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New machine to replace Anesthesiologists!?
Quick, everyone buy stocks in the sedasys!! JK, to be honest I just don't see it though. "Anesthesia is an art that must be carefully monitored". Besides this machine is only "projected" to be narrowly used anyway in only specific circumstances. Besides, haven't they have already been replaced by CRNA's anyway ...
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Did you feel CRNA school really prepared you?
What (in your opinion) qualifies a "good" anesthesia school. Through researching schools I have found it varies so much on how the curriculum is presented, number of cases, locations they are done, who is instructing the courses/how the school is run ie. medical school or strictly a nursing school or a pharm teaching pharm vs a RN etc.
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Rotoprone bed therapy
Absolutely. The use of a rotoprone bed is good for the patient. But yes, it is a MAJOR PI the A. The AACN article by Culpepper and Goldhill, you should be able to search them and find a good study/evidence
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PRO's/CON's USAFR Flight RN
Yeah thank you for the info/reply. I think after careful consideration and review, in conjunction with my life currently what is best for me is flight nursing. Meaning, non CCAT. Either way the experience and care I will deliver will be fun and exciting. Not to mention the patient population that I get to work with :)
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PRO's/CON's USAFR Flight RN
what do you mean by "wings"?
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PRO's/CON's USAFR Flight RN
I am currently a critical care nurse looking to take on a new challenge and gain a different perspective and challenge my critical thinking skillset. Additionally I want to be a part of something bigger and work on a more global scale (so to speak). I have thought about going active but for now, reserve or air guard is a better fit at this point and time. I have looked into both CCAT and Flight nursing with the AF and recognize both are a big time commitment. Both require weeks of training that would take me away from my current ICU job. I was also informed that since 80% of AE units do transport there is a almost guaranteed chance of getting deployed. I am also good with that. I also enjoy the aspect of being able to be a part of the "crew" as I love flying and being a part of the team. Figuring out what to take, load, weight, capacity for patients/flight crew is great! Along with training I take with me for a lifetime! Where I start to see an issue is job duty. If I am taking care of med/surg patients I would feel my clinical skills would suffer as the "time commitment" in the reserve as a flight nurse is heavy. I was told a realistic grasp is drill 1 weekend/month + 1 weekend (2-3 days) of flying, THEN deployment for 4-6 months. That is a full time job and some! So, if I am going to be spending that much time with it, I want to ensure I am using my skills and testing my knowledge. Can anyone shed light on this?! As for the other edge of the sword. CCAT is not in my immediate area and going for that would be great but with the same commitment AND driving 4 hours one way to the nearest squadron seems unmanageable. If anyone has insight to a) their current job and how it relates to CCAT, flight nursing or air guard...please indulge b) PRO's/CON's of everything c) deployment opportunities with each d) general satisfaction with current job and being reserve or air guard please pm me or reply! Much appreciated!
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AF Reserve in southeast?
Hey all, Recently spoke to recruiter about process, paperwork, commitment etc and wanted to reach out to see who could enlighten me on the more intimate side of being a critical care AF reserve nurse. Pro's/Con's, drill, how it works (or doesn't) with personal life/job. I am at the crux of my decision and want to hear first hand from someones experiences. thanks
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Any books recomendations?
I wouldn't worry about overloading yourself with books upon books to read. Get yourself one book...specifically one you can reference if needed. A good critical care book (the book from nursing school did great for me, it was amazing looking back to now and how much I can put relavence on and how much of it makes so much more sense) and a pocket guide (I used "the ICU book" by marino). the rest will come with time. As a side note-do not come off trying to impress the manager too much. You want to seem teachable and impressionable in your new environment.e
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long term sedation options
Interesting article. Especially when cost effective! I find at my facility, we do not use this combination enough (IMO) What do you use at your facility??? Opening the floor do discuss this article. http://ccforum.com/content/18/3/R122/abstract
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MICU vs SICU for critical care experience?
Agreed. SICU is an amazing work environment where you see multi-modalities and lots...lots of different patient issues. You have many different types of groups following these patients. Not to say MICU is bad or you won't learn or gain valuable experience but it tends to harbor the more chronic of patients. ESRD, Infections, HTN, DM. A lot of turn/water/feed patients as they say.
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qualities of CRNA school
I do not have enough "posts" to p.m. people on the site yet so I attempted to add you.
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qualities of CRNA school
well could you shed more light as to HOW you chose a school. There is obviously the financial factor, but does rank matter? Do clinical sites matter or is it more about hours of clinicals? Is picking a front loaded program better? Should I pick a school based upon whether I think I will get a job in the area (as in-same state)...questions like that.
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How do I know if I will enjoy Critcal care
well to be honest. it is task oriented. only after you get to the point of understanding what you are doing. obviously you have to be thinking about things critically and using clinical judgment and you absolutely have to "know" your patient for nuances in vaso gtts, meds etc...etc...but after a while there are highly repetative tasks. all i meant by that. i don't negate using your brain
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ECMO Ethics
well, that is the job you/we all chose. sorry to be blunt but it is true. nursing is difficult not for the hours, not for the tasks or attention to detail, not for being spit at, cursed at or cleaning s**t nor working for weeks to no end to see a patient suddenly expire...what makes this profession difficult is seeing humanity at its most elemental core. Haha, there is always someone to save when money depends on it!
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New grad starting in CVICU soon! Any pointers?
It is an intellectually and emotionally difficult unit. You will soon discover! As for "what to do" that will come with time but in essence. Be a sponge. Things to learn would be: drips (about 15 main ones-receptors they effect, dosage, what effect the drug has on the patient etc), vent settings (3 main ones), chest tubes (differences between pleural and mediastinal), all of your hemodynamic parameters/values and later down the road ecmo and vads. That is a short and sweet answer but there are a lot of good resources out there!