Poohlovr
<font color=red>Still SSB's archrival!<br><font co
- Joined
- Sep 16, 1999
- Messages
- 3,856
In a lot of hospitals the nurses don't have time do much of anything but pass the meds and take care of emergencies. They don't have the TIME for fluffing your pillow and feeding ice chips even if they wanted to. Everyone has to prioritize at work but when a nurse does it...someone calls them cold and uncaring because they have no choices.
The truest words I have seen written.
Rare is the day that I get out of work on time. Rare is the week that I'm not supposed to go back to the hospital on my day off for some sort of meeting or another. Even rarer is the day off that I don't get a call asking if I can come in to work.
I wish I had the time to do everything the patients ask of me. Simply put, I don't. I run up and down the halls passing pills and "putting out fires" If one of my patients goes bad and requires extra time, the rest go on auto-pilot. Meds are late, Dressing changes are late (or, put off for the next shift to do).
My day doesn't have any extra time allowed for emergencies.
/Most days, I finish doing my assessments and passing my 8 a.m. meds at 10 or 10:30.
If it's 10, I can start charting for a few minutes. If it's 10:30. I start passing my 11:00 meds. Charting will have to wait.
After 11:00 meds, I do my insulin injections, then I start charting.
If it's a day that my stomach thinks my throat has been slit, I might grab something to eat,assuming I have time (I take a a tv dinner, cause it's faster) at this time. Somewhere between lunch and 1:00, I have to get all of my charting in (and that's a lot--if you want to hear in detail all of the charting I am required to do--either by law or my hospital as a result of industry lawsuits, I'll be glad to tell you--in detail. Rest assured taht we are supposed to chart every two hours on each patient).For the next two hours, I finish my medications (I also have 1,2 and 3:00 meds.) I have to do chart checks, review new orders to make sure I haven't missed any during the day when I make checks for new orders every time a doctor sees a patient, chart vital signs (which I take--not my aides)
At 2:00, if nothing urgent is going on , I tape report for the on-coming shift. Then I finish meds and finish charting. Somewhere in this day, I have had to do dressing changes, make doctors calls if there is a change I need to report, draw labs, change IVs that have gone bad, change IV tubing that is 3 days old, talk to ancillary services and the lab umpteen times, and answer questions from doctors more times than I can count (after all, it's easier to ask the nurse, than to look it up themselves). I also answer call lights all day, because the aides are busy ,too. I help my aides with bed changes and
with "clean ups" This is on a regular day, with no emergent pateint concerns.
No, I don't have time to do all of the things I am asked to do--get cokes, coffee, ice, go buy newspapers, talk with family members multiple times a day on the phone and in the hall, sit with mom or dad who gets lonely or confused or combative....the time is simply not there.
If you don't like it, you can help-- coordinate your family--one person to get information on how moms night was and that person can tell everyone else. Trust me, if 10 people call, the answer is still going to be the same and I really don't have time to go through that with each family. (BTW--did you know that HIPPA prevents me from giving out information now except to the POA??? Don't get ticked at me if I tell you "I'm sorry--I'm not allowed to give out that information", 'cause I'm not allowed to). Someone from the family can be there for the confused patient to help re-orient or calm or simply to talk. The family cannot expect me to get coffee, cokes, etc for them. I am there for the patient. I don't have time to wait on them, too. We have a cafeteria--use it.
If we are short staffed, I will have extra patients, but, I am not allowed to tell anyone that we are short.
If I have patients who require extra care, some patients will not see me as often as they should. I am sorry for that, but, it's true.Don't expect me to drop everything cause mom needs kleenex, or her face washed or anything not urgent. I will get to it, but, be patient. Don't call for the nurse i mom needs to be cleaned up. Ask for the aide. I will do it, but, that leaves other parts of my job hanging, while the aide might be available to do it right away. If I am truly pressed for time,that's all I'm going to do anyway--get the aide.
If the next shift is short, I may be mandated to stay to help fill their holes. If not, it is still frequently 4 or 4:30 before I finish my day that was supposed to end at 3:00 and can go home.
Now, lest you think I am an uncaring nurse, I'm not. Nor do my patients see me that way. At work, we have a "Better Care" awards program. There is one criteria and one only for receiving this award-- a patient or their family, has to write a note to management complimenting the care you (And yes, you must be named in the letter) gave. I have 4 of these awards, and will get a fifth next quarter. The most one could have (if you had gotten one every time since their inception, which no one has, is 8.(No matter how many notes you get each quarter, you still receive only one award)
I feel blessed to know that despite everything, my patients appreciate what I do for them and recogonize that I am doing my best and working my hardest.
I do not want to leave nursing and I am not going to leave because some people don't understand the therapeutic value of making these events and these people human. It just allows me to deal with what I do and see on a daily basis . But, I will tell jokes about nursing. I will tell funny stories, just like all of these.
No matter what some of you may say, that does not make me a bad nurse. I am one of the best nurses you will ever hope to get.
Now, did I tell you about the elderly gentleman who kept taking his colostomy bag off? Whenever we would bend down to clean him up and get it fixed back up, he would say "while you're down there, why don't you just grab my..."---oh my--I can't even type what he asked us to do while we "were down there", but I bet you can guess!





