I'm wondering if there is a better way to dispose of patients medicine bottles with their names on them. Where I work, I only deal with their bottles, and the labels with names are tightly bound to the bottles. What else can I do besides spend valuable time coloring? There is no company policy and this is how the previous nurse did it. Every day, I have tons of them to dispose of and I need a better way! I used to work in a nursing home and I remember just throwing out the packages meds came in, not bothering to black out names. That's how they did it there, but here is no policy. HELP!!! and thanks! :)
- What jobs have the highest satisfaction for nurses?
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Can I be rejected for a job over the meds I am prescribed???
Well, the person who hired me actually IS the person doing the urine collecting. I don't know why I'm embarrased, I guess because it's proof I'm not as awesome as I appear to be. hahaha But I really AM worried that the person hiring me/collecting the urine, might change their mind. So, do I tell them when they collect the urine, or do I wait until the test comes back? Take in the actual bottles, right?
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Can I be rejected for a job over the meds I am prescribed???
I am assuming I was just offered a job, pending background check and drug screening. That's what a background and urine usually mean, I hear. Both checks will be fine, but two of the meds I take are going to show up on my drug screen. I am prescribed Adderall QAM and Klonopin QHS, as it shows on my prescription bottles. I'm also embarrased to have to show them my "weaknesses". What I'm worried about is, what if when they see that I take those medications, they call me and say they don't need me after all? I really want this job, so should I tell the lady collecting my urine that I take those meds? How do I go about that? It's being collected at the place of employment, I dont know if it's sent out or what. But mostly, can they just decide not to hire me afterall, because I take Adderall and Klonopin??? I was excited over this job until I thought of that......
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How do I learn "charge nurse" skills???
I've only been a nurse a couple of months and took a job in LTC, hence I'm a "charge nurse". My nursing school was excellent but we werent taught ANY leadership skills. I'm not assertive, and I'm being taken advantage of. My orientation, uh, there was NO orientation. I watched some videos and then went out to push a cart. I have only learned how to do something when the issue arises. And the answer all depends on who I ask, nothing is consistant. I'm finding out that half the CNA's are walking all over me, and I had no idea!!! Anyway, there has got to be a way to learn some leadership. I took it upon myself to look at the company policy and it's written with such broad terms, it is useless to me. I've talked to two in the DON office, and neither time was I told what to do, how to handle it, what I should do, nothing. The ED is a good person but spineless, so that's a dead end, too. The other nurses, calloused and fed up. I dont want to have to become calloused and jaded to be a good nurse.
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Sleep deprivation, why does it make ME so sick?
In short, I'm a new nurse and just had to stay up all night to work. Anytime in my life, staying up all night or not getting more than a few hours sleep, I am so sick and it takes the whole next day to recoup. I am sweating, my heart pounds out of my chest, nauseous, shaking, dizzy....why am I SO affected by losing sleep. There are other people I know who stay up all night and dont feel "good" but none of them are so affected. I'm generally a healthy person, no problems. But going without sleep makes me SOOOO sick. I hate the pounding tachycardia most of all.
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Working alot of hours on NO sleep, and a Dangerous CNA. Moral support PLEASE
I have talked to two different people in the DONS. Ya think anything has happened? Nope. And I had no idea we could write up CNA's. Now, I just need to "grow some" and do it. Oh, I finished the shift w/o sleep and everyone survived. I'm still not recovered, and going off for another shift feeling like I'm hungover. Thank you for the comments, too. No one really talks at work.
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Working alot of hours on NO sleep, and a Dangerous CNA. Moral support PLEASE
The thing with calling off, every single day for the past few weeks, SOMEONE is mandated on a shift. Then they call off or quit. Hence, a cycle. Because the call off isnt in due time, agency doesnt get called in. We've lost three nurses in two weeks, two CNA's. One day, there were only 3 nurses and 6 CNA's for 90-some patients. I've been mandated (along with everyone else) one day the past three weeks, but never an all nighter and come back w/o sleep. And ya know what? The day I ended up mandated and having to work the midnight.....it was my day off, I volunteered to cover. Jokes on me, huh.
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Working alot of hours on NO sleep, and a Dangerous CNA. Moral support PLEASE
Just wanted to add that I have done doubles and such before w/o any difficulty, I can work sun up to sun down and be just fine ....but forcing myself to stay awake all night when my body is used to a midnight bedtime...it's really messing with me.
