Published
I received the following email today from a RN/friend that I worked with and I am ticked! I cannot believe that this is making its way around the world wide web. At first I thought that they had just misused the word experienced and graduate. Or that perhaps they should substitute "experienced" for "burned out" or "incompetent" and "graduate" for "competent". Then I thought this email serves absolutely NO good purpose. It is just another symptom of the bigger problems in Nursing (have you seen one of these for drs? firefighters? police officers? etc?)
The email::angryfire
>Are You a Graduate Nurse or an Experienced Nurse?
>
>A Graduate Nurse throws up when the patient does.
>An experienced nurse calls housekeeping when a patient throws up
>
>A Graduate Nurse wears so many pins on their name badge you can't read it.
>An experienced nurse doesn't wear a name badge for liability reasons
>
>A Graduate Nurse charts too much.
>An experienced nurse doesn't chart enough.
>
>A Graduate Nurse loves to run to codes.
>An experienced nurse makes graduate nurses run to codes.
>
>A Graduate Nurse wants everyone to know they are a nurse.
>An experienced nurse doesn't want anyone to know they are a nurse.
>
>A Graduate Nurse keeps detailed notes on a pad.
>An experienced nurse writes on the back of their hand, paper scraps,
>napkins, etc.
>
>A Graduate Nurse will spend all day trying to reorient a patient.
>An experienced nurse will chart the patient is disoriented and restrain
>them.
>
>A Graduate Nurse can hear a beeping I-med at 50 yards.
>An experienced nurse can't hear any alarms at any distance.
>
>A Graduate Nurse loves to hear abnormal heart and breath sounds.
>An experienced nurse doesn't want to know about them unless the patient is
>symptomatic.
>
>A Graduate Nurse spends 2 hours giving a patient a bath.
>An experienced nurse lets the CNA give the patient a bath.
>
>A Graduate Nurse thinks people respect Nurses.
>An experienced nurse knows everybody blames everything on the nurse.
>
>A Graduate Nurse looks for blood on a bandage hoping they will get to
>change
>it.
>An experienced nurse knows a little blood never hurt anybody.
>
>A Graduate Nurse looks for a chance "to work with the family."
>An experienced nurse avoids the family.
>
>A Graduate Nurse expects meds and supplies to be delivered on time.
>An experienced nurse expects them to never be delivered at all.
>
>A Graduate Nurse will spend days bladder training an incontinent patient.
>An experienced nurse will insert a Foley catheter.
>
>A Graduate Nurse always answers their phone.
>An experienced nurse checks their caller ID before answering the phone.
>
>A Graduate Nurse thinks psych patients are interesting.
>An experienced nurse thinks psych patients are crazy.
>
>A Graduate Nurse carries reference books in their bag.
>An experienced nurse carries magazines, lunch, and some "cough syrup" in
>their bag.
>
>A Graduate Nurse doesn't find this funny.
>An experienced nurse does
first of all, i have been an rn for over 10 years and i still believe that nursing is an amazing profession (its not just a paycheck) so, i should find this funny...it started out as humorous but then i noticed that this email was not just going to nurses. by the way, i do have a good sense of humor (i am surprised by the personal attack but then again don't they say that nurses eat their young?)
my point is that this is being sent to lay persons (at least the email that was sent to me was also being sent to lay people). can you see the message that this is giving to the lay person? it portrays nurses as pretty jaded, lazy and incompetent. everyone knows that we have a nursing shortage. is this the kind of advertising that is going to entice people to become nurses?
"graduate nurse carries reference books in their bag. an experienced nurse carries magazines, lunch, and some "cough syrup" in their bag".
i have worked with nurses who brought "cough syrup" to work. not exactly "cracker jack" nurses and not the kind of nurses i want to represent me (or working on me for that matter).
i just wish i could articulate this better. i am not trying to be nasty. honestly, i was surprised that i was not supported by my colleagues (well, there were some of you :wink2: ). i wonder if the response would have been different from the nursing advocacy site?
I guess I see your point, maybe. I don't think that there was any harm intended in this email; it's all very tongue in cheek. But I can see where you might get a little bothered that it gets sent to people who aren't involved in the nursing profession who might not understand the humor.
Really, I actually can't imagine why someone would send that email to friends who are not nurses. It is obviously meant to be a satire and not a serious expose on the dark, seedy world of nursing today.
truern
2,016 Posts
If I'm not mistaken, it's already made the rounds at allnurses...
I LMAO when I read it :rotfl: