WILTW 9/13: Social Calls and Social Justice

Nurses General Nursing

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Hi all!

I have gotten permission by ixchel to host WILTW. I feel EXTREMELY honored to keep a thread going that inspires, and helps many of us who want to work or work in this business.

This week, has been the most SOCIAL week; with enjoying the last week of summer break behind me and celebrating labor day as a unionized employee at work, the rest of the week was exciting with the increase of social cases, and my ever frustration with how social services is fragmented, in trouble, and fails the kids and the families that I see, along with actual lateral violence-not amongst nurses by the way-in my face, and support for a issue arise, it hasn't been a bad week! ;)

So, without further preamble what I learned this week:

1. Nurse who are out of work or at their undesired job due to the nursing surplus in my area that want to be Peds nurses could MOST likely run social services much more efficiently and effectively. :yes:

2. Being recorded is NOT such a bad thing when you see a trauma fellow screaming and pushing nurses during a trauma, twice in the same weekend for two different traumas.

3. That I enjoy sedations; and this is another option when I plan my pre-semi retirement.

4. That I will be a part of learning to be a educator on sexual assault, assault collections; we play an important part of collecting to ensure that DNA is not compromised; even if not discovered immediately, anything and any part of the process where I can assist in protect the public's health and safety, then I can be confident in supporting that justice.

So, what have you learned this week?

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.

I will renew my license for now. But I feel as time goes on I feel less & less like working/going to school. I had that motivation before I had my first child, now I don't care as much.

Plus with my job history & being out of the professional world for so long, I feel it will be close to impossible to get a job as an LVN. So my hand is kind of forced, if I want to work as a nurse I'll have to go back to school. Ugh.

Specializes in ED, psych.
I will renew my license for now. But I feel as time goes on I feel less & less like working/going to school. I had that motivation before I had my first child, now I don't care as much.

Plus with my job history & being out of the professional world for so long, I feel it will be close to impossible to get a job as an LVN. So my hand is kind of forced, if I want to work as a nurse I'll have to go back to school. Ugh.

Definitely renew that license -- I renewed my teaching license, even though I have no intention of teaching again. That was a lot of hard work, sweat and tears and it's easier to renew than to let it lapse. God forbid I suck as a nurse and I go back into teaching, and I have to start at square one again. That's a lot of extra, expensive steps for me if I let that lapse.

I can imagine it's pretty similar in the nursing world.

Phooey to the job history. From reading your posts over the months I've been on here, any job will be lucky to have you, OC.

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..

Oh thank you so very much. Now I hope the Break Room link works just as well.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
I will renew my license for now. But I feel as time goes on I feel less & less like working/going to school. I had that motivation before I had my first child, now I don't care as much.

Plus with my job history & being out of the professional world for so long, I feel it will be close to impossible to get a job as an LVN. So my hand is kind of forced, if I want to work as a nurse I'll have to go back to school. Ugh.

It won't be a negative; if and WHEN you return to school, you will learn so much new advances, that it will be a positive. :yes:

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
I learned that having a newly hired orientee can be daunting, especially if this person has extremely literal thought processes. It makes training the person so much more difficult than it needs to be...

Like the Albert Einstein quote: "Logic will take you from A to B. Imagination will take you anywhere."

Hoping you can help guide the newbie to tap into their nursing imagination! :up:

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
I learned that my father's death has, in a way, freed me. I have not even allowed myself to think about relocating somewhere warm and sunny from the Midwest- as I needed to be nearby in his old age. Now that he's gone, I find myself looking daily at real estate listings in Florida (we have a daughter there). My work-from-home job is portable. All we need to do now is get our youngest through college, and we can go! (Gotta have that in-state tuition rate)

I also learned how to calculate a baseball team's 'magic number'.

My thoughts are with you with this new chapter MMJ; I also hope you can share that "magic number" calculation!

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
I learned why so many projects fail how to initiate and start projects with all the science that is actually present. I also learned how to calculate costs /budgeting for projects, stakeholder management. Now that I have more solid knowledge about how to really plan and execute a project I hope to use that for some quality improvement project I am planing.

