Entries Tagged as 'nursing school'

It has a certain ring to it (Bring The Noise)

I am now a GN. What an anti-climactic finish to school. We had our exit exams last Friday and it has still taken a couple of days to sink in since we had our ‘official’ graduation back in May because the medical and nursing school I attended only has one graduation annually.

I think the angst has I was feeling towards the current administration of our program has lessened because I have actually slept since the exit exam. The requirement to graduate from our program is much higher than the national average and the amount of nonsense that we have had to put up with has certainly given us the wherewithal to get past the NCLEX. It makes me wonder if the method to the madness in the program is designed to prepare us for any situation in the medical profession.

Heaven knows I didn’t sleep before the exit exam and I say it again, I am amazed at the amount of pressure that we (I blamed the program earlier) put on ourselves all over an exam. I realize that some folks believe that this is the end of the line if they do not pass but I we are taught to be an encouragement to patients as well as classmates. Regardless of what the challenge may be, we have the capability within us to bounce back from what is thrown at us, even if you didn’t pass. It’s not the end of the world it’s just a delay in your road trip of life. I heard recently that experience is what you get when you don’t get what you want but continue towards your goal. The resolve that nursing students rely on to get through nursing school should be an encouragement to those of you still wading through the morass. Kudos to my fellow classmates of ‘08 for surviving.

p.s. I passed. That will sound so much better after the NCLEX.

The end is near…

I am down to one week and I am so amazingly tired that it concerns me going into my final week of tests and clinicals. I find it interesting that I get the feeling from numerous students, their schools seem to be involved in the same practice of pushing students to the stress levels that we know are detrimental to the health of our patients. I actually had a teacher tell me to work on my breathing technique. ?!?!?! I am not in a freaking Lamaze class! I think I’ll stick to my swimming routine 3 – 4 times per week instead.

I love NCLEX practice questions

First of all let me apologize to those of you that have commented since I have taken my sweet time in replying to your insight. I am humbled that you would take the time to peruse my mental meanderings. Thanks to Kim for the support!

Secondly, the reason I have been so lax in posting is my ever busy school schedule. The profs are really laying in on with only a month left. Haven’t they every considered using the calendars in the online material they are so driven to use for presentations?!

Thirdly, I just love me some practice NCLEX questions:

A client comes to the emergency department while experiencing a panic attack. The nurse can best respond to a client having a panic attack by:

1. staying with the client until the attack subsides.

2. telling the client everything is under control.

3. telling the client to lie down and rest.

4. talking continually to the client by explaining what is happening.

Correct Answer: 1 Your Answer: 1
RATIONALES: The nurse should remain with the client until the attack subsides. If the client is left alone he may become more anxious. Giving false reassurance is inappropriate in this situation. The client should be allowed to move around and pace to help expend energy. The client may be so overwhelmed that he can’t follow lengthy explanations or instructions, so the nurse should use short phrases and slowly give one direction at a time.

As if we really have the time in an over-crowded ER with a waiting list of 3+ hours, a gunshot wound, 2 (or is it 3) suicide attempts, an MVC – Ped, an MCC and collapsed lung from a construction accident. Forgive me for not wanting to listen to you freak out while other people might actually die.

What are some of your favorite Utopian questions?

Common sense nursing?

I am not the sharpest turnip to fall from the truck but I ain’t stupid either. Some of you jaded ER nurses might want to listen up every now and then and take some advice from a ‘student’ nurse. When I tell you the hospital medical directors’ brother is a patient in the hallway, your response should not be, “So you think I should kiss his ass like every other patient or something? He’s in a hallway bed, do you think I f!@#$% care?” Your response should be a polite nod and ‘okay’ whether you know him or not, and regardless of what your opinion is of nursing students. You too may have been that bumbling student in the past. What I am saying (for those of you that are not as sharp as a turnip) is that you should mind your p’s and q’s just like you should with every patient regardless of whom they are. I know this concept is outside anything your pea-sized brain can fathom and I do realize the number of jokers that present in the ER but you never know who your patient is unless they are one of our frequent fliers. I observed a slack-jawed patient in the hallway watch you and your girlfriend complain less than 5 feet from him in a ‘hallway’ bed, about some pathetic social situation that you just had to gripe and moan about. NO ONE, much less a patient, wants to hear how your white trash ex-husband’s cousin’s brother is such a pain in the ass but you still continue to sleep with him. Get a life and PLEASE don’t scream your love life in the hallway. A very simple tenet you should have learned in nursing school. I too would want to forget the nurse that carried on in front of me that way. And you wonder why the medical profession gets such poor “customer service” satisfaction surveys?!

Triage this!

Am I really that jaded now that I have spent time in and ER as a tech and a majority of what little free time I do have in nursing school surfing nursing and medical blogs? Today, I was allowed to observe for 4 hours in triage in a large, county hospital. I have learned that I will not make a good ER triage nurse or I might run the risk of being fired for telling people to get out. I sat through 4 hours of unmitigated hell. There is living proof that licensing should be required to birth people into this crazy world. One patient out of 47 I think actually had an emergent situation. Arterial blood spurting all over the place tends to draw the attention of the leeches and you want to holler at those sucking on the teet of society, “SEE PEOPLE! THIS IS AN EMERGENCY! The rest of you need to disperse because there is nothing to be seen here. Go to your local, non-emergent clinic and find a PCP!” This community has several, easily accessible clinics that are set up for this purpose. Educating the public is a daunting task. One thing for sure, Momma wouldn’t allow this nonsense occur.

I should have said something

My wife and I recently moved back to the town she grew up in so I could attend nursing school. I have had the privilege to spend a majority of my clinical time in a burn ICU. I failed at the opportunity today to do something that the professors have been trying to instill in us for the past 8 or so months that is an essential aspect of nursing care: Educating the general public. We were on our way home and had to fill the truck with gas when a hail storm hit our town. Much to my surprise, a carload of folks came whipping under the cover of the gas station at our corner grocery store and the female passenger chucked a cigarette butt out the window onto the asphalt. The glare I received after I watched the butt hit the ground could have frozen hell. The sheer lack of concern or pure ignorance amazes me. I only hope is that in the future she doesn’t end up on the unit along with the 20 (unaware), or uncountless others that she put at risk for her actions. She needs to see the pain and agony of our patients that have been harmed by the thoughtless action of others. I haven’t lost hope in common sense…yet. It will warm the cockles of my professors heart’s that I will not pass up another opportunity.

Gimme A Break

My brain has been mush with the full week of pediatrics and tests and papers and reflective journals and… and… and… It’s summer break!!! Time flies when you’re having fun or busier than a one-legged man in a butt kicking contest. I now have three weeks to work on the house, rest, relax, study for the NCLEX and get vamped up for the last 2 ½  months of school before the real deal begins. Man, am I ever ready. My classmates are in the same boat and feel much the same way I do. Ragged, worn out and ready for margaritas. We are all very ready for August to be here so we can begin our respective careers.  I am off to relax… and catch up on some blogging also.

self·less·ness

I am surprised at the number of stories I hear of nurses that ostracize students. They too were right where you were at some point. I just don’t get it. I plan on getting into education (while continuing to practice) and I have promised myself never to be ‘one of those’ nurses when it comes to teaching. Although I have been fortunate enough in my unit to find people that are very willing to try and help students discover the processes of nursing as long as they are willing to put forth the effort and initiative.

This brings me to my coach. She’s incredible. That’s what we call our preceptor/mentor/instructor. The benefit is that we have one-on-one instruction for an extended amount of time. The woman has embraced education. Two bachelors, one masters and considering another masters or doctorate in nursing. I don’t think formal education is necessary to become curious but that’s the path she has chosen. I think I get the picture. She has tried to give me assignments outside of the normal work required for the program but finding the time to research them is another story when completing an accelerated program.

Intellectual curiosity is essential to nursing and the thing I enjoy is the she is trying to instill the skills required to become a self-educator. I think most of us in nursing would agree that we have some desire to learn something new on a regular basis. When that curiosity is no longer present, maybe change is in order. She has certainly broken the stereotype that nurses eat their young and often expresses her desire to teach.

Selflessness – it comes to mind when I think of most of the people I work with on my unit. We work as teammates for the most part and it makes the stress so much more bearable. My coach has shown through example and is willing to share her knowledge with anyone, and if she doesn’t know, she goes up the line to find out. So I’ll be spending my last 2 ½ months of school on an SICU. I am fired up but I certainly enjoy where I am now. I have grown comfortable but I need the experience spent on other units. Most of our intermittent rotations are short and you never seem to get in the flow on that particular floor. I am kind of sad to be leaving where I am currently, and will certainly interview if they have any opportunities open. I feel like a kid in a candy store. Anyway, I just getting home from clinicals. I am tired and I have a paper to finish.

Word of the day

Word for the day…no…the word for the week. My word for the week is…you guessed it. Busy.

3: foolishly or intrusively active : meddling

4: full of distracting detail

I have mentioned said professor previously. She goes and does it again. It’s sad that we are trying to be taught organization, time management and skills which help us plan out care. Those skills could be applied across any facet of life, but when the coordinator cannot seem to maintain a schedule and assigns 2 weeks worth of work into one week in an accelerated program? Why does it seem accepted that students suffer due to the (dis)organization of a professor? I’ll pull on my big boy pants now.

Just going through the motions.

Too busy to write, play, or think.

School has me consumed this week thanks to professor’s inability to communicate for a couple of weeks and then dump a load of crap schoolwork on us, all in the eve of a couple of tests and concept map. I guess they’re just getting us ready for the real world. I did come across a couple of worthy pages.

The first link is a group of Pennsylvania nurses indicating why they chose nursing. I hope to maintain their enthusiasm.

The second page indicates things we are starting to learn during clinicals. Thanks to Head Nurse for the following in
Things they don’t tell you in nursing school
. I really like the comment on cynicism.