Tuesday, September 2, 2008

No truer words

"nursing is head on, hands on, heart on. all together. all at once. maybe that is enough explanation why there is a nursing shortage. it is because not a lot of people can be all that, all at once."
--may at www.aboutanurse.com

If you haven't already discovered may's aboutanurse blog, do not pass go, do not collect $200, go straight there. I have been reading it for quite a while (I know I started in nursing school) and there is always something to think about.

My evenings are over for this week. Thankfully, everything went reasonably well. I had the same guys all five days and everyone was doing well. Mr. H. got in the shower, not once, but twice. I also let him know that M., our charge nurse, will get him there, too, if he wants to shower when she works, since M. does not rotate shifts like me. Mr. H. is a para amputee, but M is known on the unit for getting quads up and in the shower. Mr. B. was her longtime customer every Friday night until he left. Consequently, Mr. H.has been in a pleasant mood. I really think the showering is doing him a lot of good.

Mr. O., his roommate, is reasonably new. He's one of our few rehab patients. He's got a balky bladder, due to some previous cancer history, so I've been working on the rationale (aka sales pitch) for intermittent catheterization with him. He's been balky with some of the other nurses, so I go in and tell him very nicely and slowly how important it is that he empty his bladder. So far, he's agreed to cath more than he's refused. I cathed him, not once, but twice last night. Hopefully, they can get him on a schedule and just do it until he can get his urodynamics study.

The man across the hall, Mr. B. is still on C diff precautions and still has that foul, smelling stool. He is eating better (mostly Taco Bell, but he's actually eating other stuff with that), but we really have to sell him on drinking water. He drinks almost no water during the day when he has visitors (sometimes 20+ people), because when I was checking him on first rounds, his urine was always dark. By the end of the night, when I'd encourage the fluids and he'd drink them, it would get lighter. Who said nursing wasn't a sales job? I do a lot of encouragement and followup to get people to do what they need to do to succeed at the program. His halo is intact, but still causing him pain, so until the C diff stooling stops, we can't try getting him up into a chair.

I'm going to stop here...so many things to do in a short time on this day off. More later...

2 comments:

may said...

thanks for the kind words, and the link love :)

sales person we are, most of the times. i agree. not goods, but encouragements.

RehabNurse said...

may:

Yes, I sell a lot of "yes, you can", which just so happens to be the title of a SCI book that we get for patients. (see this page: http://www.spinalcord.org/news.php?dep=18&page=101)