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jifferte

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  1. Hi everyone (*waves). I've been a nurse for 22 years now, mostly in high tech-infusion, critical peds, and nursing ed. & admin. I recently applied to a school nurse position within our home district, and I have already started as a sub nurse. What do you feel are some of the most important things to know when coming into this specialty? What are your brightest spots? What are some of the pitfalls? Any and all advice is appreciated! Thanks so much!
  2. I currently work for them, feel free to PM me.
  3. To illustrate the difference between a licensed nurse and a MA, I offer several anecdotes. All of these have happened at my local provider's office over the last several years. 1. Weighed me with several textbooks in my hand and my bag. Had to ask to be re- weighed and had to explain why. 2. Auscultating my heart sounds on the incorrect side. 3. Called with test results and insisted that the doctor had to lower my dosage of Synthroid. Didn't understand why I have to be kept hyperthyroid (s/p thyroid ca with mets) 4. No hand hygiene And so on. Please note these are my experiences and certainly not representative of all MAs, but from what I have experienced- there is a wide disparity in knowledge base and critical thinking between the MA and the licensed nurse. I don't see how the MA could be effective in a clinical oversight role over the LPN/RN. Just my 0.2
  4. Sorry, that got cut off. Several previous classes chose the dresses pictured above. I believe they are from allheart and barco. Good luck to you and congratulations.
  5. There aren't too many choices out there and afraid many of them aren't very stylish but here are a few that several [ATTACH]22038[/ATTACH][ATTACH]22039[/ATTACH][ATTACH]22040[/ATTACH]
  6. ***This This This x 10000! As clinicians they are invaluable! I have learned so much from the great RTs I've had the pleasure of working with.
  7. Pretendinitis- self explanatory
  8. Hallelujah! Working with my best friend tonight!
  9. I have 20 years of experience, (18 when I was hired) and in my current instructor position, I am the instructor with the least years as a practicing nurse, so the short answer is no. A reputable program will want to hire instructors/adjuncts/ professors who are very experienced. The reasoning why is as stated before- how will you demonstrate chest tube/Foley/wounds/Ng tube/ piccs/ port care without having actually experienced it? These teaching exercises are important, as are the experiences that we discuss with our students relative to our own skill set. Complete your MSN, continue to work in a hospital or rehab and see if you can get a per diem lab sub position, then build on that. Good luck to you, keep working, get those skills and the go for it.
  10. I'm so sorry that you had to experience this. Hope you are doing well.
  11. This made my day! What a wonderful story!
  12. This is a beautiful tribute. As a mom of an 11 year old on the spectrum, the joy you take in your daughter brought a smile to my face!

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