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lithrlndRN

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  1. I don't work for a union. I work in a nice size hospital in a very diverse college town in southern indiana. When I started here at my hopital 3 yrs ago staff pt ratio was 8:1 sometimes without techs. Then we went to team nursing where the LPN passed medications, which was a disaster. Our LPN's are able to do a lot here, pretty much everything but ng and pushing cardiac meds. Our LPN's are strongly encouraged to further their education, and most of them have. Shared Governance works well, in my opinion. Although management does make the final decision, we get a lot of say. If you propose what you want to change, why it needs to be changed, and how it will benefit the hospital it is really hard for management to deny what you have to say. The problem at a lot of hospitals are that people are willing to complain, but do not want to put in the extra hours to fix the problems. Our tele floors like PCU is 3:1 ratio most of the time. I float around the whole hospital and I have observed what is working and what is not. I am telling you that floors with a strong shared governance and managers that listen are the most successful. Of course management plays a huge part in the decision making, but I feel strongly that if you believe in something enough and build a case for change, the majority of the time management will not shoot you down.
  2. I disagree with everyone who thinks magnet is a bunch of BS. When reading this I would hope that you would have an open mind. It is all about how your shared governance works at your hospital (or lack of). My fiance and I are both on the magnet committee and we are going for our designation at our hospital. My fiance is an LPN and one of the most involved nurses in the committee. She is going to go back and finish her RN. Magnet is a recognition of the good care that you do as a nurse everyday at your hospital. It is no different than an award for lab, RT, or any other dept. Don't get me wrong I agree that it makes the hospital look better. If your hospital is not to your standards you should either leave, or fix it. There are a lot of things that need to be changed at my hospital, but there are a lot of amazing things we do everyday. I just don't see why any nurse would not want to be recognized for their hard work. I think what happens is that a hospital starts magnet status for all the right reasons, and then when they get the status they quit their journey to excellence. I know my hospital will never be perfect, but I do know that we will strive for the best pt care possible. Our door to cath time is less than 30 min, we are stroke certified, we have constant observers for patients who are high risk for falls or extremely confused, on our med surg floors we usually only have 4 pt max per nurse, CCU 2 pt per nurse and open hearts are all one on ones. We have rough times, but when there is a problem we try to fix it. I know that most of you reading this think this reply is as much BS as you think magnet is, but I firmly believe in my great care towards my patients. Do you? We have been working on relationship based care (RBC) for the past year and getting ready to role it out to the staff. We all have the choice to have our opinions heard at our hospital. I highly suggest that if your hospital has not fully embraced shared governance or adopted RBC as a model of care then you should make it happen. In our hospitals RBC has involved 14 different dept in our hospital that meet once a week. This is including everyone from dietary to med staff. We want to make sure that every dept has good communication and understands each others needs to give the best pt care possible. I hope that maybe this message has helped at least one of you understand what magnet SHOULD be about. If you have any questions for me on how things are becoming successful at our hospital I would love to share, if you have any suggestions on how to make RBC work well for us I would appreciate it. Also, I am one of those nurses in a lot of committees and I work my full time hours weekly. I am in the committees to help make my work enviroment better, and to give better patient care. I think maybe we forget the real reason we started working for the healthcare system in the first place.
  3. Ok I am a little late on this conversation, but I disagree with everyone who thinks magnet is a bunch of BS. It is all about how your shared governance works at your hospital (or lack of). My fiance and I are both on the magnet committee and we are going for our designation at our hospital. My fiance is an LPN and one of the most involved nurses in the committee. She is going to go back and finish her RN. Magnet is a recognition of the good care that you do as a nurse everyday at your hospital. It is no different than an award for lab, RT, or any other dept. Don't get me wrong I agree that it makes the hospital look better. If your hospital is not to your standards you should either leave, or fix it. There are a lot of things that need to be changed at my hospital, but there are a lot of amazing things we do everyday. I just don't see why any nurse would not want to be recognized for their hard work. I think what happens is that a hospital starts magnet status for all the right reasons, and then when they get the status they quit their journey to excellence. I know my hospital will never be perfect, but I do know that we will strive for the best pt care possible. Our door to cath time is less than 30 min, we are stroke certified, we have constant observers for patients who are high risk for falls or extremely confused, on our med surg floors we usually only have 4 pt mx per nurse, CCU 2 pt per nurse and open hearts are all one on ones. We have rough times, but when there is a problem we try to fix it. I know that most of you reading this think this reply is as much BS as you think magnet is, but I firmly believe in my great care towards my patients. Do you? We have been working on relationship based care (RBC) for the past year and getting ready to role it out to the staff. We all have the choice to have our opinions heard at our hospital. I highly suggest that if your hospital has not fully embraced shared governance or adopted RBC as a model of care then you should make it happen. In our RBC we have involved 14 different dept in our hospital that meet once a week. This is including everyone from dietary to med staff. We want to make sure that every dept has good communication and understands each others needs to give the best pt care possible. I hope that maybe this message has helped at least one of you understand what magnet should be about. If you have any questions for me on how things are becoming successful at our hospital I would love to share, if you have any suggestions on how to make RBC work well for us I would appreciate it.

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