1/9: What I learned this week - Worst. Vagina. EVER.

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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]️

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?

:eek: oh my goodness why

😂😂😂

Specializes in CVICU CCRN.

Ahem. :clears throat:

I've learned I can be wildly inappropriate when being up during the day (when I should be sleeping) while working nights. [emoji16]

Specializes in critical care.
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Well, jeez, with that thing, who needs vegetables?

ixchel, I swear I read your #1 as "I have the worst smelling lady parts ever". And then all these posts about produce being stuck up there... Good to hear that this is not you. I'm glad you have left the veggies out of your vajayjay.

I've learned that hyperkalrmia often accompanies acidosis (and I know the rationale!), as well as hypokalemia and hypocalcemia a common occurrence with alkalosis.

The Midwest weather is actually starting to feel, well, normal. And Cali is starting to feel like the Midwest. My condolences.

Lung cancer is deadly. Don't smoke. Ever.

I finally have started watching Lost (only a decade or so later). I'm not sure what the big hype was, but it is an acceptable time-killer in the mean time. It seems too similar to Lord of the Flies, but lacking in savagery. Then again, I'm in the 1st season, and they're still trying to get their **** together.

BOOP, although fun to say, is also lethal.

ixchel, I swear I read your #1 as "I have the worst smelling lady parts ever". And then all these posts about produce being stuck up there... Good to hear that this is not you. I'm glad you have left the veggies out of your vajayjay.

I've learned that hyperkalrmia often accompanies acidosis (and I know the rationale!), as well as hypokalemia and hypocalcemia a common occurrence with alkalosis.

The Midwest weather is actually starting to feel, well, normal. And Cali is starting to feel like the Midwest. My condolences.

Lung cancer is deadly. Don't smoke. Ever.

I finally have started watching Lost (only a decade or so later). I'm not sure what the big hype was, but it is an acceptable time-killer in the mean time. It seems too similar to Lord of the Flies, but lacking in savagery. Then again, I'm in the 1st season, and they're still trying to get their **** together.

BOOP, although fun to say, is also lethal.

Specializes in Critical Care, Med-Surg, Psych, Geri, LTC, Tele,.
Honest to god, words don't exist to describe this smell. The potency alone was taking breath away as far as the nursing station, which was nowhere near the patient's room. I have no idea what could possible make a smell like this. I am hoping the mystery will be solved before I go to work next.

Was it a retained tampon?

Inquiring minds wants to know!

Specializes in allergy and asthma, urgent care.
BV and something inside the lady parts. Like produce.

AKA "Party Pelvis"....... Happens a week after someone drinks too much and hooks up with someone they don't know and can't remember, and of course didn't use any type of protection. It ain't pretty. But it doesn't sound like that was the patient's problem.

I actually learned something at my most recent CE conference and recognized that one of my co-workers was having an id reaction over her whole body to a bacitracin allergy from a cut on her foot. Also not pretty, but it didn't smell bad.

I learned after a total of 1 cold days this winter that I just don't want to deal with either cold or snow. I swear I have PTSD from last winter.

I learned that home construction projects will take at least 3 times longer than the original timeline. I wish that I could just not show up for work with no explanation and not get fired.

And...I didn't win Powerball.....

What I learned:

1. Working in corrections is where I am suppose to be.

2. Just when you least expect it, or you need it most, someone reminds you why you chose to be a nurse in the first place.

3. I found this blog!

Thank YOU!

Specializes in CVICU CCRN.

"Party pelvis"

*stealthily makes notation for future use*

Specializes in Cardio-Pulmonary; Med-Surg; Private Duty.

I learned that home construction projects will take at least 3 times longer than the original timeline.

And cost at least double the original estimate!

Specializes in critical care.

I finally have started watching Lost (only a decade or so later). I'm not sure what the big hype was, but it is an acceptable time-killer in the mean time. It seems too similar to Lord of the Flies, but lacking in savagery. Then again, I'm in the 1st season, and they're still trying to get their **** together.

Guuuurrrrrrlllll....

We can talk Lost anytime you want. And don't you worry - the savagery is coming. Well, it was on prime time network tv, so as much savagery as that allows.

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