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It was my time to float the other night and I was to float to pediatrics. No way Jose!
I have never felt comfortable with children and my specialty has always been with the adult population.
I stood my ground and refused pediatrics.....they said my assignments wouldn't be that bad - 3 infants and 2 older kids - NO! THE ANSWER IS NO!
I would rather be budgeted home that work with kids.
If I was a patient on an adult unit I would not want a neonatal or peds nurse caring for me after a major procedure......I think its safe to say that a child would feel uncomfortable in the hands of an adult nurse.
Sorry if that offends peds nurses, but i can't and i wont work peds.
Can you float to another unit and say, "Look, I am clueless. May I back all of you up tonight rather than take an assignment of my own?"
That's better than nothing, but that still doesn't properly alleviate a short shift. It is high time that hospitals stop relying on inappropriate floats. Better safeguards for adequate staffing are maintaining a strong float pool that are cross-trained for various specialties, offering incentives for nurses that are willing to come in on their days off (or that stay over) to fill in a short shift, and failproof support from the unit manager and/or director- which in my opinion means, getting out of your comfy jammies and slippers, throwing on some scrubs, rolling up your sleeves and get to work. And for goodness sake, 'ya better still have the skills to be able to do just that! Yes, I think that's what you sign up for when you accept that level of responsibility!
Those simple measures are a drop in the bucket compared to the cost of a bad outcome that resulted from inadequate staffing or when some poor sucker gets stuck floating to a unit that is incompatible with his/her competencies!
I would have grumbled a bit but done it if the kids were older/adolescent. No WAY would I go to a unit to take care of infants! As other posters have said, I haven't a clue what to do with a baby. I'm 40 years old and have held a baby maybe twice since nursing school. I don't know what they eat, how to feed them, the meds, and I certainly could not start an IV. Would you want me around YOUR infant?
Funny! It works the other way around, too as I worked at a children's hospital where my oldest patient (and I didn't work with adolescents often) was 17. I can't remember why now,( but had to have been OKed by higher-ups) I had a 21 year old very lumberjack-built guy! Ye-gads! Gi-normous! What do I do?? I can't pick him up. . .hmm Turned out fine, but we definately get our senses tuned to what we see most often for the longest time.
When I am getting a ped admit to our adult ICU, I go to the ED and begin my admission there. I make it a point to mention sweetly somehow that I have ZERO peds experience, but I'll do the best I can. This is completely honest, and my employer cannot punish me for being honest with patients/families. 9 times out of 10, mom and dad insist on a transfer. ;-)
When I am getting a ped admit to our adult ICU, I go to the ED and begin my admission there. I make it a point to mention sweetly somehow that I have ZERO peds experience, but I'll do the best I can. This is completely honest, and my employer cannot punish me for being honest with patients/families. 9 times out of 10, mom and dad insist on a transfer. ;-)
So you would talk to a family about not having peds experience? Have you ever gotten in trouble from admin. about it?
When I am getting a ped admit to our adult ICU, I go to the ED and begin my admission there. I make it a point to mention sweetly somehow that I have ZERO peds experience, but I'll do the best I can. This is completely honest, and my employer cannot punish me for being honest with patients/families. 9 times out of 10, mom and dad insist on a transfer. ;-)
We admit kids to our adult ICU (in the UK) while waiting on the paeds retreival team (can take up to 12 hours plus), we have actually had parents call and ask if their child can be transfered back to us us they feel our care was better!
Interestingly in the UK Paeds and Psych are seperate nursing registrations from Adult (adult being 16 plus) although there are some of us "older" Nurses who were trained as "general" nurses so did mainly adults but also some psych and paeds (simmilar to US training)
Its your license...i don't blame you. I've been walked on all over the time. Looking back i should have stood my ground and said "NO" or tell them i am going home sick. I have been "forced" to float to MICU and pediatrics. I was not happy with it, everthing turned out ok and no issues either time. But i really need to stand my ground more often. You did the right thing for you, for the patients you would have been taking care of and your license.
SuesquatchRN, BSN, RN
10,263 Posts
Can you float to another unit and say, "Look, I am clueless. May I back all of you up tonight rather than take an assignment of my own?"