roses are red, i’m going to bed
#violets are blue #damn bitch me too
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@nursekrystaaal
roses are red, i’m going to bed
#violets are blue #damn bitch me too
What I’m thinking during most crazy/gross situations at work...
The other night I was applying moisture barrier cream to an 80-something year old man’s massively swollen and excoriated testicles after we’d cleaned up his 2nd BM that had him shitting down to the footboard and I said to my coworkers, “Man, people must envy my job.”
A few months ago, my co-worker had a patient code on her and die. Now, we work on a cardiac med-tele floor. We don’t see code blues too often, so when we do, it takes us a little bit longer to digest.
My co-worker has been a nurse for over 30 years. She’s had a few codes in her career but never one that didn’t make it. This one shook her.
“I’m a nurse. I was supposed to save his life. But I couldn’t.”
She went over her every move. She dissected every intervention leading up to the moment he stopped breathing. She thought of things she could have done better. Things she could have done faster. Things she could have done that would have allowed him to still be alive.
Truth is, she did not a thing wrong. His death was not her fault. But like all nurses do, she felt responsible. What she said still hovers around in my head.
“I’m a nurse. I was supposed to save his life. But I couldn’t.”
We are responsible for multiple lives every time we clock in. Sometimes we clock out knowing we helped made them better. Other times, we leave with a heavy burden on our shoulders, wondering what more we could have done.
Yes, we are nurses. Yes, we heal. We care. We save.
But we’re human. We can’t save everyone.
We do what we can with the abilities God has given us with. The rest is left to His hands.
Staff meetings
I’m a doctor. We get all the glory. And credit. And guess what? We only deserve part of it. I started out in medicine in the mid-80′s, volunteering at an ER. And the biggest shock to me was learning how much of what happens in a hospital is nurse territory. Doctors will see you anywhere from 5 to 30 minutes a day, depending on how sick you are. And the rest is the nurses. They’re the ones making sure you get your pills and checking that your vital signs aren’t dropping. They make sure you don’t fall down and break something. If you start vomiting, doctors will run out of the room and the nurses will rush in. They change your wound dressings and start your IV line. They’ll bring you a warm blanket. And clean disgusting things off you. Even if you’re drunk. Or delirious. Or mean. And through all of this they try be friendly and positive. Even though you aren’t their only sick patient. I respect nurses. I learned early on that they’re key to being a good doctor. You piss off the nursing staff, and you’ll have a miserable career at that hospital. Respect and treat them well, and you’ll never regret it. They’re as important to being a good doctor as your medical degree. Maybe more. If you come out of medical school with a chip on your shoulder against nurses, you better lose it fast. Because they will make or break your training, and often know more than you do. Be nice and they’ll teach you. A good neurology nurse is often a better inpatient neurologist than some doctors I’ve met. I remember a guy named Steve, who was an intern with me a long time ago. We were only a few months out of medical school, and as we were writing chart notes one morning a nurse came over and asked if he’d go listen to his patient’s heart. With icy contempt, and not even looking up from the chart, he said “I don’t have to listen to his heart, because I looked at his EKG.” They ain’t the same thing, dude. If he’d listened he might have noticed that the patient had developed a loud murmur in the last 24 hours. When the attending caught it a few hours later, Steve got chewed out. If he’d taken the nurse’s advice, and listened, he wouldn’t have gotten reprimanded by the residency board. Here’s a quote from “Kill as Few Patients as Possible” by Oscar London, MD: “Working with a good nurse is one of the great joys of being a doctor. I cannot understand physicians who adopt an adversarial relationship with nurses. They are depriving themselves of an education in hospital wisdom.” Those doctors are also depriving themselves of friends. On a difficult day on call, sometimes all it takes is a sympathetic nurse to temporarily add you to her patient list, steal you a Diet Coke from the fridge, and let you cry on her shoulder for 5 minutes. It doesn’t make the day any less busy, but helps you absorb the punishment better. What got me started on this? While I was rounding this weekend, a grateful patient’s family brought the ICU nurses a box of donuts, and so the staff was picking through them. One said, “Oh, this kind is my favorite, it has cream filling.” And a patient in one of the rooms yelled, “Hey, babe, I got my own kind of cream-filled dessert in here! Come have a taste!” You say that to a waitress, and you’d likely get your kicked out of the restaurant. You say that to a co-worker, and you’d be fired and/or sued for harassment. You say that to a lady in a bar, and you’ll likely get a black eye. And what did the nurse do? In spite of the patient said, she went in his room, turned off his beeping IV pump, and calmly told him that he would not talk to her that way. And I admire that. Nursing is a damn tough job. And the people who do it are tougher. And somehow still remain saints.
Angela Ar (via
theitunurse
)
This makes me feel good.
(via adenosinetriesphosphate)
What it feels like on those shifts where everything goes wrong…
This is Nick. He’s a handsome twenty-some year old ICU nurse from Ohio who I happen to be smitten with ;) Our story is kind of fun- actually, it’s really fun and almost out of this world. I’ll save the details for some other time, but just know that he and I have some big goals we plan to tackle together. The first of many being travel nursing. We currently work in the same hospital in Vegas but on different units. Before we met, we both individually had dreams of travel nursing. But dreams are more fun when you share them- especially when you share them with someone you really care about :) With that being said, we are currently working on getting our RN licenses in a few different states. We have some ideas of where we’d like to go first, but nothing is set in stone yet. In the mean time, we spend our days (or nights, actually) working and using our days off to travel about. Let me just tell ya, dating this guy has been life-changing. For a number of reasons. But that’s something else I’ll save for another time too :)
Back.
Hi friends! It’s been awhile, but I’m back. There has been a lot happening in the past few months, so forgive me for my absence. As some know, I was at the Route 91 shooting in Vegas back in October. I wasn’t physically harmed, however, the traumatic event did take its toll on me in a number of other ways. I am very fortunate and blessed to have the friends and family that I do because they sure as hell carried me through one of the toughest circumstances I’ve ever been in. But with that aside, I entered 2018 with a new appreciation and a deeper love for life. So, I shall spend this next year continuing this fun blog and throwing in fun updates about my life because this year and the years to come are going to take a different but exciting turn :)
sometimes nursing and medicine is having to remind yourself that the burdens you keep are not just yours to bear alone.
burnout talk (via nurse-x-ramblings)
Omggggg the worst
This is my friend Aaron, who also happens to be an ER nurse at Sunrise Medical Center; the very hospital that took in hundreds of victims Sunday evening. From nurse to nurse and friend to friend, we spent this morning talking about each of our traumatizing perspectives. Mine as dodging bullets and desperately running to save my life; his as running around chaotically in a literal blood bath to save hundreds of lives in a maxed out ER. While we tried to be as lighthearted as possible, we’re both carrying pain that neither of us want to bear. I’m not sure if talking about it in grave detail is healing or hurting, but I’d like to think it’s progress either way. Aaron, thank you for saving so many lives. You said, “I just showed up for another day of work,” but you left as more of a hero than you probably ever thought possible. I hope you choose to humbly hold that close to your heart despite the pain 💕
What I have learned in nursing school so far: If you take a pill with grapefruit juice, you are going to die.
lol truuuuu
When the attending asks if the patient received a “nursing dose” of Ativan
the struggle is real (by @fire-plug)
Always.
My activity level on my first day off after 4 in a row
I sit.
I watch.
I eat.
Me for usually 24 hours:
Only get up for maybe a snack and bathroom 😂
When you find out there’s a nurse on your med surg floor who’s been there for 40 years
Waking up every single time when you work night shift