Published
I am just wondering how many of you encounter the attitude that mental health nursing is not 'real' nursing. A co-worker said something the other day about the med-surg part of our hospital 'where the real nurses are'.
Do you personally ever feel that mental health nursing is somehow 'less' than traditional med-surg? Do you find that other people do?
This quote bothered me. I am not a psych nurse, but I don't work in Med/Surg either. I am an outpatient educator. I do work with inpatients in my job, but when I am there I will not touch their IVs or pumps or anything else, I'm qualified, but I do not work in that department. I am still an RN. The great thing about being an RN is that there is room for us all. We all have our own tasks, duties, and focus, but we are all RN's and I still call myself an RN, I earned it, and I pay for it every year on my birthday. I have the piece of paper to prove it.
D**n straight!
kadokin, ASN, RN
550 Posts
It is not like that on the inpt psych units where I work. We flush iv's, give iv meds, change dressings, give tube feedings, draw blood, many things. The only things expressly forbidden on our units are blood transfusions and telemetry. We aren't equipped to pick up the telemetry signal and we don't have a crash cart to deal w/severe prophylaxis. We have an emergency cart that includes a back board, ambu bag, setups to start ivs and a few other things, but no meds. We, of course, can not give certain cancer meds that require special certification or other push meds that require cardiac monitoring, etc. A few wks ago, I had 2 recent post-op (less than 48 hours) pts and a 42 hour post-partum pt. We frequently get transfers from med/surg floors that can not be managed on a traditional unit d/t acute psych problems. I guess what I'm saying is the nurses on your psych floor are being very unrealistic, because, guess what, psych pts are people, and sometimes people have very real physical problems. As a matter of fact, chronic physical illness can lead to or exacerbate such things as depression and anxiety. Also, chronic mental illness can lead to or exacerbate certain physical conditions such as copd, diabetes, cad. Red-headed step-children, I think not.