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Telemetry to mother baby unit
A few months ago, I was asking the same question to myself. I came from a Pulmonary/critical care background, 5 years. After moving to a new state, I hired on at a hospital that was gracious enough to train me and I'm loving it. I can tell you that it will be a totally different world than what you are used to but change is good!
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Alien hand syndrome!
Yeah, we really thought at first that it was a psych issue. This was before the stroke was found. Someone came out of the room and said "that poor lady is crazy...she just pulled all the skin off her own hand!
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Alien hand syndrome!
Anyone dealt or heard of "alien hand syndrome"? Had a patient post-stroke that has this and I wouldn't have believed it unless I saw it. Her hand was like it was possessed. It had a "mind of its own". Her hand has now become known as "THE HAND" to her, as in "help me, THE HAND keeps touching me". She has completely depersonalized her hand. She kept hitting herself in the face repetitively, hard, and nearly broke her glasses. Also ended up bloodying her knuckles from hitting things. The worst part was when she grabbed her good hand with the bad hand and when she tried to pull her good hand out of her bad hand's grasp it ripped all of her skin off her hand. The hand has also tried to rip out her IV and midline. We all had to do some research on the internet once the neurologist told us what was going on. I just feel bad for her because she can't control it and its scaring her. It doesn't help that its being so mean to her! I've read that it is quite rare. It also depends on where the stroke was at on what abilities the hand has, such as flailing, grasping, pinching, or movements that seem even more purposeful. Wondering if anyone has any stories for me on this topic?
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What are the top 5 medications YOU administer daily?
Zosyn, Levaquin, Vancomycin, lots o morphine, Solumedrol or prednisone. I work Pulm.
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What Freaks You Out?
I'm a Pulm nurse so mucous, loogies...doesn't bother me at all. I can suction a trach with the best of 'em all the while thinking about what's for lunch. But start talking about bugs....maggots, cockroaches, worms...that gives me the heebie jeebies. Only had maggots on a patient once and I nearly passed out. But the wound beds where the maggots had been were amazingly clean, good granulation tissue, no necrosis! I also have a problem with measuring and flushing vomit, especially if it's chunky. I have dry heaved in more patient bathrooms than i want to think about. And I did have a patient that was NPO except for the big jug of Golytely that she was supposed to be drinking a glass of every 1/2 hour. She also had a horrible food addiction. She got ahold of the jug when I was out of the room and chugged it all. Then proceeded to poop, everywhere in the room. It looked like a murder scene, but with poop instead of blood. She over-flowed the toilet, covered it actually. I threw a towel on the floor to cover a lake of poop to get to the toilet and when I tried to step over the towel, I ended up skidding across the floor on the towel and poop. I went over the the patient and she had it smeared all over her body, and was just sitting in it. By the time I was done I had multiple poopy handprints covering my isolation gown. Needless to say, I didn't eat lunch that day. All my co-workers still laugh about that day. Gee, now I'm starting to think...just why did I become a nurse?
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Having trouble fitting in
I'm a 31 yr old newer nurse, mom of 3, and married for 10 yrs. The floor that I work on has a good mix from 20's up to 50's and we pretty much all tend to get along really well. One of the nurses on my floor is the mother of a girl I went to school with. Of course, we are usually so busy that no one has time to sit around and just talk. Of course, I think that good work ethic is highly respected in our area and you wouldn't last very long without it. I always feel like you should be friendly, courteous, helpful...but these girls don't have to be your best friends if you just don't have much in common. Just put your all into your patients and go home knowing that you are doing a good job. As far as age...one of my best friends I found in nursing school. She's my mom's age and I love her to death. So stay open to friendships where you might not expect it.
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Fall Risk help
I'm a brand new nurse. A few days ago I had a elderly patient who had orthostatic hypotension. He kept getting out of bed without assistance and nearly fell twice. I did the what I could think of: fall risk assessment; call light, phone, and remote within reach; urinal at bedside; offering BR q 2 hrs; room by nurses station; reiterating the importance of calling for assistance; TED hose on per Dr; had the patient sit on the side of the bed for a few minutes before getting up; and talked to the Dr. about the situation. He continually refused to put on his call light. He said that it was ridiculous to call for an aide everytime he wanted to get up and that he was just fine. He told me that he didn't care what I thought and would continue to get up on his own. Eventually I put a tab alarm on which he would promptly take off the moment I left the room. Later, I went to a floor pressure alarm. I was upset about doing this because I know he was really upset about it. And the thing is. it wasn't that he was confused and getting out of bed, but that he just refused to admit that he needed help. Even though he admitted that he had recently fallen at home and broke a hip. So I guess the question is: what could I have done differently to create a better and safer environment for the patient?
