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I still can't believe it's January! Where did 2015 go?!
If your unit is like mine at all, brace yourselves.... Respiratory failure is coming. Out of 10 different patients since 1/1, I've had only one non-respiratory failure patient. Only two of those had sputum cultures with the same type of bug. That bug was a rare one for adults, too, so it's been fun, to say the least. All's fun and games until you get a patient who has no concept of covering a cough.
Regardless, Ixchel Medical Center and Chez Ixchel have both been full of lessons. Hard to narrow this week's list, but for the sake of people actually reaching the bottom of it, I did. [emoji5]ï¸
This week, I have learned.....
1. I am fully convinced I have smelled the worst possible smelling lady parts.
2. Apparently I am a great big baby about getting invasive procedures done on me.
3. Receiving unsettling news about your health is much less unsettling when the doctor is hot.
4. Also, receiving unsettling news about your health gets easier to process emotionally with each new diagnosis.
5. It seriously sucks to clock out from caring for a whole unit of respiratory failure (half dead) patients only to come home to your smoker spouse.
6. The first couple of times you get asked, "Am I going to die?", it's a little creepy, until you have enough experience in nursing to be able to answer, "not on my watch!" with a reassuring smile, followed with, "you will be okay." But then, when someone actually does die on that admission, after asking repeatedly, it goes back to being creepy again.
7. My unit tends to be a bit wild, so staff turnover ends up being high. This changes the "personality" of night shift a lot, since the new to nursing newbies like night shift. I like the night shift personality right now and hope the newbies stay.
8. It still feels weird to be the most experienced nurse on a shift besides charge.
9. I might lose my shizz if we don't get psych on consult. As much as our hospitalists feel adequate to handle psych, they simply aren't.
10. You should have 1-2 people on your "speed dial" (hahaha!!! You guys remember speed dial?!) as your medical procedure go to people for those times you can't do medical procedures on yourself. (i.e. Stitches removal in hard to reach places.) (Thank you for that idea, Dogen!)
11. My primary care doesn't feel qualified to remove a mole from my shoulder because it's too big and looks like someone more specialized should do it. (This is the 5th item in this week's list related to this topic. I may need some tranquilizers, to stop thinking about this.)
12. I met my favorite patient ever. EVER. I want to take him home and name him Grandpa.
13. It's hard enough to stop being lazy after night shifts when I get an ideal schedule. When my schedule sucks, it's impossible. Seriously, ugh.
14. BEST THING EVER! (That may be an exaggeration.) Medscape sent out an article saying contact precautions for MRSA and VRE are no more effective at preventing transmission than standard/universal.
15. Our legal system may be corrupt, or be inefficient, but that doesn't mean a suspect is innocent.
Phish, anybody? (Don't worry, Farawyn, no one dies in this one.)
So, my loves, what have YOU learned this week?
I've learned that my heart can hold enough love for another red head and she's precious :).
Having an awesome anesthesiologist makes a third c-section go much MUCH smoother than the last. (The last one included my bp in the 200's and hr in the 20's.)
They will discharge you barely 48 hours post section if you're a nurse. They told me that was the reason. Since "you know what you're doing." (I work here PRN so there was no hiding it.) But I am no OB nurse.
Hearing a Code called on the OB floor for the first time in my career...is scary, and props to my nurse who was calm and a cucumber and never let her anxiety show.
*Sorry these are all baby related...
I've learned that my heart can hold enough love for another red head and she's precious :).Having an awesome anesthesiologist makes a third c-section go much MUCH smoother than the last. (The last one included my bp in the 200's and hr in the 20's.)
They will discharge you barely 48 hours post section if you're a nurse. They told me that was the reason. Since "you know what you're doing." (I work here PRN so there was no hiding it.) But I am no OB nurse.
Hearing a Code called on the OB floor for the first time in my career...is scary, and props to my nurse who was calm and a cucumber and never let her anxiety show.
*Sorry these are all baby related...
Don't be sorry!!! Congrats my sweet friend!
We miss you over on the school thread!
(((((Baby Sully and Sully)))))
Don't be sorry!!! Congrats my sweet friend!We miss you over on the school thread!
(((((Baby Sully and Sully)))))
I've been keeping up on all the SN haps.
And thank you! I keep wondering what is going on in my clinic.... I need a spy. Maybe I can employ my 8 year old brother. He goes there.
* There will be a shortage of pca syringes (morphine, dilaudid & fentanyl) that is expected to last into March. No idea what the plan is for managing our fresh post-op ortho pts. Anyone else hear of something like this?
Awe man, I remember this happening about three years ago when some company that makes the glass vials couldn't make them for some reason. We actually retrofitted our epidural pumps into PCA's. At least I'm an epidural pump trouble-shooting queen now! Still have the cheat sheet for them on m brain sheet clip board! Who'd a thought this would come back like a bad fashion fad...first world problems I guess!
I'm with ixchel - I'm a little lost on how 2015 escaped us.
1. Some people's behavior is just predictable. Could use it to set a clock.
2. I started 2016 off working New Years. Plus side? My scheduled holiday is over for 2016.
3. I got to do something really cool for the first time ever this week.
4. My boss also doesn't treat me the way she treats my coworker in the same job class as me. Frustrating. She also doesn't give me the chance to learn...
5. I just wanted to scream at one point with my assignment one day this week. Then my assignment got changed (I suffer from human ping pong ball syndrome). In the process of being reassigned, I got to talk to some of my favorite coworkers and one of my favorite surgeons. Five minutes of entertainment, so I could call that specific day a much better day.
6. The adulting I've had to do at work lately. It's crazy. But I guess it's good prep for what I want to do after grad school.
7. The pressure is real - will I get into grad school or not? Guess we'll find out soon enough...
8. Turns out, talking to coworkers yesterday? It may have been an especially sucky week at work. Turns out I wasn't the only one the universe took a big old dump on. Every so often a communal black cloud hangs out at work and we might be in the presence of one. (Here and I'd thought I'd forgotten to leave *my* black cloud at home).
I learned a bunch of random things this week:
There is a second an.com user who is now using Farawyn's avatar, and that is confusing.
That I may be willing to float to med surg for overtime.
I really missed psych this week while cross training on med surg, but the dementia and detox patients kept me in my element.
I learned that I love having five nights off in a row.
I learned that I have to go on to the an website to change my information now that I have my BSN.
I learned that I am terrified of leaving my bedside job for full-time academia. But come March, I'm doing it anyway.
... that a pre-pubescent 12 year old boy yelling "My wiener hurts" for a couple of hours (nothing wrong with said wiener) gets old and causes the other parents to wonder what you're doing to that poor child.
... that I would prefer snow at this point in time than this ugly, brown, rainy blerch of a winter we're having so far.
Farawyn
12,646 Posts
Yet, still on topic. Somewhat.