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When you have down time on the night shift? I am talking about patient care is done; charting is done, no co-worker needs help getting caught up, yadda yadda. Do you sit and read a book or try to look busy?
On slow nights I catch up on my mandatory educational modules, purposely chart slower than usual, update care plans, browse the internet, chat with coworkers, and perhaps read the newspaper or a magazine.
When you have down time on the night shift? I am talking about patient care is done; charting is done, no co-worker needs help getting caught up, yadda yadda. Do you sit and read a book or try to look busy?
I never encountered this. There was always something to do. In LTC it might be bringing down to the basement low O2 tanks and bringing up full ones. Just one example.
Chat with coworkers (happens during all nursing station time anyhow). Read occasionally. Watch YouTube on my phone quietly. Clean keyboards (those things are disgusting). Print out teaching sheets for my patients. Eat snacks. Read histories. Prepare a room for an admit.
I just wish I could take a nap. That would be amazing.
~ No One Can Make You Feel Inferior Without Your Consent -Eleanor Roosevelt ~
It is pretty rare that, not only is it a slower night for me, but slower night for my other co-workers, too. Usually, on my slower nights, which are fairly rare, I help another co-worker with their admission (because if I'm not getting one, it's a guarantee that a coworker next to me will be), cleaning up a patient, etc. But, on the rare night that everything is done for everybody, those are the nights that I do my CEU's, read the H/P.
applewhitern, BSN, RN
1,871 Posts
Read Allnurses, of course!