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What Is Your Most Gross, Yucky, Disgusting Nursing Horror Story?
One time in the OR, I scrubbed for an Ex-Lap case. The patient is a young male in his early 20s and has been suffering stomach pains since he was a child (so long, imagine that pain...). When the patient was opened up, the surgeons found out that the patient has adhesive band formations on his intestines. So they had to bring out the whole intestine. After doing adhesiolysis, they were returning the whole intestine back. Unfortunately, it won't fit (as opposed to what our teacher said that it would easily coil back after stretching and would fit easily when returned). So they had to milk the feces out of the intestine starting from the ascending tract (where as we all know the feces ain't in its solid form yet). While milking, there were loud farting sounds. After the incision has been closed and the linens were removed, a pool of liquid stool was there. Erm...I think it was green...
- What Is Your Most Gross, Yucky, Disgusting Nursing Horror Story?
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Why Women Take So Long in the Bathroom
So true! Thanks for posting, made me laugh a lot!
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Loculated Pleural Effusion & NCP for CTT
Need help with loculated pleural effusion. How do you describe it? The Brunner (and some other) books describe it as being "walled-off". Sorry if I don't get what it means but it's one of the things that make it a bit harder for us foreign students when it comes to understanding the textbooks. Though we understand English, we don't usually use some common words like walled-off and others because it's not taught at school and we don't use them (currently looking for dunce smilie but can't find one ) :smackingf I've searched the net and browsed books but only a few contain it and with the definitions I get, I'm still dumbfounded :uhoh21: About the NCP, my instructor suggested/told me that another appropriate NCP for my patient is "Altered comfort" (to closed thoracostomy tube?). It's not found in the Nanda. The patient is a 5-month old baby so I can't do some distractions like magazine-reading. There're also no toys there because it's a Pulmonary CCU. Are there any other ways to provide comfort to the baby? Aside from giving pain relievers as ordered, what are the appropriate non-pharmacologic interventions I can do? Thanks a million in advance! :)
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Help with ARF secondary to AGE
Thanks very much for your help for the third time :)
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Help with ARF secondary to AGE
Hi everyone! My groupmates and I are currently working on a case study about a patient diagnosed with Acute Renal Failure secondary to Acute Gastroenteritis. For the pathophysiology part, how can AGE lead to ARF? Our patient has hemorrhage. From the Brunner Med-Surg book by Smeltzer [et al.], it said that hemorrhage is one of the causes of Prerenal ARF. How exactly does it happen? My presumptions are the gastrointestinal inflammation + hemorrhage compresses the kidneys and therefore causes poor GFR. Our patient's urinalysis shows increased BUN & Crea levels in the urine. If this is the case, can this still be elaborated? Thanks a million in advance! Ails
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Help: Relation of Inguinal Hernia with High Risk Pregnancy Report
What is the relation of inguinal hernia to high risk pregnancy? All I know is that when the intestine gets incarcerated in the inguinal canal, it carries with it a uterine ligament. Which is it? And how is it detrimental to pregnancy? Thanks a million! By the way, here's a copy of the paper I submitted to our instructor. I'm going to do an oral report next week about it, hope you could give me additional inputs: :) Thanks very much to Daytonite's previous reply. Unfortunately, my first post was removed due to some reasons. Here's an edited post. Thanks again! :imbar
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Help: Relation of Inguinal Hernia with High Risk Pregnancy Report
Can anyone help me with my case report? My case is a high risk pregnant woman with inguinal hernia. I'm going to have my oral report to my clinical instructor next week and I still haven't figured out how inguinal hernia can be detrimental to pregnancy. By the way, we are asked to do our own written reports ovenight and submit them the next day. That's why I wasn't able to really find out exactly how it goes. I was only able to find out that when the intestine gets incarcerated in the inguinal canal, it carries with it a uterine ligament. Which uterine ligament is it? And if you happen to know anything helpful related to my report, kindly teach me. Thank you very much! I really put my heart in doing my reports...unlike my classmates who just "copy then paste". I really hate that. Again, thanks a million!
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What do you think about floaters?
I do have one tiny floater which I got last April or May. It shrunk but it did not completely go away. I can't imagine how other people with severe floaters feel. I found this online petition for cure on floaters. Maybe some of you who would like to support the petition make an entry there: http://www.petitiononline.com/qd2584/petition.html There are videos and photos of how a person with floaters see. This site has good visuals: http://www.eyefic.com
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Negativity????!!!!!!!
Just this April/May, our teachers (all nurses) were having heat between them. It was like a previous faculty member vs. the new faculty. Because of this fight, the new faculty had intentions of resigning. The result, that previous faculty member resigned. One of the previous faculty members (not a nurse) was so disappointed with our teachers having the fact that they're all nurses, yet they fight each other. Speaking of negativity, one of our new teachers has a very strong personality and is one of them annoying "know-it-alls". Yes, she has experience but no need to make students feel inferior, DUH :angryfire
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Charting Bloopers
Our teacher always tells us that in writing nurse's notes, it should include the whereabouts and activities of the patient. Here's something my teacher told us. It's not exactly the same but it goes like this: [...assisted Patient X in standing up from bed, walked three steps toward the door. Then, turned the knob and opened the door. Walked 10 steps...] Hahaha...too specific!
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Some Jokes...
Nurse 1: Hey, why do you have a thermometer on your year? Nurse 2: Oh my, which ass did I put my pen into? ================== :lol_hitti ================== In the mental institution, one of the patients is singing while in bed (in supine position). Later on, the patient turned into prone. The nurse asked, "Why did you turn?" The patient replied, "Are you nuts? It's side B already!" ================== :lol_hitti ================== Hope I find more
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will somone enlighten me?
I'm still a student but here're what I think: - Nursing is service, as symbolized by the cap, and the "reward" one gets from serving people and taking care of the sick feels so great. I think no other profession can feel that happiness. - On the salary thing, I think an increase would be better since nurses are the medical field's "frontline members". We risk our own health (some have risked the career they've worked for in years, some even risked their lives) everyday when we render care to our patients.
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Make up...?
Haha, I finally found a way to get away with it. Our professors said wear make up, they did not specify which. Since I sweat like hell, I don't wear powder. I also don't wear mascara or lipstick because they're sticky and do not make me feel comfortable. So, I just wear a blush on that lasts a whole day, even if I sweat so much. It's not sticky and I even forget that I'm wearing it.
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Please help, I'm hearing impaired but------
I am not hearing impaired but I've hearing problems. My ENT told me that when I clean my ear with ear buds, it pushes the ear wax farther into the ear canal. And so, I used to feel how it is to be deaf, sort of... I'm all right now but sometimes, I misunderstand what others say to me and that makes me nervous. What if I misunderstood the doctor? What if I didn't hear my superior correctly and then I did something wrong? :uhoh21: I need to go back to my ENT again... There are times that I get tinnitus or the high-pitched sound in the ear. It's not always but maybe five times a year I suppose.