Showing posts with label nursing school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nursing school. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2012

For New Nurses

Here’s a bit of advice for new nurses starting out. There will be so many supplies that you want with you on the floor, not just as a new nurse. You will always need extra pens, perhaps a calculator, scissors, markers, etc. There are a lot. I would like to tell you the things that I have found I need to have every day and you should have too.

As a starter, use a pencil box! I can’t tell you how handy having this has been:

I use only black pens and always have extras in my box as well as in my bag in my locker. We’re about to go onto a computer system, but since we’re not there yet I also need red pens. I always have an extra of that in my box as well. Then I have highlighters. I keep a yellow highlighter in my pocket and various other colors in the box. I also have a black marker. These are used to write names and room numbers on charts. I didn’t have one at first, but after I acquired one, it made things run more smoothly. I keep a pair of scissors with me in the box. I don’t need them all the time so I like to keep them in the box since I keep enough in my pocket. I keep a pencil with an eraser in there too. While I don’t really need it for work, I use it to request my schedule. I keep a calculator to add up intake and output at the end of my shift. I usually don’t use it, but have it just in case. Once again, this will change once we go to computers. And let’s not forget, a power bar! I always have one or two power bars with me because most of the time I don’t have the time to sit and eat. This way, if I don’t have time to run in back and heat something up, I know that I at least have something to eat that can hold me over. Power bars have lots of protein so they’re great for long days. Now, here’s my last item that almost no one else on my floor carries and it really is a crucial item to have… it’s a pen light!
I can’t tell you how amazed I am that most people don’t carry them around. You’re a nurse and we will get patients every now and then that need to have neuro checks done. You must have a pen light for this. I end up loaning mine out all the time to the day nurse when she doesn’t have one. But I only give it to them if I know I’m coming back the next night. Otherwise, I know I’ll never see it again. And for the few weeks that my pen light was broken, before I got a new one, I brought a small flashlight to work.

Now, let me tell you why pen lights are of such a necessity. First of all because of the neuro check that I mentioned. You have to check pupil reaction for a neuro check. There have also been multiple times during my clinicals while I was still in nursing school that doctors went around looking for pen lights. And the nurses didn’t have them, but I as the nursing student did! When you have a patient that you are debating calling a neuro RRT on, you need to check their pupils! As a charge nurse for my floor I have called multiple neuro RRTs and I always check pupil reaction because the doctors will be asking about it. There was a time when one of the patients had one pupil that was unreactive to light, necessary neuro RRT! Another time I saved the day with my pen light, was when another nurse had a patient who pulled out her NG tube. The PA needed to replace it, but she didn’t have a light and neither did the nurse. But there I was, coming to the rescue with my pen light! And with that, the NG tube was put back into place.
Purchase a pen light
I’m sure there may be more needed for other types of floors, but this is my must-have list for a standard med-surg floor. And this of course, does not include the stethoscope I wear around my neck!

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Survival Guide to Nursing School Post #1

I never thought that nursing school would be as tough as it was. And I didn't just come out of high school and go into nursing. I have a good background to judge. Nursing was my second degree. My first was in Biology from which I graduated with honors. Getting my bachelor's in nursing was much tougher than my bachelor's in biology.
I survived nursing school!
And you will too! But not without a new best friend. It will come naturally, because you will be like a fish out of water with all the work and the questions and the clinicals and holding people's lives in your hands. You need someone to study with, to vent with and to ask all of your questions to. Your friends who are not in nursing school will never understand! They think they know what it's like to be in school, but they don't know what it's like to be in nursing school. I met my best friend in my first real nursing class. After that, we went through every single class together and now we work on the same floor in the same hospital! That was not planned, it just happened to work out that way. She works during the day because she has 2 kids and I work nights. So now at work when I come in early and she's working I always go to her and see if I can help her and I do the same when I'm leaving work and she's coming on. She does the same for me. And when we were both first starting out, there were times when the day nurse left me with 8 patients who were a mess and I had no idea what to do, she was there staying late to help. I owe her my sanity. She is an amazing nurse and mother and I am so thankful that she was there in my class needing a friend too. Don't worry, this all comes naturally with nursing students. I have seen it with everyone in my class, especially those who are getting a second degree. We all bonded together and helped each other through everything. We made sure everyone got through it, we would not leave anyone behind. That's just what nurses do and that's why we became nurses!
I survived

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Calling All Nurses

Don't let the name of this blog fool you. It's not just for night nurses and it's not just for the naughty ones. This is for every nurse out there. If you have ever felt under-appreciated, overworked, underpaid, stressed to the point of breaking, if you have been injured on the job, if you love your job, hate your job, if you're still in school and want to know what it's really like to be a nurse, if you work with babies, children, in the OR, ICU, with the elderly, cardiac, cancer, hospice, home care, if all you do now is paperwork, if you're a male nurse, if you're not even a nurse, but want to read about the crazy things that really happen, this is for you! This will be a place for stories, products, help, stress release, laughter and tears. This is a place for everyone to have a voice, although we all must remember to keep the privacy of our patients because of HIPPA, so let's be careful about that. This blog is just starting up and it will take time to find it's voice, but don't be afraid to follow and share stories and opinions.