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When I was doing bedside care, I always wanted to shave my male patients. The thing is, I was horrible at it. I could shave my grandpa like a pro with a straight edge, but those hospital razors! They are great for shaving legs but NOT beards. My nurse manager said to me "you want to shave them, not harvest skin grafts."
Wash their hair. Man I know I feel scuzzy if my hair isn't clean, so I do that in the hospital.
In homecare, I have done things like clean out someone's refridgerator, organized their wound care supplies for them, made them lunch, cleaned out their medicine cabinet w them (one psych pt I saw had, no lie 2 HUGE hefty bags full of expired tylenol, laxatives, cough syrups, you name it. She was convinced we couldn't put it out in the dumpster, it wasn't safe there, so I told her I'd take it to the incinerator, and loaded it into my car.)
I have washed feet and done foot massages, picked up their meds from the pharmacy, brought them enteric coated asa for mediplanners when it's on sale at WalMart, and my favorite pt, I bought him an organizer with business card pages, so he could bring me the cards of all the specialists he saw, I put a calender in it, so they could see when he had other appointments, and folders, a med list and about a dozen copies of the note "Please give Mr. So-and-so written instructions for all meds or therapy." Because he is soooooo forgetful. I have bought food and/or cat food for people so they could keep their pets. I feed one cat regularly, and I want to bring him home, but my dtr is horribly allergic and really suffers around cats.
I figure God has given me many blessings, so I pass it on if I can.
Originally posted by LasVegasRNWhen I was doing bedside care, I always wanted to shave my male patients. The thing is, I was horrible at it. I could shave my grandpa like a pro with a straight edge, but those hospital razors!
They are great for shaving legs but NOT beards. My nurse manager said to me "you want to shave them, not harvest skin grafts."
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Good trick:
Wash his face with warm water. Then, put the shaving cream on and LET IT SIT for a few minutes before you shave him. Also, I bring 2 razors. I use the first for around the mouth, then I do the cheeks and the neck last.
Hair washes and footrubs.
Especially for our new trauma admissions, they are always grungey and it must feel so awful to lie in a bed and be covered with road grit...
I knew a HCA in a chronic care ward who would bring people a basin of warm water to soak their feet, since it is rare in hospital to get a good soak on a bathtub, so that was her compromise. I thought that was really nice.
Favorite things to do for Residents:
(Boy you can tell I spent some time teaching the CNA's this stuff, can't ya? I love doing pt. care when I have the time to do it RIGHT.)
I like to spend a few minutes just chatting; I learn a lot about the pt. that way, and oftentimes, I get a history that's really helpful to the pt's care plan.
I also like to lotion dry feet/legs. If the person has obviously not done this care in awhile, I'll put a large gob of lotion to the feet and wrap them in a towel for a few minutes (while we gab )
And it only takes a few minutes to wash someone's hair when they're bedbound. Just take a pad, a plastic bag, and a couple of bedblankets, put them all under the pt's head, and use a cup to pour the water and wash, rinse, and comb.
Lots of times, I'll do the hair first, then finish the bed bath, and get 'em lookin' spiffy. If their skin is reallly dry, I use a lot of lotion. For really smelly underarms, swab some alcohol wipes and then let some shave cream sit on there a few minutes, then wash as usual....long's the skin isn't broken. this works pretty well.
Sitting and talking to the people (they can choose the topic -- whether it's based on reality or not). I like to lotion dry feet and legs, make sandwiches or toast, give massages hold hands. Make them feel CARED for, basically. I work in LTC and have a coworker whe brings a bottle or nailpolish to work and paints the little old ladies nails when there is down-time.
Nurse Ratched, RN
2,149 Posts
We all have things we'd like to be able to do for patients when time allows. We get many many geriatric folks at my work (from home or nursing homes) who haven't had nail care in AGES. I love to get folks trimmed up (discreetly, of course - the policies are so funny about nail care.)
Another nurse I worked with felt like she wasn't doing her job if her bedbound patients didn't get a backrub at bedtime.
What do you like to do special for your patients "just because" (not because some made it a script or a customer satisfaction ploy.)