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Working alot of hours on NO sleep, and a Dangerous CNA. Moral support PLEASE
my biggest problem is how do I tell a crazy lazy psycho CNA that she needs to prioritize, she cant be leaving the floor all the time, she needs to not up the O2, she ... oh hell, I jsut dont know how to tell this one very experienced CNA that she needs to do Simple things like, if a fall risk wants back in bed, dont' let the resident yell about it for an hour while you are calmly and sluggishly changing a wet brief!! I mean, someone who is KNOWN to get up and fall ALOT ..they SHOULD be a priority over a wet brief, right??? It was just a regular wet brief, no wounds, no outings planned, just a wet brief!!! and this resident DID fall.....she kept asking to go back to bed, her bed is ALWAYS to be in lowest position but was raised high to "deter" her from getting in bed....AND IT WAS WELL PAST HER BEDTIME ANYWAY!!! and yes, she got very banged up when she fell. Because of things llike this, I'm still doing insulin at almost midnight. I DO NOT have this problem, or ANY problem, with any other CNA. With the other CNA's, I actually do get to help them out and cut them a break when I'm able to do things like get my own temps. I actually LIKE helping them change or clean someone so I can see the skin, or learn a better way to do anything that the CNA has found helpful for that resident! And yes, I have told management. Everyone knows about the CNA, they all know that she is taking advantage of my inexperience......I don't want to leave my job, but I really feel that because of this CNA, I have found the answer to my own post about "how can one's job make them lose their license. " Which brings me to my next major cause of freaking out..... Sorry for rambling...after the mandated all nighter double, I have been home six hours and only slept for three. And now I have to go back to work, I don't feel like I am thinking straight from lack of sleep, I feel exhausted, I feel sick, and I don't know how in the world I am expected to even be a half-assed nurse. At the end of tonights shift, I will have worked 25 hours within 32 hours. By law, I had my 8 hour off time, but 25 hours work hours within 32 hour, thats three shifts out of four on NO SLEEP...I'm just so exhausted.
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What/How do I delegate to the CNA?
I get along great with them, I'm just not used to being "in charge" of anything. And I have no idea what to expect from them. But as for getting to know everyone, we all get along great for the most part.
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What/How do I delegate to the CNA?
I have only been a nurse a couple of months and work in a LTC home. I've had basicly no training there, but hey, I can pass meds like crazy. I absolutely dont know what I am to expect from the CNA's. And the one time I did ask a CNA to do something, she backtalked me and refused to take the pt back to his room. So, what do I expect from them? And how do I "delegate" without being a bitch? Being the new nurse, the CNA's who've been around longer are taking long smoke breaks, not getting vitals...one CNA I don't lay eyes on from 4 to 6:30 Please help, because in the LTC, with all the needs my residents have, I need help on the floor, I can't do it all alone!!!! One of the absolute worst, most unsafe and laziest CNA's has been there almost ten years, so I feel the facility really doesn't even care.
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How can a workplace cause you to lose license?
I'm a brand new nurse and I keep reading and hearing things like "I'm not going to work in a place that's going to make me lose my license" Also, how can what the CNA's do affect my license? I've been told that if they mess up badly, it's on me??? I work in a nursing home, and have about 25 residents to myself. I'm not understanding how your work environment can jepordize that. Stupid question, I know, but I work at a crazy place and I hear it alot from my coworkers about being afraid of losing licenses because of the workplace. Can someone explain? I thought you lost your license over things like med errors, abuse, fraud.....how can a job cause that? Thanks a bunch!:loveya:
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Concerns about routines
I'm new too, and working at a LTC home. My "orientation" consisted of taking on the med pass for whatever nurse I was with that day. A few days before I was put out on my own, another nurse did show me how to get into the computer and do some charting. Where I am, we have a sheet for our med pass with each residents name, code and room number, in order. At report, at shift change, I ask the previous nurse things like who is crushed, who gets grouchy if their meds aren't on time, who "routinely" gets PRN meds (that saves me lots of time)... I make those little notes on the paper and keep it on my med cart. When I have all the notes for a hall, I use it the next time. One thing I've noticed...we had an agency nurse come in one day and she finished up her med pass in lightening speed even though she had never been to our facility before. While we all had raised eyebrows, it seemed to be a silent understanding that "at least we have staff". Sad, I know. The nurses I work with have told me that I am going to feel like quitting and I am going to feel overwhelmed and then I'll eventually develop my own routine and it will get somewhat easier. I'm relying on that heavily, because I am very, very unhappy and overwhelmed at my job. I also keep telling myself that there are problems every where you go, reminding myself of the bonus I'm "supposed" to get and how close to home my job is located. I know what you mean about the nurses not knowing what to tell you or them being so busy themselves. The ONLY way I've learned anything at all is when I HAD to do something, knda like learning to swim by being thrown in the water all at once. Just yesterday I posted a question about how to get through med pass with such talkative residents. It seems my whole shift is med pass, and I work 3-11. I've completely forgot what the topic was here but I hope some of the things I said will help you.