1/23: What I learned this week: Long, long week. But the bagel was tasty.

Nurses General Nursing

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This week has felt painfully long. And here it is: the end. Just in time for the new one to begin already. I'm so not ready for a new week to begin, especially if it's going to be more of the same.

In my world, I've learned....

How fast a 31 year old being treated over the last year for skin cancer can go from okay, to gone.

How utterly heartbreaking it is to watch her husband fall to pieces.

How the very first RR code I ever witnessed, EVER, is doing now. It was during my internship in school. After a narcan bolus woke her up, a narcan drip didn't KEEP her awake (or breathing for that matter). It's been years since that day, and I imagine she thinks we're idiots with tiny fish brains. Her "allergy" to narcan with the response "heart stops" really isn't convincing.

On further reflection, if you ever want to stop someone from giving you narcan, tell them it will stop your heart - the one thing worse than the overdose it is supposed to be stopping.

I can't decide which hospitalist is worse: the one who totally ignores nurses (leading to malpractice suit-worthy near misses), or the one who thinks nurses are secretaries and puts pointless testing and orders in, and schedules things at times that make absolutely no sense. This one is a fan of q3h vitals (floor protocol is 4, so we thankfully can override that), q8h orthostatics (usually they're q12h), q4h fingersticks on NPO after midnight NONDIABETIC patients... The list goes on. Both these people need to go. Apparently people can't be terminated for simply sucking at their job.

It is so, so sad to watch a sweet, elderly, a&o, dignified, former doctor become humiliated by his sudden rush of diarrhea, which he did not make it to the toilet to pass. It was kind of beautiful, though, seeing his recognition and deepening respect for all that nurses do. I don't think that he knew. With one doctor ignoring us, one treating us like secretaries, and this guy, I truly wish we could take time with each physician (especially on a hard day) to show them what we do, and share with them what we know, what we see, support and experience in any given shift.

Kidneys suck. Especially when contrast literally kills them.

I strained stone fragments out of urine that looked like poppy seeds and sesame seeds. Totally got an everything bagel on the way home. Toasted. Cream cheese. YUM!!!

Ages ago I started a thread asking for advice regarding good scrubs for a short, tiny person with a big booty. It's probably been a good year since I asked, but I've finally found my answer! Butter Soft Stretch 8-pocket pants (in petite sizes) and 5-pocket v-neck shirt.

I've decided to hop on a project, choosing frequently seen chronic and acute conditions to gather EBP on for the unit committee I'm on. And suddenly, I'm back on the books and research article libraries like they're crack and I'm hooked.

The recent dynamics change that we are experiencing on night shift are so not good. We've had a rather dramatic drop in the last quarter's satisfaction scores, and as we went through respondent comments, it was pretty clear that a core group of night shifters are likely the cause of the drop.

There are some nights when I feel like I'm the only one chasing down the noisy pumps to make them stop beeping and bed alarms when the ninjas come out of the LOLs. They'll all be online, looking up stuff to buy, while I'm all go-go-go all night. Then, shift change comes, and they're all waiting to clock out and leave. I'm still charting and wrapping up my shift.

Caring for a patient with a horrible looking skin wound might make you slightly freaked out when you get a red spot on your nose that begins to breakdown like 3 days later, then takes days to show progress of healing.

I was really hoping I would have learned the result of my biopsy by now. I have kept this mostly to myself, because of the passing of the wife mentioned at the top of this list. It hasn't helped, though, to feel the sadness and horror of her sudden loss of life due to skin cancer. Just please let this be negative.

This week, the drug of choice appears to be heroin. And hookers. And drunken brawls in the ED.

Deciding to always stay up all night was the best decision I could have made. It's amazing how much more productive I am on my days off when I'm not all jacked up trying to sleep.

I have a person in my life who is constantly looking for things to be angry about. Seek and ye shall find. Not only is this utterly exhausting, but it's incredibly frustrating.

So, yeah, long and complicated week. And I'm way behind on this place. Share with me what I should have learned!!! And, of course, I'd love to know - what have you learned this week?

Eta: I didn't add a video!

What the heck ISSSS this?

Specializes in Addictions Nursing, LTC.
Specializes in Addictions Nursing, LTC.

Welcome back, OC!!

Hoping for a negative biopsy for Ixchel!

This week I learned that I'm doing well enough in my new job to have been kicked off orientation for at least one shift to cover a staffing shortage.

