Disney Doll
DIS Security Matron
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2000
- Messages
- 28,882
Well, first of all, venting on the DIS is an acceptable alternative to beating the snot out of your demented patient!
Second of all, a nurse having a bad day and venting about it is not the worst thing in the world.
Third of all, there are many different types of nursing, and many different types of facilities a nurse can work in. We may all have similar experiences, but no two can ever be the same. I would imagine working on a medical floor in an inner-city hospital is a lot different than working on a medical floor in Palm Beach, if you KWIM.
I think often a nurse's frustration lies less with the patient and more with what is pewrceived as a lack of support form the administration. Nurses are "expected" to do everything that no one else wants to do, they are expected to always be smiling, happy angels of mercy no matter what the circumastances. Meanwhile, there are fewer and fewer of us and we are asked to do more and more by way of patient care, to make up for cuts the hospital has had to make in other areas...say for example, housekeeping. In my hospital, if a patient vomits on the floor, I am expected to clean it up. Not the housekeeper...me. I am to wipe it up first, and the go to the housekeeper, borrow her mop and wash the area. Why??? Because where we used to have 2 housekeepers we now have one and she is busting her butt just to do her routine cleaning duties so if she has to keep stopping to do "extraordinary" things, her routine things fall by the wayside. And that is one example...i can give you millions like that. Does it mean I hate my job? No...but it dsoes mean that I wish I could do the nurse job without having to do all the other jobs so that I could maybe spend a bit more time with the patient. I do, after all, like people, and taking crae of them...I just don't get much of a chance to do it anymore.
Nursing is in a crisis. There are not enough of us, and it is only going to get worse. Within the next 20 years, when all the nurses who are now average age 48 (because that is the average age of a nurse today...48) retire, there aren't going to be a lot of nurses left. Younger folks today aren't going into nursing, because they have so many more opportunities to do so many more exciting things. Let's see...work for a big company where I have the opportunity to grow, earn a really big salary, and maybe travel a bit, or become a nurse, clean people's butts, deal with demented people who try to fondle me, and work weekends, evening, nights and holidays...which would you choose?
It's a crisis in the making, and unfortunately, no one really seems to be addressing it.
Second of all, a nurse having a bad day and venting about it is not the worst thing in the world.
Third of all, there are many different types of nursing, and many different types of facilities a nurse can work in. We may all have similar experiences, but no two can ever be the same. I would imagine working on a medical floor in an inner-city hospital is a lot different than working on a medical floor in Palm Beach, if you KWIM.
I think often a nurse's frustration lies less with the patient and more with what is pewrceived as a lack of support form the administration. Nurses are "expected" to do everything that no one else wants to do, they are expected to always be smiling, happy angels of mercy no matter what the circumastances. Meanwhile, there are fewer and fewer of us and we are asked to do more and more by way of patient care, to make up for cuts the hospital has had to make in other areas...say for example, housekeeping. In my hospital, if a patient vomits on the floor, I am expected to clean it up. Not the housekeeper...me. I am to wipe it up first, and the go to the housekeeper, borrow her mop and wash the area. Why??? Because where we used to have 2 housekeepers we now have one and she is busting her butt just to do her routine cleaning duties so if she has to keep stopping to do "extraordinary" things, her routine things fall by the wayside. And that is one example...i can give you millions like that. Does it mean I hate my job? No...but it dsoes mean that I wish I could do the nurse job without having to do all the other jobs so that I could maybe spend a bit more time with the patient. I do, after all, like people, and taking crae of them...I just don't get much of a chance to do it anymore.
Nursing is in a crisis. There are not enough of us, and it is only going to get worse. Within the next 20 years, when all the nurses who are now average age 48 (because that is the average age of a nurse today...48) retire, there aren't going to be a lot of nurses left. Younger folks today aren't going into nursing, because they have so many more opportunities to do so many more exciting things. Let's see...work for a big company where I have the opportunity to grow, earn a really big salary, and maybe travel a bit, or become a nurse, clean people's butts, deal with demented people who try to fondle me, and work weekends, evening, nights and holidays...which would you choose?
It's a crisis in the making, and unfortunately, no one really seems to be addressing it.
) cannot legally abuse nurses, doctors, hospital staff, etc, if they do you should refuse to care for that person or report the family memeber. As for verbal abuse, there are just too many *******s in this world and unfortunatly we all have to deal with verbal abuse in any line of work. You should have heard some of the things I was called while working at Blockbuster
I am a nurse and I was at work last night when my friend and co-worker had an unruly patient (I'm being kind). He is elderly and has severe dementia and is confused. He ripped out his IV and flung blood around the room, he hit and kicked, and he yelled out the most vulgar, sexual comments to all the nurses in the room (6 of us, all female). I however, was the lucky one who got to restart his IV and administer the meds to calm him down - here's my problem: while I was doing this, he was fondling my crotch! Of course, this behavior is totally unacceptable, but I can't retaliate like I would to any other man who would do this (like beat the snot out of him) because he's a patient in the hospital. Why is it acceptable for people like him to behave like this (I know he's confused, but he knew what he was doing because he made vulgar comments about it) and nothing gets done? If I had done something back to him, I could be sued for abuse but he can just fondle anyone he pleases and it's ok. Well, it's not OK and the public needs to realize what we go through as nurses. Patients and their families can physically and verbally abuse to their hearts content because nothing is ever done about it, and the nurses have to "take it". There is a situation right now on the same floor where anyone who does not answer a certain patient's call within 5 minutes will face disciplinary action because the family complained that it takes too long to get "service". In the meantime, the staff is now afraid to go get something to eat or use the bathroom and other patients are neglected because of this one family - don't you dare take longer than that 5 minutes - they stay 24 hours a day and they actually time us. We also have a policy that states no visitors in a semi-private room after visiting hours end, but there is no consistent enforcement of this policy. My friends have been "turned in" and disciplined for both not allowing people to stay (which is the policy) and allowing people to stay (which is against policy). There are many, many more situations like this that occur daily as well. It's things like this that are pushing people away from careers in nursing - nurses shouldn't have to put up with crap like this.
Well said.
(This applies to a pt that is new to me, or another nurse's pt that I'm assisting with.) If there are no orders for O2, I call the MD and let them know about the situation.