I learned that there are still physicians out there who believe that palliative care is only appropriate "when the patient is ready and there yet" - meaning basically 2 days to live. Never mind that it is not the same as hospice care and focuses on prevention of suffering, increasing the quality of life in serious illness, and tries to help patients to align the goals for care/care plan with their values and wishes.

And - how is it beneficial to say "Hi - the doctor told you that you have 2 days to live - what are your wishes and goals?"

When talking about serious illness a conversation method that is not so much focused on the medical detail but on the patient values and goals is more effective and the rest will usually follow. But - those conversations need to happen earlier in the disease, more, and better according to the research from the Ariadne Lab

Clinicians learn how to talk to patients about what matters most and be change agents for better care | Ariadne Labs

If you have time and are interested in child birth /maternal care or improvements in surgery or end-of-life care check out their webpage !

Their training and workshop has transformed the way my team approaches serious illness conversations.

We started to use this conversation guide for those conversations though have to adapt it for acute care as patients may be sicker and in crisis :

Redesigned Serious Illness Conversation Guide supports more, better and earlier conversations about what matters most | Ariadne Labs

What was especially important for me to learn is that there is a huge difference between saying "I am concerned" (more of a medical jargon) and "I am worried about you / I am worried that your time might be shorter than you think it is" (empathy and emotion focused). I learned that the effect is different. I had a hard time to say " I am worried" - it does take away some distance and signals that something serious is going on plus a person cares.

And I would like to also put out that as palliative care team we do not see a patient with a set agenda. I learned that a lot of healthcare workers still think that our job is to "make that patient DNR/DNI" or "make that patient CMO" or that if a person has not changed their mind about their code status to what the nurse thinks is the "right code status" for patient after seeing palliative care I have not achieved anything. There is no set agenda!!! The goal is to explore the goals and values, discuss what is going on, what is important, identify palliative care needs, sometimes symptom control. If it also happens that somebody decides to change code status fine but if not that is also ok. People need time to process things.

I learned that due to my age fitness kickboxing is pushing it at times... as a martial artist I like the fitness kickboxing stuff because I do not have time to focus on martial arts right now and I am too old now for any sparring or competitions. The fitness aspect is great though and I have gained back a lot of strength and mobility. Not to mention that exercise is good to relieve stress.

I have signed up for American Sign Language to build some basic vocabulary. I probably wrote already some while ago that the appropriate pain scale to use in non hearing patients is usually Wong Baker.

Looks like most of my writing is related to palliative care (again).

Keep posting palliative care information! Your posts are very valuable in terms of making those who don't specialize but encounter end of life issues have extra tools in the nursing toolbox!

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
Oh thank you so very much. Now I hope the Break Room link works just as well.

I I hope we can stay on the yellow side; I don't know why my password doesn't work over there.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
I've learned that parents will do ANYTHING not to share their kid's medical history with THE NURSE.

:banghead: I can relate; when they come to visit the ED, parents that don't even share the history or the chief complaint fully becomes a "what a tangled web I can weave" scenario.

Sometimes we'd have an advantage; we get to go over previous records, and histories; I'msure you would love to have electronic accessible records!

Specializes in RETIRED Cath Lab/Cardiology/Radiology.
I I hope we can stay on the yellow side; I don't know why my password doesn't work over there.

Please report the problem to the Help Desk.

Same password *should* work on both sides.

Hopefully someone will sort this out and solve it for you. :)

Also in the non nursing world - I've learned so much about my spouse this week while starting to pack our house. He's gone to our new location, already at work. I'm doing the majority of closing our house on my own which means I get to go through everything in this house. I just unearthed a positive treasure trove of ancient magic the gathering cards. I do believe my husband was once a horrible geek. I shall tease him forever. :roflmao:

I just unearthed a positive treasure trove of ancient magic the gathering cards. I do believe my husband was once a horrible geek. I shall tease him forever. :roflmao:

My husband too! He probably has over 1000 cards.

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