Published
There is poop in the OR, in L&D, dialysis, cardiac patients can accidents too. I imagine if you are a flight nurse/medic if there is poop in the air, you clean it as well.
The important thing to remember is the dignity of the patient. Nobody wants to be that dependent on another human being.
If you work in long term care , you wont clean up poop. there are PSWs who do that .
A few questions... I have looked around the forums but I want to ask specifically about Ontario/Canada. I've heard people say that they got 'suckered' into nursing and the reality is you have to clean peoples messes (of different kinds) regularly. I've also heard people say they rarely have to do it as a RN (BSN).For those who have an aversion to poop, and cleaning up after people, what roles or careers as an RN have minimal exposure to fecis and cleaning patients ? Operating room ? Cardiac ? Flight nursing ? How easy is it to specialise like this ?
In Ontario are RN's the grunts dealing with bedpans etc.. in hospitals? What are the realities of this?
For those interested in a career that has more to do with diagnoses, treatment, and science is RN a good way to go or not?
I'm sure when I start attending school I will have to deal with cleaning up more then once... which I dont mind, but I would like to move myself away from it once ive graduated if possible.
need educated responses asap! :)
If you work in long term care , you wont clean up poop. there are PSWs who do that .
I hope no member of my family winds up in your facilities care.
Back when I worked LTC, who found the poop cleaned the poop. Managers included. Usually the aides would take over, BUT you could tell which nurses they didn't like because they would all suddenly be busy when nurses with that attitude discovered a code brown.
codeblue20
27 Posts
A few questions... I have looked around the forums but I want to ask specifically about Ontario/Canada. I've heard people say that they got 'suckered' into nursing and the reality is you have to clean peoples messes (of different kinds) regularly. I've also heard people say they rarely have to do it as a RN (BSN).
For those who have an aversion to poop, and cleaning up after people, what roles or careers as an RN have minimal exposure to fecis and cleaning patients ? Operating room ? Cardiac ? Flight nursing ? How easy is it to specialise like this ?
In Ontario are RN's the grunts dealing with bedpans etc.. in hospitals? What are the realities of this?
For those interested in a career that has more to do with diagnoses, treatment, and science is RN a good way to go or not?
I'm sure when I start attending school I will have to deal with cleaning up more then once... which I dont mind, but I would like to move myself away from it once ive graduated if possible.
need educated responses asap! :)