-
What are the worst call in excuses you've heard?
I had a co-worker who had called in due to the amount of snow. I would have felt sympathy until I discovered she lived across the street from the nursing home and always walked. Not to mention the folks from "out in the woods" making it in that morning. Call me a chauvinist but I just snicker madly when these newly pregnant moms call in with morning sickness within a week of finding out they are pregnant, but I'll give you ladies a laugh at my expense, an ER doc took me out of work for a few days for a case of epididymitis. Only thing I came up with that could have brought it on was urine reflux related to lifting while my bladder was full.
-
Does Death Have A Smell?
I believe that death has a smell, just as I believe cancer has a smell. I don't experience the smell as the OP does. I smell it as almost a metallic scent that I can only equate with what betadine smells like. Then again I can also smell a UTI a day or two before the person shows symptoms. I just chalk up these "gifts" as being born for the job.
-
Anyone with Anxiety issues
Something that helps me on tests is when I do show up for the test, I do my darndest to block out the panicky students and stay away from those who are doing the last minute cram thing. I discovered that I am much more relaxed if I STOP studying at least 24 hours before the test. I also can recall the information much better when I follow that rule. If I study the night before or minutes before, then the information becomes scrambled. Being around people who are in a panick will give me the same mindset.
-
CNA in CNY?
I know the facility I work for has CNA training on site. The hours of the class are from 7am to 3pm Monday through Friday. Training lasts for about a month, you take the state exams and you get to work as an orientee as long as you pass your written portion. The facility pays for your exams and licensing. My facility is not in Syracuse, it's in Oneida, which is 30 miles east of Syracuse via the Thruway. My facility also advertises for CNA's at $10/hr for no experience, fresh from the class. Since Loretto has so many nursing homes in Syracuse, I would say to try contacting them. There is also VanDuyn near Community General. As far as I know, you can work as an aide in a hospital without the CNA certification, and most hospitals will train you. Depending on the hospital, you might be able to do more than what a CNA in a nursing home would be able to do.
-
Moving to Syracuse
I know of four hospitals in the city of Syracuse. SUNY Health Science Center (Locally known as Upstate Medical Center) is a teaching hospital, unionized, a state job, and has education opportunities up to (I believe) PhD in nursing; St Joseph's Hospital is locally reknown for it's cardiac care and has what I consider the kindest ER nurses in the city; the other two I know nothing about, Crouse-Irving Hospital and Community General Hospital. If you're up for psychiatric nursing, there is Hutching's Psychiatric Center. There are also some smaller hospitals in the surrounding cities depending on how long of a commute to work you want and how close to the actual city of Syracuse you will be living. There is Oneida Healthcare Center with both Hospital and LTC in the same building in Oneida; The city of Rome has Rome Memorial Hospital which also houses an LTC facility; Fulton has Lee Memorial Hospital; Cortland has Cortland Memorial Hospital; Utica has three, St Luke's which has a lockdown psychiatric unit, radiology school, and a neighboring LTC; St Elizabeth's which has a psychiatric unit, nursing school, radiology school, and is a trauma center; and Faxton which is affiliated with St Luke's and has an urgent care but I don't know much else about that one. Those are all the ones within an hour or less from the city of Syracuse. As far as pay goes I have no idea. I do know that Oneida Healthcare pays about $18 an hour for day shift RN's to start, has 12 hour shifts, RN's are unionized through NYSNA and has good medical benefits. Their LTC (where I work) pays CNA's about $10 per hours to start, LPN's $13, and RN's $18, non-union across the board, and just opened a physical rehabilitation section. I hope that helps.
-
Code Red/Code Blue/Code whatever....what do you have/what are they for?
The facility I work in has just a few codes: Code Blue - Cardiac arrest Code Yellow - Fire Code 44 - Workplace violence Dr Strong - Nursing assistance needed Dr Child - Missing child Green Alert - Missing Resident
-
Pimples, blackheads and acne
I have to admit that I am bordering on being a compulsive "popper" with my other half. But I should also add that I have been a licensed cosmetologist since 1994. From what I have experienced in nursing school (I've only made it through second semester) is that there isn't much taught in identification of various skin conditions. Would I let a nurse take care of my blackheads or other pimples? Probably not. I would allow a barber, cosmetologist, or aesthetician to have at it. If I were given a doctor's order than yes I would set about to removing blackheads. For those angry looking pustules on the face, I usually recommend the client wash with plain cold water. Though I haven't looked at or done any studies, I firmly believe that soap causes a rebound effect as far as facial oil production goes. Increased oil production = an increase in likelihood of blackheads.
-
Things nursing school FAILED to tell us
Here's something I wished they taught me in class: No matter how many times the patient has hit the floor, she/he will still try to get out of bed and walk. Some doctors need a reminder that their patient is not between the covers of a chart/set of vital signs. The patient's peri area that was as red as a traffic light all night will suddenly and miraculously heal when it comes time for the doctor to look at. Some of your co-workers will be shocked and horrified that neither the patients nor staff sleep on night shift. The hospital is not a place for a patient to get some rest. Make sure your partner lifts when "boosting" a patient or you will end up in the ER or tossing the patient in your partner's lap or both. Your second aide on a floor full of assist of 2's will always be treated as the "spare" aide and be floated off unit when it's time for AM cares. Chux pad placement is an artform, those who don't believe this will doom the next shift to a series of complete bed changes. There is someone out there who is teaching beancounters that mandatory overtime costs less than scheduled overtime... Who knew? The patients who acknowledge they aren't the only patients on the unit are probably the ones that need your help the most and ask for it the least. That little old lady with a fracture at both ends of the same humerus is convinced her arm is not broken. There will be times in your career that you will swear family members make mom or dad a full code just to be cruel.
-
Being a bundle of nerves causing problems
I fully understand that it was a med error, and by the program's standards it is an unsafe. I'm just more upset that my case of, shall we say, stage fright is making me look like an idiot. I can do the tasks well in practice lab and without prompting. The only thing I can compare this feeling to is when I stood for my cosmetology practical and my EMT practical exams. I truly shake through the whole experience. Anyway, I decided this was the last straw, I started seeing a psychologist on campus and am setup with a NP who specializes in psychiatric medicine. I hope I can get this dealt with before it's too late.
-
Being a bundle of nerves causing problems
I'm in my third semester of nursing school and I'm not doing well at all in clinical. I feel like I'm so worried about making a mistake that I'm making more than I should. These last two weeks felt the worst. To quote my instructor "You're not inspiring confidence in your patients." She also went on to suggest that if it was anxiety that maybe I should consider going on medication. I don't like that idea, even though it is most likely a useful suggestion. I don't know what it is, the moment I know they are in the room, I feel like I want to impress her, but at the same time I draw an outright blank on what to do next. Then I keep questioning myself if I'm doing something right or wrong. It ends in either a mistake or looking, in my opinion, stupid. My instructor also told me today that one of my patients had told her that he didn't think I was going to make it. Today's events were just the icing on the cake. My patient for the day, while being gotten out of bed by PT, saw a pill on her bed and took it. I remember her saying that she thought she dropped one when I gave them to her, I saw her look in her hand as well as reach down beside her and heard her say that no she didn't. Trusting soul that I am did not look at her hand to confirm. When questioned by my instructor I relayed the same story. However when they questioned my patient she claimed that she didn't say anything about dropping a pill. My instructor then told me that my patient either has a slight form of dementia or I'm lying about the pill. Given the tone of her voice and my none too stellar performance over the previous three weeks, I would be willing to bed she believes I'm lying about the pill. Needless to say, I'm really torn up about continuing in the program. I'm looking for some helpful hints, or words of encouragement.
- Mnemonics and Memory Aids
-
What are the item(s) you need most for nursing school?
I love this thread, and as a student, I'll add what works for me so far. 1) Med book specifically geared for nurses; I prefer Mosby's and the PDR Nurse's reference. 2) A good stethescope, Ultrascope and the Littman Master Classic II or Cardiology; yes they are expensive but your ears will thank you when you get that fluid filled patient with a b/p that sounds 50 miles away. 3) A spiral bound memo book 4) Black ink retractable pens, ballpoint but not gel ink, many facilities frown on gel ink 5) Highlighters 6) There's this reference guide called "RN Notes" that's a good buy 7) Bandage shears 8) Good comfortable shoes, I prefer New Balance 9) Colored folders, believe me when you color code things they get faster to find. Now for some optional stuff depending on what your school requires. I have to do concept maps with different colors for various sections so ballpoint pens or colored pencils in green, red, blue, orange, yellow, and black. Get a good word processing program that is easy for you to use and understand; OpenOffice.org is what I use. My mini recorder comes in handy for those fast paced lecture classes, I have both a digital and a micro cassette recorder. I use my laptop, when allowed, to take notes during lecture classes and it serves a dual purpose, my notes are legible and my typing skills have improved.
-
Pinning ceremonies...
:roll :roll The next year everyone must wear white scrubs or "orderlies uniform" receive a box of ABD pads and paper tape (for treating that half chewed a**) and listen to our theme song, "Wild Wild Life" by Talking Heads
-
Over vigilant about some of my allergies?
I'll try to address all of these replies in one go. First and most important, I'm not asking to be exempted from wearing gloves to change linens, that goes without saying I hope. But wet or dry betadine does cause a rather painful rash at the point of contact, a simple heads up on what's soiled would suffice. I'm not asking for a full bed change. As far as the theatrics, jumping back is over the top, I agree. I equate my reaction as if I had touched a hot stove, not really the running and screaming as my original post made it out to be. Poor choice of words on my part. The nurse finding protective gear for me was by her choice, I would have gotten it myself and do so when I know where it is. It wasn't on my usual unit and no two units are keep stock in the same area. Yes I could have asked, but she grabbed what she thought I would need as she was collecting what she needed. The linen that is usually splashed is usually any of the pillow case the pt has their hand on, the top sheet, or the rolled up bath blanket also used to elevate the pt's hand. A simple "I got some betadine on the bottom sheet, can you change it?" would give me the clue not to lean againt the bed for balance doing repo. I added the please change the linen part after asking the shift supervisor for her advice on wording. I consider her to be more diplomatic than I am.
-
Over vigilant about some of my allergies?
A week or so back, I had written a note in our floors communication book asking that all who use Betadine on a pt to please be careful to not splash it on the linens, and if it is splashed on the bed linens to change them for fresh, d/t an employee with a severe allergy. Most of the time I don't let things like being referred to as a jerk get to me, because I know I have my days and take my humble pie when it's handed to me. I have no problem changing out sheets with tube feed or anything else splattered on them, I'd even settle for being asked to change sheets that had Betadine splattered on them, provided I'm given the heads up that it's there. BTW, I was helping another nurse by holding her pt over for a pulsavac treatment that included betadine in the mix. I told her before we went in of my allergy and she found a face sheild and an isolation gown for me to wear in case of splashing. The patient had her concerns which were easily allayed explaining that I was highly allergic and I preferred that neither one of us had to go to the ER if I had a reaction and we both ended up on the floor. My reaction to the stuff is so quick that if I see anything that funny orange-brown I will jump back as if I had seen the devil himself. I know that's a touch extreme but for me, contact with Betadine feels like contact with a hot stove and leaves what looks like a chemical burn. After this long tirade I have to ask, am I asking for too much?