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Required Reading
I think anything with some good pathophysiology in it is good. If you can really understand what is going on in a disease process it helps immensely, at least on exams. I don't know about real-life nursing because I just passed boards and haven't started working as a nurse yet, one more week of freedom!
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taking the nclex exam
I used Saunders to help review content. I did many, many Saunders questions. However, I think that my Kaplan course was so much more helpful in terms of the style of questions presented. They were written much more like the actual exam questions than the Saunder's questions were. I think that Lippencott is also kinda similar to Saunder's. Kaplan also has a money-back guarantee and I believe that they have both online and actual physical classes.
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New nurse's daughter just diagnosed with Type 1
Too bad has severe needle phobia, lol! :chuckle I thought he was going to hyperventilate the first time her gave her a shot!
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New nurse's daughter just diagnosed with Type 1
Hi all, I just passed NCLEX on Thursday, 3 days after my 5 year old daughter was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. Wow, I have studied diabetes in school, but I never realized how all of the changes affect your life. My daughter is such a trooper and my own personal hero. We were very lucky that we found the disease extremely early. My husband, who has no medical background, asked me she might be diabetic because she kept licking her skin and rubbing her eyes. His boss' son was just diagnosed and had similar symptoms. I told him absolutely not, I would not have believed it in a million years. But as I started thinking more, I realized that she had been peeing and drinking an awful lot. But I had been so busy studying that I didn't really think much of it. So on Monday, I went and bought a glucose monitor and her fasting glucose was 256. At that point I pretty much knew. We met our Dr. at the ER where he said that she looked great and not like she had diabetes at all. Well, the blood work came back and she did. Luckily, she only had minimal ketones in her urine and was not acidotic. No one could believe that we caught it so fast. They told us that most kids are first diagnosed when they are in DKA and critically ill. She is doing great, physically. Now we are just trying to regulate the glucose levels. Her A1c was 10.1- her endocrinologist said that she has been running in the 400-500 range for the last 3 months. I got her home from the hospital on Wednesday night and took boards on Thursday morning. I am really amazed that I passed, because I was exhausted from 3 sleepless nights. I am just so glad that I had the medical knowledge to know that something wasn't right with her and glad that I trusted my gut to check it out. I was worried that I was just being a paranoid mother, as I tend to be usually. Now we are trying to get her in with Dr. Richard Guthrie- who is a well-known endocrinologist who works only about an hour away from our house. I have heard nothing about praise about him and I hope that he can help her. I also hope to find her a friend who is going through what she is, as she is very lonely and sad right now.
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My traumatic week
I just graduated from school on May 9th and was scheduled to take boards this last Thursday. On Monday, three days before the NCLEX, I took my 5 year old daughter into the ER and she was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. We were in the hospital with her until Wednesday evening. After many hours of indecision, I decided to go ahead and take the test. It was horrible. My husband, who has no medical background had to take care of her and he was scared to death because he is just learning to count carb points, figure insulin, and give injections. I was scared that he would give her too much insulin and kill her. The test shut off at 75 questions and I just knew that I had flunked. I was amazed to get on the computer this morning and find that I now have a license in my name. I even got my actual license in the mail today. This week has had such highs and lows and now I am exhausted. At least I don't start my job for 2 weeks!
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KAPLAN-to do or not to do!?!?!?!? HELP!
I did Kaplan and I think that it really helped. I would say that questions on the NCLEX tend to be more like Kaplan questions than that of other review books I have seen. I have also studied both Saunders and Lippencott. Kaplan does help you to break the question down. Do you need to assess? Does the assessment answer make sense? What about Maslow's hierarchy of needs? Physical before psychosocial. Go with your ABC's. Airway, airway, airway!!! I took the test on Thursday and passed in 75 questions. Our class took Kaplan as a group, it was required and part of our school fees. So far 30 out of 39 have tested and all have passed the 1st time. We are hoping to be the first class with a 100% pass rate.
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Why Won't Anyone Hire Me??
I know that in my area the hospitals have already been hiring for positions for months. I was actually hired at least 2 months ago, and I just took boards on Thursday. What are your expectations in a job? Are you requesting specific hours or specific areas. I did not get the position that I wanted because there were three other graduating techs who already worked on that floor who were offered the positions first. Sometimes as a new grad you are more likely to have to work your way into certain shifts or positions. Good luck and be persistent. Show your continued interest and you will get hired!
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What is a nurse tech?
I'm a nurse tech. I was able to be one after my first semester of nursing school, although I didn't start until my 3rd semester. It is basically a CNA but I am able to do a lot of other skills that I learned in school as well. I can do Foley's, dressing changes, d/c IV's, trach care and suctioning. We do not assess, pass meds, evaluate, etc... At our hospital we have to test for the CNA exam within 3 months of starting but we don't have to do the classes, just the exam.