What do your coworkers do to annoy you?

Nurses General Nursing

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Last night when I got report from the RN who was leaving, he told me the doc had ordered a stat med for one of my patients. After report, I checked the chart, and found the order timed for a half hour before the start of my shift. I bit my tongue, gave the med, and when I discarded the syringe, found the sharps container overflowing. This was just too much, so I caught the other nurse just as he was leaving, and gave him an earful about the sharps container. He responded that the aides are supposed to replace the containers. This was the final straw. Not only had he not given a stat med ordered on his shift, he had put me at risk for a needle stick, then used the "It's not my job" excuse. I let him have it with both barrels. After he left, I checked on my other patient, a GI bleed who was having frequent bloody stools. She wanted to be helped off the bed pan, but I had to make her wait while I went for gloves, because the box in the room was empty. :( :(

I was venting to some of the others on my shift, and we came up with a list of co workers' annoying habits.

Not emptying an overflowing garbage can.

Leaving packaging from meds all over the counter in the med room.

Starting the GoLytely prep an hour before the end of their shift.

Leaving the bags from discontinued IV meds hanging at the bedside.

Leaving a patient in a dirty gown after he has spilled food on himself.

Not giving pain meds on time.

Leaving a patient's room a mess.

Not making sure there are adequate supplies in the room so you don't have to run for everything you need.

Not doing mouth care.

Always coming 5 or 10 minutes late and delaying report while they pour coffee and "get organized."

Giggling and whispering in report.

Not answering call bells for any patient but their own.

I'm sure I could come up with many more if I thought about it some more.

Originally posted by passing thru

This is a true story. (I preface my comments with that statement because most nurses can't believe such a place exists.)

Several years ago, I went to work at a hospital in their ICU. I was agency. The nurse who gave me my 5 minute orientation said: "Don't do any suctioning, respiratory takes total care of the vent and patients respiratory needs. Don't bathe, or turn the pt. the techs do that. Don't empty any cannisters or foley bags, or drainage bags, the nursing assistants do that. You do not need to check the chart or the orders. We have two secretaries 24 hours a day, they take off all orders & will notify you if there is anything you need to know. Don't call the lab for anything, you never need to pick up a phone on this unit....the secretaries will get anything you need...reports, results....they follow all that & will put the reports here on your desk as they come in. We have a satellite pharmacy on this unit. You will simply go to your pt.'s bin & get their meds...the pharmacist rarely misses having your pt.s meds in your bin.

We NEVER empty trash here....housekeeping takes care of that.

I said, "cool." "Sounds like a real cool place."

She said: "The hospital firmly believes that RN's should only do RN work."

It was a 21 bed unit. It was the most fascinating place I ever worked....total organization , professionalism, and expediency.

I had two patients.

This thread made me think of it, with the annoying things your co-workers do.......so many of which are housekeeping or nurse assistant duties; or a secretary's.

Sounds like a dream!

As an RN, I empty trash cans, wipe up spills off the floor, fill paper-towel dispensers, refill the soap dispensers, etc., etc., etc. on a daily basis. Imagine, being able to put all your efforts into CARING for your PATIENTS!

Wow.

I hate it when every supply needs to be restocked. But the thing that bugs me the most is coworkers who are mean. The one's who consistantly put on a superior attitude and act like any minor infraction on anybody's part is a huge, loud, hairy big deal.

When I see someone like that- I know they try to draw attention to how inferior others are so that their very own weaknesses are hidden. If they act like the best defense is a strong offense-I know they are probally screwing up and are trying to draw attention away from themselves.

see my 3 co-workers from hell thread under ob. i have to teach a skills lab tomorrow w/ the one old bag already complaining there are too many stations. we should close the hospital for several hours perhaps and hold the skills labe at 5 a.m. to make sure she gets to go at the time that she wants. oooh too close to the end of the shift. maybe at three o'clock. no that would interrrupt her lounging in the chair w/ her feet up reading her harlequin romances. no right time to please her. if we didn't have the skills day, then she'd c/o that we never teach her anything. grrrrr. this woman annoys me along w/ two other hemmorrhoidal types!

Originally posted by Rapheal

I hate it when every supply needs to be restocked. But the thing that bugs me the most is coworkers who are mean. The one's who consistantly put on a superior attitude and act like any minor infraction on anybody's part is a huge, loud, hairy big deal.

When I see someone like that- I know they try to draw attention to how inferior others are so that their very own weaknesses are hidden. If they act like the best defense is a strong offense-I know they are probally screwing up and are trying to draw attention away from themselves.

I TOTALLY agree with your assessment of those types of people,

Rapheal

i work in the er and to me the biggest pet peeve is when other nurses and residents pad their rooms so they don't have to get another patient, and they do it all the time...come on its not like the patients are going to go away, you just make it harder on everyone else. man i really hate that.

courtaneyRae,

What is "padding" a room??? Having images of geomats hot glued to the walls....

