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UAP d/c-ing peripheral IV's
Hey nurses, I am in my last semester of RN school and we are discussing and researching the prevalence in my area hospitals of delegating to UAP's the removal of peripheral IV's. I have looked at the policy and procedures of two of the major hospitals, both Trauma II and both have almost a thousand beds. Both insitutions provide in their P&Ps for the UAPs to remove peripheral IVs. One of the insititutions includes removing peripheral IVs in their nurse technitian course they use to train new UAPs.The major issue that has arisen from this is a recent incidence of a UAP removing a catheter but a part of the catheter remained inside the patient's risk requiring the patient to return a week later with a severe infection. My question to you guys is at your facility is it permitted for UAPs to remove peripheral IVs? This is just out of curiousity not for a school project.
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Advice for LPN school
Hey Congratulations on making it into nursing school, that is a feat in itself. I am about to graduate my RN program this upcoming fall semester and just took my LPN exam last week and passed (in Oklahoma one can take the NCLEX-PN after a year of RN school as long as you have Foundations, MedSurg, OB, and Peds.) The first thing about any nursing program is to be somewhat organized. Try and incorporate the class calender into your own planner and if you have multiple calendars for different classes I would advise putting them all together on one calender. When you are in clinicals take any opportunity presented to do skills. I got to do loads of IM injections on my postpartum rotation because I just started asking nurses if I could help with the discharge teaching and giving vaccinations. I would also try and keep your paperwork in clinical light. Keep a brain sheet you can write all your information down and then put it into a format for an assignment. Have something you can do to decompress every once in a while, like reading a book or taking a walk. It can be something that just takes 15 minutes out of your day to clear your head and get some perspective. ALWAYS, always bring your stethoscope unless told otherwise. Same for a pen, paper, and a penlight. This is a good habit for the real world as well I have been told.
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Lab Coat NP Embroidery
The NPs at the facility I work at usually do one of the following: John Smith APRN Family Nurse Practioner Or John Smith ARNP Family Nurse Practioner
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Things you would love to say to your fellow nursing students!
No we did not go an talk to the professor grading our group presentation about you becuase we just dont like you, we talked to her becuase you: 1. Show up constantly late to group meetings 2. Show up hung over, drunk, or barely conscious 3. Come unprepared 4. Get us kicked out of the coffee shop we are in for talking loudly about partying the night before 5. Complain about how hard this assignment is, or how stupid it is and has no relevance to your future nursing practice Also if I hear the phrase, "why do I need to know this, I am going to be a nurse not a doctor" I am going to go postal. Yes you do need to have a good basic knowledge of meditations, disease processes, psychological development, and many other things that make nurses healthcare professionals. Quit complaining that the instructors are mean and trying to weed you out, for once you have professors who actually expect you to be responsible for your own learning and not be spoon fed information. You are going to be responsible for people's lives and well being. GROW UP! And the one thing in nursing school that has made me furious on many occasions. Those of you who decide to cheat on our exams. Thank you for ruining our test reviews as a class and the ability to ask questions about test questions. Thank you for pushing our professors to the point of having us inspected by security when we go to test. And since they decided to allow you to repeat, do not talk to me. Do not engage me, I do not care you circumstances. I have so much respect for someone who honestly tried and failed. If I am ever a patient in your hospital I will fire you as my nurse and inform your entire floor, charge nurse, and house supervisor while you will never, ever enter my room again or see my medical records.
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Things you would love to say to your fellow nursing students!
To those who are repeating this particular semester of nursinf school: "Im sorry you did not pass the first test, but if you have the entire summer to study what you were not able to get last semester, and you knew what was going to be on this test I have little to no sympathy for you. How are you going to be a competant nurse without learning from your mistakes, and yes it is actually desirably to crack a book in Med-Surg I." To the girl who tries to latch on to my group by sucking up to us: "No we will not help you just bc you finally decide to play nice. And no, "helping" does not consitiute giving you all the answers gift wrapped" To my clinical group last semester, "am i really the only one who looked and learned all my patient's medications when the clinical insructor said not once or twice but three times in preconference and postconference that the following week we would be quizzed on the meds before we were even allowed to touch our patient's medications. And it is kind of awkward when you are the only one who knows you have to assess someone's BP when your giving a BP med
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Nurses, do you immediately take bath after duty?
Omg! I want one. Where did you get that?
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Med-Surg I
Hey fellow student, nurses, and instructors I have just started my first week of Med-Surg I and so far I have been really busy with studying and keeping up with assignments to get ready to go to our clinical rotations. When in the med-surg setting as a student does anyone have any advice about how to get the most out of the rotation. Last semester we finished up our Foundations course where we spent out clinical time in nursing homes, although a good way to start by working with one patient and slowly transition to two I am defiantly not running to start a career in Long Term Care. Nothing wrong with it, just not my cup of tea. Any advice is appreciated, and if anyone has any suggestions for supplies to carry that help in the med-surg setting that would also be appreciated.
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Are the new nurses to blame
Speaking as a future new grad, the reason I decided to take up nursing as a career was for bedside nursing. Working in the hospital setting and doing clinicals attracts me to the role of the bedside nurse. Although I have only gotten a watered down version of what it really like for that nurse at the bedside, I still believe it is where I want to be for a while. Advanced practice has interested me, but I think a good solid foundation in nursing practice is essential to the success of an advanced practice nurse. I personally love going to a nurse practitioner for their highly developed assessment skills and the 'nursing' approach to treating me. And in my opinion, and this is just coming from a nursing student's point of view as well as a consumers, I do not think someone can develop that level of nursing expertise in only two to three short years. Just my opinion btw.
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PCT at TCC
It is a great class to take if your wanting to eventually go to nursing school. It prepares you better than just taking a CNA class especially since you get exposed to much more than just a CNA class. For example we did clinicals on a floor at a local hospital and then had a couple specialty rotations: ER, EKG, Lab, Wound Care. Here is the scope of practice for a PCT(AUA) http://www.ok.gov/nursing/aua5.pdf
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Are there any new grad nursing jobs anywhere?
Look at Tulsa Oklahoma and Oklahoma City Oklahoma. I cannot gurantee a ped position there are some good cardiac and medical floors needing nurses. The hospital I'm workig at is openig a whole new step down unit to meet the patient demand. The starting pay for RNs out here may sound low at 19-21 base but some hospitals give sign on bonuses to people who move here from out of state.
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JOBS in OKLAHOMA
I don't know about Oklahoma ctiy but all the hospitals in Tulsa offer 4-5$ diffrential for nights and a 4$ for weekends. And if one looks at the average amount for a luxary apartment with all appliances supplied at around 800-900$/ month it's really not that bad to start at 19$ base
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Resources you bring to work?
Would you be willing to share your report sheet?
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Nursing Home Emergencies- what would you do?
Thats a really good idea!
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What do you carry...
I have three pockets on my scrub top and to pockets on my pants: Scrub Top Pockets- ID on my V top. Penlight Sharpie Pens Stehoscope around my neck Tape on Hemostats attached to the end of my top Small notebook Patient papers Pant Pockets: Wallet Cellphone Keys All the clinical related stuff is in my top pockets and my personal stuff is in the pant pockets. I kinda wish I had a locker to put some stuff in.
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State of CA CNS vs. NP
In oklahoma CNS's can apply for prescriptive authority within their specialities