I need to keep working on the algebra so I can place in college algebra and survive chemistry.

That we're expecting more snow next weekend! Grrrrrr!!!

I still love the RN's I work with. They treat me like an intelligent person and are always willing to answer a question or lend a hand.

This week I've learned:

1) being up in a hoyer lift is a bit scary. Even more when it's a sky lift. A little motor and seat belt are supposed to hold me 5 feet in the air...? I mean yeah it worked, but it was unnerving.

2) Hand washing is life. I need a good, not slick lotion.

3) kids think it's fun to be transferred around with a gait belt.

4) waking up at 0400 is tiring.

5) going to sleep before 2300 is a strange concept for me.

6) I've decided to just go ahead and highlight in my fundamentals books. It's probably never leaving my possession.

7) I am LOVING nursing school so far.

ETA #8) talking to mannequins is weird too.

I've learned:

When you live where I do in the south and they call for snow, it doesn't ever snow or it's just light flurries.

When there are light flurries outside, people stop in the middle of the intersections for no apparent reason. It's frozen water people and it's not sticking! Treat it like any other day[emoji35]

The worst time to have to go to the grocery store is when there is a chance of "snow".

I make a terrible patient.

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.
ETA #8) talking to mannequins is weird too.

Talking through mannequins is even weirder. Although it's fun to make them scream when all the students gathered around are talking amongst each other trying to figure out the simulation instead of paying attention to the patient!

Specializes in Cardiology, Cardiothoracic Surgical.

1) Patients can have scabies when they're not in group or homeless situations. Made my skin crawl every time I went in that room, even with gown, gloves and hats. I washed those scrubs in bleach and hot water multiple times, and scrubbed my skin in the shower till it was red. BLARGHHHHHH. :barf02:

2) I really, really hate the IV pumps at my new job. Difficult to program, and even more fussy than the ones I normally use.

3) R/t IV pumps, I've noticed a rash of IVs coming to the floor in the A/Cs or wrist this past week. They go bad really quick from patients bending their arms, even with tape and armboards. I've had to either put in new ones or call the IV team to have new ones dropped in. STOP IT.

4) My husband is pretty damn awesome. He's been holding up his weight related to the farm as I've practically living at the hospital this week.

5) I can't believe the people traveling on the road during bad weather who aren't emergency or hospital personnel. We aren't equipped in the South for bad weather AT ALL, and have no salt/ash/sand reserves and snow plows. Except for the truckers trying to work, I have ZERO sympathy for people who got stuck in places like Kentucky.

6) I got to witness de-icing operations on the way home from work on the highway last night. The secondary vehicle drops a rotating cylinder onto the ice patches and literally burns away the ice, complete with sparks. SO COOL.

6) I realized I love watching art lines on the monitor. BP in real time!

What I learned this week,

So I guess I live in the section of town that gets higher snow accumulations. We got at least 12" when the rest of town got around 6-8". I do live almost on top of a 'mountain' ( a CT sized one at least).

Also learned that I need to get back to the gym if I expect to be stubborn and continue to shovel the 75yard gravel driveway instead of paying for a plow guy. I am going to want to fall asleep while on the ambulance tonight. And I am going to be super sore tomorrow.

And I am getting super excited to start my new RN job. Orientation starts Feb 8th. I am wanting less and less to do paramedic work, and wish my nursing job had started already. Its a weird feeling, but I'm just tired of the streets, the lack of resources and having incompetent EMT partners that put us both at risk I guess. And I'm hopeful that being an RN in the ED will better than the road.

Specializes in Pediatrics, NICU.

I started studying for my CCRN and I learned that I know NOTHING. I thought I was fairly well informed...nope. I have a lot of studying to do!

I learned that I will be training for charge soon. :bag: I hope I'm good at it!

I learn that crying at work is WAY better when everyone else is crying too. I think it will never stop being sad to watch a baby pass away and that's ok.

I learned that you can be born with your orifice in the wrong spot so it needs to be surgically closed and a new one formed.

I'm so sorry about the baby. :(

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

Don't usually dwell on the WILTW threads much cause I have not usually learned much interesting enough to contribute, so I lurk but I do want to wish Ixchel the best ((((HUGS)))) and keep us informed.

Specializes in Hospice.
Talking through mannequins is even weirder. Although it's fun to make them scream when all the students gathered around are talking amongst each other trying to figure out the simulation instead of paying attention to the patient!

I see we have the same sense of humor...[emoji48]

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