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Civilian Hospitals vs. Military??
Hi! I am seriously considering getting my BSN via the Navy, but I've been reading a lot of posts on the regular boards that give me pause. Some of the posts make nursing conditions sound unbearable at best. Understaffing, pay that's a joke, bad attitudes... Is this the same in the military??? I want to work as a team with people who are going to support me and that I can support in return. I'm not into "politics" and stepping on others to get ahead and that sounds like that happens a LOT in civilian nursing. Please let me know your thoughts on military nursing in general. Is there any particular branch that is "better"? Right now I'm looking at the Navy because of their signup incentives, but are the incentives there because it's an undesirable branch? I just want to be well informed and recruiters are great, but will always put their best foot forward - I want the down and dirty!! :)
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Ever taken Paxil?
Maybe it has something to do with your dosage. I was on paxil 12.5 very briefly and never had any side effects at all - not when I went on and not when I came off.
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desperate to learn Spanish
I'm not sure where you're located, but in my area (DALLAS, TX) some churches offer Spanish classes. All the community colleges around here offer them as well.
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What is your biggest nursing pet peeve?
HAAAAAAHahaaHAHAAAAAHAaaHAAAA!!!!! I LOVE IT!!
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
Yeah - I've heard that. *sigh* It's depressing. I've been looking in the paper and on hospital websites and it seems like they all (even LTC and assisted living) want experience of at least 3 months. Where are we supposed to get experience if no one will hire us without experience??? Sheesh! I have to echo Faeriewand's comment - this thread has been EXTREMELY informative for me (which of course was it's original intent) and I want to say a huge thank you to everyone who has posted and to those who will post in the future!
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Did you ~EVER~ feel this way??
Ooooo..... I REALLY like this idea! Thanks so much for the suggestion!
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Anyone ever have a discogram?
I don't know where you work, but you definitely need to apply for FMLA - especially if you work full time. FMLA GUARANTEES you have your job and benefits held for you a specific length of time. It also means they cannot LEGALLY discipline you for the abscences. Check with your company's benefits department. Good luck with your surgery!
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
I would guess that would mean cleaning up the body for the funeral home or for the family if they weren't present at the time of death. I don't know for sure.
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
I get the feeling you don't/didn't like being a CNA... Did/do you have more experience in a hospital or LTC setting? Wouldn't I have to take the same CNA classes to be a medical assistant in an MD's office? What does a phlebotomy tech do? Also - one thing I guess I should also explain. While I already mentioned that I would use the CNA certificate to allow me to work in a healthcare setting while I'm (hopefully) in school, I failed to mention that it's also going to give me a direct advantage over other applicants to the program since acceptance is based on a points system. I get extra points for HAVING the certificate (even if I never used it) and I also get extra points for actually working in the healthcare field (based on time worked). PS - anyone know what the general salary range for a CNA in the Dallas area is?
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Working with the sick - how do you keep yourself healthy?
Ooooooo..... good question. I'm really interested in seeing what people say. My former roommate worked at a nursing home and it always ended up that I was the one getting sick from whatever it was that she "brought home". I wasn't even IN the healthcare field. She always seemed to stay well - I guess maybe she just had a stronger immune system than I did...
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
First of all - forgive me if I offended anyone with my choice of wording (i.e. -diapers) or if anyone felt slighted by my calling the duties "just". I have obviously displayed my naïveté with the finer points of this field of work. Please accept my apologies. :imbar Secondly - I am REALLY EXCITED about this field after reading these posts!! Please keep the info coming!
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
Here's a link I thought might have some good info. I found it while doing a google search. http://nursingassistantcentral.homestead.com/
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
Geez... that makes it sound pretty grim.
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Give me the down and dirty of being a CNA
I'm a secretary right now and am thinking of becoming a CNA to get some hands-on experience in the healthcare field while I go to school to be a nuclear medicine technologist (if I can get accepted). I really love helping people (especially pediatrics) and I had a psychic tell me once that I have "healing hands" (whatever that means). Anyway I need to know the down and dirty of being a CNA. I want your best and your worst stories. I want to know what all being a CNA means - do I just clean up vomit, change diapers/flush Foleys or is there more? I want to know if you love it - I want to know if you hate it. Nurses - what do you love about your CNA's - and what's your biggest peeve? I have soooo many questions... Am I only assigned to one specific nurse all the time or do I get rotated? What if my nurse hates me? Am I assigned to only one area of the hospital or will I get to know my patients? Do scrubs come in tall sizes (I'm 5'8)? Do I have to do anything "needle-related"? Do I have to insert catheters? Are CNA's respected or do they just get dumped on? I noticed that most hospitals in the Dallas area want CNA's with 3 months experience or more - where am I supposed to get that if no one will hire me without experience?? HEEEEEEELP!!! Flood me with your knowledge and wisdom....
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What's Your Best Nursing Ghost Story?
My grandparents had made an agreement that whoever "went first" would send a sign (if possible) to let the remaining person know that they were okay and watching over them. If the person's spirit could come back, the sign would be that a specific knick-knack shelf would be knocked off the wall. My grandfather fell asleep at the wheel of his truck in 1978, went off the road, and hit a concrete embankment. He was still alive when they brought him to the ER, but died shortly thereafter. When my grandmother returned home from the hospital (she was alone - it happened so fast none of the family was there yet), that exact knick-knack shelf was laying the in middle of the living room floor. That sign gave my grandmother considerable comfort because she knew without a doubt that it was grandpa telling her he was okay. For those of you who have been reading through this whole thread - my grandmother that I'm talking about in this post is the same one that I talked about in a previous post - she's the one my mother is convinced came to the family after her death as a huge snow white dog.