Nursing student blogging about her senior year. Follow along for laughs, tears, and good times. Check out the blog at mightynursemegan.blogspot.com
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Kevin Hines jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge and survived. He tells his emotional story and ends with a powerful message to people mentally suffering
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People react to news of late-stage cancer differently.
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MY FAVORITE PATIENT TODAY
Patient has been sitting in a bed in the hallway waiting for a room.
Me: “Hello sir, how are you feeling today?”
Patient: “You know after sitting here for 20 minutes and watching everyone else pass by, I’m starting to realize how not sick I am.”
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When report goes something like this: Negative assessment, Bowel sounds good, blood sugars good, no skin breakdown, room air, IV saline locked, up ad lib.
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Sensory Dermatomes
Be careful not to confuse S1,S2 which is your achilles heel, to S3 which is your genitals (which some may consider mens figurative achilles heel). :D
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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the first human tests of an experimental Zika virus vaccine, the makers of the drug announced on Monday.
Called GLS–5700, the medication will be used in a clinical trial involving 40 healthy people, and represents the first major step towards ultimately immunising people against Zika – which was declared a global public health emergency by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in February.
“We are proud to have attained the approval to initiate the first Zika vaccine study in human volunteers,” said J. Joseph Kim, president and CEO of US-based Inovio Pharmaceuticals, which is developing the vaccine with South Korean partner, GeneOne Life Science. “We plan to dose our first subjects in the next weeks and expect to report phase 1 interim results later this year.”
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Me when the outgoing nurse says, “These patients are easy, you should have a good day.”
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Sasha Berg
https://www.behance.net/sashaberg
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Dear New Nurse Me
So you’re probably wondering what you got yourself into.
It’s your fourth week with your preceptor, and already you’re wondering that. You just passed NCLEX, you studied for months, heck years if you think about it, covering every inch, every detail of the human body; and after all those clinicals, you sort of thought you had a good idea what to expect - but this? You’re wondering how you’re supposed to juggle 7 patients on this floor. You’re panicked, as you still aren’t giving meds on time, your documentation sort of sucks, you completely suck at IV’s, you’ve had pegs explode back on you, you seem to say all the wrong things to patients, and families, no one trust you yet - doctors, patients or coworkers, you completely missed warning signs a patient was decompensating, and you almost had an MI yourself the first time your patient coded. You can’t remember what you love about nursing, and you can’t seem to remember any of the damn codes to the supply room, med room or hidden stash supply rooms. Plus you never, ever seem to get out on time.
Dear new nurse, don’t give in.
In about three or four months, you’re going to nail that IVL in one hit, and some days you’ll miss, but you’ll remember the day you got it and you won’t be so hard on yourself.
In about six months, you’ll finish your medications in record time. It will probably surprise you, and you’ll wonder if you missed something, but you didn’t. You’ve just begun to establish your flow.
In about 8 months, you’ll be the first one to notice a subtlety in one of your patients, something that seems amiss. You’ll probably question your judgment, but you follow your instinct anyway, advocating for your patient. You may not feel it today, but that patient in about 8 months likely avoided a cardiac arrest because of your rapid intervention.
In about a year, you won’t tremble every time you call a doctor, you won’t feel so awkward reporting information about your patient, and you will stand your ground and you will earn the respect of the doctors for your quality of care, your sharp assessment and skills. You won’t really notice it, but they will begin to look for you to ask your thoughts, or just to ensure you know updates on what’s happening with the patients you share. A year from that, they will probably start to rely on you to the point where you think they’re taking advantage of you, sometimes that’s going to happen unless you stand your ground, but sometimes it’s really just them trusting you, something not easily shared by caregivers.
In about a year and a half, you’ll have your system down, whereby you’re finishing your meds, documenting much less than the storybook you began with, but you’ll realize you’re getting to the point a lot faster. You’ll have days when it all goes to hell, your system blown, patients coding, patients coming and going from tests, admissions and discharges not accounted for, patients falling and needing stat CT’s, coworkers calling out meaning you’ll get extra patients, but you’ll remember that you can do this. You’ll remember that you’ve had good days when you can juggle those patients. You’ll remember that you have coded patients, and you haven’t felt a trembling mess, you’ll remember that even in the worst of patient nurse ratios, you’ve banded together as a team and survived the day.
In about a year or two, you will be the one in charge, you will be the one people are asking to help insert IV’s, you’ll be the one nursing students look up to, you’ll be the one new nurses hope they will someday be.
Dear new nurse, we’re not here to say, “cheer up, it all gets better,” for that’s an insult to your struggle right now.
We aren’t here to say that one day it all magically falls into place, for it’s the todays you are worried about,
We’re simply here to support you, to empathize with what it feels like to be in your shoes, some days you’ll feel strong, some days you’ll feel weak,
But do not give in.
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Nightshift conversations between 2 and 4 AM
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When you’re not sure if you can hear a bed alarm down the hall, or if you’ve just heard so many this shift your ears are ringing
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Love this sponsored post of patients talking about their hospital experiences and appreciation for nurses. Happy nurses week!
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Congratulations on the new book @nurseeyeroll!!! Can’t wait to read and share with others!!
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that “you’re always invited” stuff doesn’t work for me you have to personally invite me or else I’ll feel like I’m showing up uninvited
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