Published
I'm a freshman nursing student in an ADN program and yesterday I had the opportunity to observe in OR for the whole day. It was very cool, but I came home with my eyes wide open, I tell ya. It is really 'just a job' - not in a bad sense, but more like, "yes, I'm going to work now and there I may have to change some people's lives forever, but if I think about it, I probably will not do it, so I'm going to work now."
I'm left with a few items that need clarification, I'm hoping some of the more experienced nurses out there can help out. I want to emphasize, I am NOT making judgments, but in my naive state of never having observed surgery before, I just need to know these things:
#1: Are surgeons never gentle? I observed 5 different surgeries, everything from a T/A on a 5yo to a urethrotomy on a 60yo, with 4 different surgeons; none of the surgeons were what I would call gentle. Pulling, tearing, slashing, forcing through resistance - that's what I observed.
#2: Is it common for a surgeon to staple a drape onto a patient? I mean, stapling.the.cloth.into.a.patient. (On an 18yo's butt, to be exact)
#3: how bad does something have to be before the pt is told? In one surgery, the surgeon cut into a vein by mistake; will the doc tell the pt this? Will there be note made of things like this? In the urethrotomy, the doc forced the instruments hard enough that when he finally put the camera in, he found he had created a "false passage" - I do not know if this will be a LT problem, he didn't seem to be too upset, but will the pt know this? I just know that I would want to know that kind of thing.
Ok, again, I am NOT making judgments, maybe this is a common reaction to observing surgery for the first time, but it definitely makes me re-think any and all surgery I (or my loved ones) may ever opt for in the future!
Thanks everyone ---
Karen