4/23 WILTW: It turns out nurses do make the worst patients

Nurses General Nursing

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It's been a busy week for me, even though I feel like I've done very little actively. I've got a little extra bounce in my step (figuratively) since surgery and it has made me decide to get things done that I have been putting off for ages. Along the way, I've gathered some nursey lessons, some non, and I am still getting employer/employee lessons, but that was expected.

This week, I have learned...

(for my own health stuff, good to know for future patient care)

I have gratitude for the donor I received a part from. The feeling is stronger than I expected. I wish I could say thank you to the family of the cadaver I received bone from.

After a lumbar fusion, the anti-inflammatories they pry from your desperate hands (and refuse to give you anymore) will be the best possible reliever of post op pain. The second best will be muscle relaxers (skeletal muscle relaxants, not benzos).

When spinal post op pain finally reduces, it does suddenly and dramatically. What a beautiful event that is!

Due to my post op high fevers, it is really hard to shake the fear of infection. Last cefdinir was yesterday morning. Now I wait.

I wanted to be able to say that nurses DON'T make the worst patients. But, apparently during my first set of vitals on the floor, I told the CNA she was doing it wrong. And then I took everything away from her and did it myself.

It's become harder to remain appreciative and to continue to express appreciation to a person who is hyper and argumentative, and who has been home most of the days between March 6th and today. And who has a very different definition of helping. And who has no knowledge of ability beyond ABLE. Still, "appreciative" is appropriate because, overall, he's been amazing and he drops everything for me at the first hint I might ask for help. That said... I'm so glad he went in to work today! Now I'm on the lookout for "caretaker appreciation" gifts, or acts, that I am capable of right now. He's driving me nuts, but he does deserve actual gratitude.

Counseling is the best thing I've done for myself in ages.

(medical/nursing oriented directly)

A cardiac nurse who just moved floors (probably this week) to post op spines will be so bothered by the amount of pain medication available to a patient that she'll blow the patient off (in the hopes of spreading out doses enough that SHE feels more comfortable giving them). And then the patient will spend hours trying to get it back under control again. In tears. Because pain. Horrible, horrible pain.

Hemochromatosis is a malabsorption disorder in which iron levels become toxic (high, not low, in case that wasn't obvious), resulting in organs being overrun with iron. Other secondary diseases can result, which is how people usually are diagnosed. Hemochromatosis is usually not caught before damage is caused to organs (cirrhosis is typical), which will cause symptoms and lead to testing.

(And now I'm geeking out on this - are there homeostatic processes that become permanently disrupted as a result of the high iron level? Or, if not permanently, for a prolonged period of time after iron level stabilization? Oxygen level, pH regulation, CO2, what drives breathing (O2? CO2?), etc.?)

It sucks being the normal patient sandwiched between the escape artist who goes room to room insulting perfect strangers, and the lady with the curious family member who just stares in the neighboring rooms. Just keep this in mind if the normal patient prefers to keep the door closed.

In the posterior open approach to lumbar interbody fusion, the surgeon really thinks on the fly through a lot of it. They obviously have the basic expectation and steps for the procedure as pretty standard for the technique they use. But some of the details and steps of it can't even be decided on until midway through.

Related to that, I have half of an L5 vertebra. Also, the anticipated net balance of the loss of discs and bone, and the addition of hardware and cadaver bone, is + 3 mm.

(lessons in employment)

If I decide to not go back to my current/not current/current/maybe current/finally actually current job after everything I have gone through (believe me when I say it has been utter hell), *I* will be the one who looks like a jerk. I will never stop being appalled by this whole situation.

Relating to that, there is a cardiothoracic scrub nurse needed locally (not my current employer) for 4-10s per week plus call (frequent) that pays $8-9 more per hour than my current job. Its making me wonder if I really do care how good of a recommendation I keep if I jump ship. Then I remember this is my first nursing job ever and the only person who screwed up in all of this is the manager. Absolutely everyone else has had my back and has treated me well. So, now, I email my friend, my person on the "inside" who got my foot in that door without me realizing it, and tell her gracefully that I can't burn this bridge. But, I think I might when the timing is better.

(totally unrelated)

There is a show called You Live In What, and it's so cool! I'm ready to comb through the countryside for historical landmarks and abandoned warehouses.

My wallet has, in fact, been on vacation in Cape Canaveral, where they generously cut all my cards up including a $50 gas gift card I keep in there in case of emergency. It's home now. Yay. :\

All this and I know I'm forgetting stuff still! Oh, well!

What did you learn this week?

Specializes in ICU.
Pics or it didn't happen!

I should have taken a picture of it for real. Sadly, I've already washed my arm. Doubt it's going to be the last time, though. ;)

I should have taken a picture of it for real. Sadly, I've already washed my arm. Doubt it's going to be the last time, though. ;)

Um.