Tres

Specializes in Trauma,ER,CCU/OHU/Nsg Ed/Nsg Research.

It's making the room appear to be occupied, not clean, etc., so that Bed Control won't assign a patient to it. Our House Managers make regular rounds to the floors to prevent this.

Specializes in Med/Surg, ER, L&D, ICU, OR, Educator.

Staff nurses sleeping (roughly 3 hours) on the night shift...

ER nurse who is in ER (very rural) with one patient for more than 3 hours, brings patient up to floor for admit WITHOUT THE DATA BASE DONE!

Ward clerks getting to 0830 orders at 1400 (should I say very rural again?)...

Spending time on-line during your shift to enter in your on-line Mary Kay orders...them complain about the "big brother" memo being distributed...

...anyone warming a chair at the nurses station while everyone else is running...

...any med nurse who asks "what is --- for?". That med book should be in your back pocket! Repitition is how you will learn it!

Tardy employees, and the passive-aggressive reporter who waits for them, only to complain about them for 3 weeks afterwards....unforgivable!

The one who takes on the fake "brittish" accent and says "Oh, I am sorry, I didn't realize...". I ignored it for the first few times, then out of pure frustration asked if she had ever been to England. Of course not! I find it so rude, and "not jolly good" as she seems to think.

Today, one of them breathed and it was annoying.

Ever have those days??

Seriously, one particular co-worker stands in the room and talk to the patients....forever!, then asks everyone to help her get her work done and whines if no one wants to help.

Her evil twin who works on the unit (a nurse) likes to talk to the patients too, but she makes nasty comments about them afterward and tells their business. I think she missed the inservice on confidentiality.

Stinky co-workers who fell in the bottle of perfume before coming to work.

Ok, I'm done. :)

Gator

My pet hate as such, well I am with RNinICU, I hate sharp containers that are full, having a needlestick injury a few years ago has given me a healthy respect for sharps, as in it being another job to change we are all responsible for pt care and that of our colleagues, what if we could prevent an injury to ourselves or our co workers and then the flip side is if you change it and the NA find out then if they are like ours they will return the favour and if you need help then they will give it.

My other pet hate is change of shift and there is 1 ml of heparin or tridal left in the syringe and people leave it to the next shift, just after handover!!!!!

A little bit of consideration goes a long way and as for the RN saying it is not his job well bud better go look up team work!

But what do I love about my colleagues???? They can get the blood when I can't, they bring in coffee and when the chips are down they support me through the tough times. For those of you who have been on this site for a while will remember when nurses have written in feeling really low because they have lost a friend, partner or have had abusive pts, you will find a lot of replies of support to these people from others that only know them as a log on address. Nursing is tough at the moment but I would rather have no other profession as when I have needed support or encouragement it often comes from my colleagues and even those colleagues I don't know.

It is so easy to see all the problems in nursing or any profession but after a run of pts who will never see their next birthday, it reminds me of why I chose to be a nurse and the positive aspects it can and does have.

To all the nurses going to work have a great day and know that you do really do a GREAT job:kiss

Originally posted by aussie oi oi oi

My pet hate as such, well I am with RNinICU, I hate sharp containers that are full, having a needlestick injury a few years ago has given me a healthy respect for sharps, as in it being another job to change we are all responsible for pt care and that of our colleagues, what if we could prevent an injury to ourselves or our co workers and then the flip side is if you change it and the NA find out then if they are like ours they will return the favour and if you need help then they will give it.

My other pet hate is change of shift and there is 1 ml of heparin or tridal left in the syringe and people leave it to the next shift, just after handover!!!!!

A little bit of consideration goes a long way and as for the RN saying it is not his job well bud better go look up team work!

But what do I love about my colleagues???? They can get the blood when I can't, they bring in coffee and when the chips are down they support me through the tough times. For those of you who have been on this site for a while will remember when nurses have written in feeling really low because they have lost a friend, partner or have had abusive pts, you will find a lot of replies of support to these people from others that only know them as a log on address. Nursing is tough at the moment but I would rather have no other profession as when I have needed support or encouragement it often comes from my colleagues and even those colleagues I don't know.

It is so easy to see all the problems in nursing or any profession but after a run of pts who will never see their next birthday, it reminds me of why I chose to be a nurse and the positive aspects it can and does have.

To all the nurses going to work have a great day and know that you do really do a GREAT job:kiss

GREAT RESPONSE!! Looking for the positive in our co-workers certainly helps change our perspective.

My philosophy is that everyone makes mistakes or has a bad day and I guess my "peeve" would be the blaming that goes on between nurses and shifts. Unless it is something that endangers the patient, I figure we have all forgotten to do something and I'm not gonna jump down someone's throat or gripe behind someone's back. We are a 24 hour team . . . . whose goal is great patient care and advocacy. No one is perfect.

:kiss

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