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LATERAL Violence. How Nurses treat Nurses!
Your answer is an example of horizontal/vertical violence. Your response seems intended to belittle and demean.
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working while doing full time nursing classes
Fear not my friend. If you want if badly enough, you WILL do it. And you CAN do it! Sending postive vibes your way!
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working while doing full time nursing classes
Yes, but the point is...it can be done. If I had a choice, I certainly wouldn't have worked. But there was no choice. Pregnancy is a totally different ball of wax.
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working while doing full time nursing classes
If I had the option, I personally would have done the accelerated program. It's like a bandaid. You just want to rip it off and get it over with. Although, as I have no experience with the accelerated programs, take that advice with a grain of salt.
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Sick and tired of the AAS BSN debate
would have been better had I spelled "experience" correctly the first time. :-)
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Sick and tired of the AAS BSN debate
ADN vs BSN...will it ever end? Nursing school DOES NOT make the nurse. Your experince on the floors and your own critical thinking skills make the nurse. ADN program = 2 years of gen ed + 2 years of nursing core. BSN program = 2 years of gen ed + 2 years of nursing core. My mother is a ADN of 30+ years and is incredible (though I'm biased). I have worked in a large teaching hospital for 8 years and find that more BSNs are lazier than ADNs. Some of them seem to think that because they are BSNs that somehow excludes them from certain nursing tasks. Like, for example, bedpans. "I need my tech. Where is my tech? My patient needs a bedpan!" Yes. YOUR patient needs a bedpan. So do it. And why the need to put BSN behind everything? Anyone who graduated from a 4 year university has a BS or BA in something. You don't see all of those professionals smacking down their degree initials after their name. Get your NP or CRNA and then I'll be more impressed. That being said, I'm a BSN nurse. And I don't use the initials. Cause I'm a nurse. Just your nurse. I'm here to care for you and comfort you and your family. That's what I do.
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Scared Of Poop!!!!!!!!! Help!!!!!!!
Poop doesn't bother me, never has. If you really want into this career, you get used to it. You also find out that poop is small potatoes. Try a necrotic foot with gaseous gangren. Now THAT will make your stomach turn. Or a patient in DIC who is bleeding out of every orfice and you are pouring blood products into him, knowing he's dying before your eyes. Looking in his eyes and knowing that he knows it too. You'll get used to poop. Trust me. It's other things that will haunt you. And those haunting moments will (hopefully) make you a better nurse and give you a new appreciation for life.
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working while doing full time nursing classes
It can be done. I was in your position. My parents let me move back home rent free when I got into nursing school, but they didn't pay my bills, my tuition or carry me on their insurance. I had to do all that on my own. And I did it. I graduated today!!!! ;-) Now, I didn't have a life, or see my friends as often as I would have liked too...but the sacrifice was worth it. And whenever I would get down on myself I was slapped upside the head by one of my fellow nursing students. She was a year younger than me, a single mom with two kids and NO support system to speak of. She didn't even have family in the area. And she graduated right along side of me tonight. IT CAN BE DONE!!!!
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Sometimes our patients try to help us out....
Nice recovery on that one! I don't think I would have been quick enough to think up a story like that.
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LOL moments at work
I had a patient once, post cardiac cath. Her sheath had just been pulled so she was still on bedrest. She had to use the bedpan so myself and my coworker were log rolling her onto the pan. As we were doing so, she was telling us about how hard it is for her to have a bowel movement, "On account of those pain pills I take." She then procedes to tell us that she often manually helps her bowel movements along. My coworker says, "Oh, well...you should be careful. The tissues down there can be very fragile and easily torn." Our patient cheerfully relpies, "Oh, it's okay. I just take a tub of butter and lube up my finger." My coworker face was priceless. I hope she designates that tub of butter for one reason and one reason only.
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Care Plans - What's their purpose? - What do you think of them?
My only issue with APA is that every instructor I've ever had all seem to have their own way of doing it. And their way is the "right" way. My sister is a librarian and she always proof reads my papers...and we both shake our heads cause we know that somebody is going to say this, that or the other is wrong. Of course, my personal background is in english lit. So I really miss MLA and I'm biased. :)
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Anyone having luck with jobs?
It really depends on the location your in. There are jobs out there, but as someone stated earlier, you can't be to terribly picky. I currently work as a tech in a large teaching hospital and we hire BSN and ADN nurses all the time. And yes, once you have you ADN you can always go on to do a ADN to BSN completion. Floor nurses (where most any grad will end up for the first job) are not judged on the basis of ADN vs BSN. The pay scale is the same. Actually, (and I realize this isn't the case everywhere) the major university I live by (I won't mention the name but it's one of the Big 10...you'd know it) puts out 80 new nurses a year. And the community college puts out the same amount. And the ADN have better luck with getting hired in because the community college's NCLEX pass rate is FAR SUPERIOR to the major university grads pass rate. I personally am in a BSN program (not at that university...LOL), but when it boils right down to it, your license does not specify what if you have an ADN or BSN. It just says RN. Keep your chin up, there are jobs out there.
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What do you hate the most about nursing school?
Oh, I hate a lot! LOL. But I'm getting towards the end and I am just sooooo over it. I'm tired of the papers, the ATI stress (we have to pass ours, I've heard not every school that utilizes ATI has to pass) and the information overload! I miss my friends, my social life and sleep. It should be noted however, that I am in nursing school full time and I work full time. I think that may play into my resent onset of crankiness. Seriously though, I have been lucky. You hear horror stories about nursing instructors and mine have all been INCREDIBLE! I've been very lucky. There are two things that I detest about nursing school though. #1. The amount of community nursing my school requires us to do. We have community/homecare every semester. I think that's crazy. And #2. Nursing diagnoses. We will NEVER use them. Ever. I've worked along side RNs for 7 years now in my job and we all laugh about them. Nursing Diagnoses do not exist outside of school. You can NIC/NOC and NANDA it all you want. You are never going to chart them, you are never going to use them. Those are the only two things that drive me batty about nursing school. :)
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Question for the CCRNs
I appreciate all your input. You've all had great input!
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Any Irish nurses...what's a day like?
Your information has been invaluable! Thank you so much! If I can think of anything further, I'll come a-begging you for more info. Just curious, and not at all my business, so feel free to tell me mind my own, but how did you end up in Australia? Where you looking for a change or was it just one of those things? And do you find the nursing in Australia is much different than in the UK?