Did it fit your arm? :blink:

One of the reasons for my choosing a life career in nursing was

having a number of hospital stays as a kid ( mainly due to injuries,

but also to have surgical removal of adenoids/tonsils & a burst appendix),

& appreciating the excellent nursing care received.

Not too long ago I was an ortho-inpatient again, due to a bike crash.

I suffered multiple fractures/dislocations to my left forearm, from

elbow to fingers, & accordingly had to have multiple plates inserted.

In the public hospital that I was taken to, the ED team were great,

but the ortho ward was a nightmare.. the nurses were mainly foreign/

English as a 2nd language speakers, & sadly proved to be incompetent..

I was going to run through a litany of horrors here, but it is simply too depressing..

One example though, I had to forcefully argue about a blatant Rx error,

this - being presented with another patients meds,( & plainly/visibly not my Rx),

yet the foreign trained nurse initially attempted to browbeat me into taking them,

& then refused to even check them against my Rx chart.. until I raised hell..

This nurse then 'vanished' - & the correct Rx arrived with another - but no apology

or explanation was forthcoming, ( "Oh, I don't know what happened there..."

was the blase response to my 'W-T-F' query, from the replacement nurse)

& this was by no means an isolated event either..

I don't know what was worse, being an aware nurse, seeing it happen,

being in-the-know,& having to pick up errors & challenge them,

or being concerned about fellow patients - at the mercy of such ardently pushed,

non-reflective, relentlessly ongoing incompetence, from the Charge nurse down.

Suffice to say, once I'd got the insurance issues sorted out, I didn't return there..

(Those who have seen the Oliver Stone movie 'U-turn', will get the 'nightmare' drift).

My problem with compression stockings is that I have a muscular, short leg. If it's wide enough, it will be 2 inches too long. The foot fits, but the leg? Never.

I bought a pair of compression socks and while I love how they help my legs and feet, I couldn't get over the noise my shoes make when I have them on! It's this this awful clapping/slurping sound. No one else noticed (I actually asked my preceptor) but it drove me nuts!

Specializes in critical care.
One of the reasons for my choosing a life career in nursing was

having a number of hospital stays as a kid ( mainly due to injuries,

but also to have surgical removal of adenoids/tonsils & a burst appendix),

& appreciating the excellent nursing care received.

Not too long ago I was an ortho-inpatient again, due to a bike crash.

I suffered multiple fractures/dislocations to my left forearm, from

elbow to fingers, & accordingly had to have multiple plates inserted.

In the public hospital that I was taken to, the ED team were great,

but the ortho ward was a nightmare.. the nurses were mainly foreign/

English as a 2nd language speakers, & sadly proved to be incompetent..

I was going to run through a litany of horrors here, but it is simply too depressing..

One example though, I had to forcefully argue about a blatant Rx error,

this - being presented with another patients meds,( & plainly/visibly not my Rx),

yet the foreign trained nurse initially attempted to browbeat me into taking them,

& then refused to even check them against my Rx chart.. until I raised hell..

This nurse then 'vanished' - & the correct Rx arrived with another - but no apology

or explanation was forthcoming, ( "Oh, I don't know what happened there..."

was the blase response to my 'W-T-F' query, from the replacement nurse)

& this was by no means an isolated event either..

I don't know what was worse, being an aware nurse, seeing it happen,

being in-the-know,& having to pick up errors & challenge them,

or being concerned about fellow patients - at the mercy of such ardently pushed,

non-reflective, relentlessly ongoing incompetence, from the Charge nurse down.

Suffice to say, once I'd got the insurance issues sorted out, I didn't return there..

(Those who have seen the Oliver Stone movie 'U-turn', will get the 'nightmare' drift).

I'm sorry - this sounds awful!

Welcome to allnurses! Welcome to our What I Learned This Week (WILTW) threads!

Specializes in Hospice.
I know "used to" doesn't help, but one used to be able to buy compression knee-hi's in the same colors as scrubs: ceil, maroon, etc. I don't have to wear scrubs anymore, and I only have one pair of the socks left, ceil blue.

I've always been a fan of coordinated socks because, being tall-ish, for a long time it was hard to get a pair of scrub pants where the legs didn't hike halfway up my shins when I sat down. Having my ankle bones hanging out below the hem of my pants was a top peeve for me, so having the same color socks as pants just made me feel better.

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My daughter actually found a set of mis-matched socks for me. Yep, three pairs, 6 different socks.

Specializes in critical care.

Keep an eye out for this week's thread, which will be guest OPed by Purp!

I had such high hopes to do it yesterday and realized not one single thing was nursing related. I actually was happy for that, for my own sake because I need my brain decompressed, but I realized it meant I needed to get someone else to do it. Thank you very much for stepping up at the last minute, Purp!

Pssst, Purp, clear out your inbox!

Pssst, Purp, clear out your inbox!

I did :) I always forget to do that.

Here's the next WILTW:

https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-discussion/5-01-wiltw-1049957.html#post9024954

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