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I'm having my annual struggle to decide what I want to be when I grow up. Thankfully, things are feeling a bit narrowed down this year. At the very least, I think it's time to start the typical core NP classes.
Every level of care provider at my facility is frustrated by our current lack of psychiatric specialty care, psychiatric consulting provider, and poor staffing for acute psychiatric needs, but no one knows what to do about it. Why aren't we diverting some of these patients?
Huh. Perhaps becoming a PMHNP would knock out both those birds with one stone. (Honestly, though, I'd burn out faster than The Donald's political dreams should have. Hey, Dogen, come to the mid Atlantic when you graduate. We have crab cakes and they are amazing.)
A terminal DNR patient will become full code if they are admitted from an incomplete suicide attempt. I have a serious problem with this.
If you only see one piece stitched in on a central line (IJ, SC, or femoral), you should get in touch with the MD to get the second piece stitched in. That is a lot easier than having to pull a line and reinsert a whole new line. If you only see one piece capable of being stitched in, the other piece wasn't put on, and it needs to be. You'll have someone irritatedly inform you that that will require wasting an entire central line kit just for that little thing, but again, this is better than requiring a whole new line insertion. If you notice this is a trend, consider incident reports. Seriously, it's not okay to increase infection risks and invasive procedures to patients just because the ED doc or intensivist just didn't feel like sewing in a couple more stitches. (See picture) [/rant]
The Fitbit charge HR is my favorite toy right now.
Every time I open the AN app on my iPad, I want to get the eye booger off the right eye of the nurse in the front.
Herpes can literally get in and on every part of the body. I'm glad my innocence was already shattered by sidepockets because for real, people. EVERYWHERE.
My fellow Walking Dead community - blood does not pour like that from the second intercostal space lateral to the midclavicular line, and there are no intestines at approximately the fifth or sixth intercostal space, even if that was somewhat midline. I'm just saying.
I hate to admit this (because I'm in love with, and rather loyal to my hospital), but lately, some ED shifts have been a little scary. I really hope they get their act together quickly.
One of my floor's charge nurses has advanced so highly on my "you are an amazing nurse and charge nurse" scale, that I think she broke the meter. During some of the hardest shifts I have ever had, she has put herself right at my side, battling through the thick of it with me. She has truly made me realize the value of a charge nurse you can TRUST.
That does, unfortunately, make it suck to realize how much harder a shift can be with a charge you can't trust. My understanding is that a previous manager made it a habit of promoting the slower, lazier nurses to charge. Look, if you are a manager and you think it's easier to promote them than it is to fire them when it is obvious the bedside isn't a good fit, you're doing it WRONG.
I have heard that in the last two years, my unit has gone from "fend for yourself" to a cooperative team that has each other's back. It's sad to hear that it was that way, but I'm proud to be part of the change.
This makes me laugh every time I see it:
Apparently my screenname is a planet name in A Wrinkle In Time where Aunt Beast lives. How did I not remember this?! Charles Wallace knows!
After the last two fresh off residency new hires we got (who are absolutely terrible to work with), I never expected to feel the massive amount of relief I felt when we just got a new hire who has a decent background and enough experience to realize nurses are a valuable resource, not competitors in an ego pissing match.
What have you learned this week?
As a friendly reminder, it is important to keep our WILTW threads mostly related to nursing. It's okay to throw in personal life observations, as long as the main focus of discussion remains nursing. Be safe on this All Hallows' Eve, my friends. :) And all you ED peeps - I'm hoping for some really good lessons from you on Sunday!
Wha? I was going around resetting clocks half the night I was so desperate to stay awake!
I never notice how many clocks there are on my unit until the time changes. We have one, at the nurse's station, that sets itself. It seemed like every time I turned around I found another one that needed to be set. Even this morning, during the treatment meeting, I noticed five minutes after I sat down that the clock was wrong and waited impatiently for over an hour to finally go fix it.
*hug luvstcrn* being on call 24/7 for a long time will burn anyone out. I hate it when my kids tell me they miss me or I'm not spending enough time with them. *another hug*
Thanks for the hugs!!! I'm not usually so whiny but just an extremely bad time at work right now. My family tries to be understanding but they don't get it and get frustrated. Can't say I blame them though. Thanks again for the hugs!!! :-)
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Yep, just now catching up on the rest of the thread...
Is it weird that I was actually fascinated by it? I find those things sickening, yet intriguing. I just can't look away.
I love wounds, too. I degloved a patient once rolling her towards me on admit. Grabbed her left hand with my right, didn't even pull that hard... and totally removed all of the skin from the wrist to the pinky finger, all the way from the pinky finger to the thumb. The entire back of her hand was held on by a really thin piece of skin. She was a really fragile elderly lady on blood thinners and chronic steroids - her whole hand had been a giant bruise before I rolled her, but I definitely wasn't expecting that to happen. We just put steris on it to try to hold it closed.
This week I learned that How to Get Away with Murder literally strings together random medical words when a character gets shot.BP is 70/palp, patient has JVD
Chest clear with "equal" breath sounds, so prepare for a thoracotomy!
Hey, if they'd said heart sounds were distant, too, that would make total sense. The breath sounds being clear and equal does a decent job of differentiating a bad pneumo from tamponade. Did the patient actually have tamponade in the show?
Oh, the places we'll go!
That is my favorite Dr. Seuss book, hands down.
I'm going to go back to school for some pre-reqs in the spring myself - right now I'm just waiting on official acceptance so I can enroll in some classes. I don't know if I'm actually going to follow through with my new tentative plans in the long run, but going to school just feels productive. I feel like all I'm doing at work right now is treading water - I need to feel like I'm actually accomplishing something, I guess. My job offers some tuition reimbursement so hopefully I can get at least some of the stuff I want to take paid for by my job.
All I'm accomplishing right now is getting ready to go out the door at 0500 for some cat litter... my cat just BLEW UP the litter box and I am out of litter. Serves me right for being lazy and not buying more yesterday.
Double Dunker
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Wha? I was going around resetting clocks half the night I was so desperate to stay awake!