You know your shift is going to be INSANELY busy when...

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1. You notice no coffee in the coffee pot

2. The unt has 5 call lights going off at the same time

3. Your previous shift staff look at you and thank the lord you've come to rescue them

4. Dinner trays are still waiting to be passed out at 7pm

5. All the nursing staff could seem to be on the verge of tears

6. Off-going shift walk slowly and painfully cause there feet are hurting them

7. A collective stench on BM/Urine/Emisis is smelled getting off the elevator

8. The hospital has 8 ambulances in the ER driveway and 2 helicopters on the helipads.

9. Your Nurse Manager is assisting with patient care (Yes, I have actually seen that happen!)

...there were 4 empty beds on the unit yesterday.

Specializes in LTC.

You come on shift and the DON tells you that you have 2 (bringing the census up to 33) new admits, the other noc shift CNA called off (only 2 noc shift CNA's), Mr. Doe needs a bath (he had been finger painting, and they just cleaned it up and hadn't gotten to him), and Mrs. Smith is expected to pass anytime w/in the next 24 hours... that was the longest shift of my life and one of only 3 times I felt like walking out and quiting. Mr. Doe didn't get a bath (I did wash him down with wet wipes, but simply put there was too much to do for 1 CNA), the 2 new admits where (luckily) independent, and Mrs. Smith didn't pass until 20 min. AFTER I left (bless her soul).

Specializes in Telemetry, Perioperative.

when you were dealing with an unstable patient all day and then you finally have to call a code at 645, then you end up staying until 9 to do all the paperwork! ugh....

Specializes in Telemetry, Perioperative.

you talk to your patient about updating his DNR status, and he chuckles as he writes to you "IF CPR FAILS, CALL IT QUITS" and you know then and there your days doesn't get any better than that!

Specializes in Emergency.

You actually volunteer to work an extra shift because they are short on nurses (every extra shift I have ever worked has been crazy).

You are halfway through your shift and realize you forgot you had pt x because they were independent with ADL's (your other patients are total cares with dressing changes or just "pillow fluffers").

You get your assignment at start of shift and it includes a transfer from ICU, an ED admit and 3 isolation patients and a suicide watch (truly this really happened to me once!).

The offgoing shift says to you "You should have called in sick today."

You consider mass murder of all the attendings because they have conspired to all write stat orders on your patients at the same time.

All your patients have call-bell-itis and want the nurse for everything, including what a CNA can do for them.

All your pts are confused and high fall risk and constantly try to get out of bed, so your shift is spent trying to prevent falls.

Your incontinent C-Diff patient needs to be changed every 15 minutes, but the MD refuses to give an order for a FMS.

And finally, you show up for work only to find out that half the staff have called out sick and those remaining have to increase their patient load because they can't find other nurses to help us out. AARRGH!

Specializes in NICU, PICU, PCVICU and peds oncology.

... my DH says to me as I'm leaving, "I hope you have an easy shift." That's the ABSOLUTE kiss of death for any hope of a quiet night. Last time he said that to me I had my assignment changed FIVE times before midnight and ended up providing post mortem care for a baby who arrested just after our shift started.

Specializes in ICU, Telemetry.

You come in and ALL your patients just happen to be in the rooms closest to the nurse's station. For a reason.

I was running between 5 rooms where the bed alarms were going off constantly, the pts were ripping out IVs, crawling out of bed over the foot board, fingerpainting themselves with the contents of their colostomy bags, and one poor demented soul was memorably screaming "Moooommmmaaa! Mooommmma! MOMMA!" despite 5 mg of Haldol and 2mg of Ativan. I actually had a split second where I wanted to just throw mattresses down on a floor in an empty room and pile them all in there -- they weren't that sick, I swear to you it was NH dump day, and it didn't take but 5 seconds to see the nursing home had figured out that reporting a "seizure" meant 24 hours without the pt at their facility...as they all came from the same place and their presenting complaint was "seizure."

They screamed, threw things, climbed out of bed every 2 minutes, were constantly pulling off their gowns and tying their O2 cannulas into macrame, but NOBODY seized.

I thought about having one, however...

as you and your fellow RN's walk into the unit at start of shift, and all of night shift starts applauding.:yeah:

On my tele floor I know the my day is going to suck when

1) the following labs are ordered: ABG's, iSTAT labs, Type and Cross

2) Given prn meds include: Ativan, Haldol, Serequol

3) When i come in to check my schedule and my charge nurse brings me scrubs and gets me stay.

4) I haven't even clocked in and i get an admit slip

5) When a fellow oncoming nurse looks at the room assignments, says "No" and walks right back out(really did happen).

Half of your 8 stepdown pts have d/c orders (some home, some to NH) and you know you'll get 4 admits, some direct (nothing as easy as a transfer, of course); your agency CNA shows up drunk (not immediately obvious), cops an attitude after you give her the assignment and therefore tells all your minority pts that you're a bigot (and some believe it); did I mention the dopamine drip, restraints, isolation... In a nutshell, you know that your 12 hours day shift will end at 2300 (and no, you were not asked to stay late - they know better than that!) due to all the charting you couldn't even get started on until shift change. :eek:

Yes, this happened to me, 10 years ago (and almost ran me out of hospital nsg for good; it did for a long time, anyway).

DeLana

Specializes in Acute Care.
There are 3 police cars at the ER doors.

(Your number may vary. "3" is three towns worth around here!)

Very true. Ours is 4.

And when you get report that you assignment includes 3 patients in active detox - - and pharmacy calls to tell you they can't refill the ativan because they are almost out and all vials are being diverted to ICU.

Specializes in Peds Hem, Onc, Med/Surg.

When you get off the elevators and the nurses are crowing around and say thank god you are here, we thought you weren't coming. Time: 6:50am. Then the other nurse says, Chicookie I hope you like taking vitals!

I got a smaller assignment that day BUT i also had to do CNA work because ours wasn't there.......

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