Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Nursing Pentathlon

The Olympic Committee is introducing a new event: the Nursing Pentathlon.  Five exciting tests will evaluate the fitness and readiness of nurses!  The nurse with the highest total score will win the gold!

The Nursing Pentathlon is traditionally completed with no breaks for food, drinks or toileting.  Here are the five events:


CT RACE

The nurse and respiratory therapist take an intubated patient on four drips down and through the CT scanner and back.  The first team to get the patient back to their room and reattached to all the monitors wins*!  



*patient must survive transport

FOLEY SHOT
The nurse must place a foley on an obese female--alone--while a judge watches and evaluates the sterile technique.





CHEST COMPRESSIONS

The nurse must do continuous chest compressions at a goal rate of 100 beats a minute for one hour while the physician explains repeatedly what the chances are for recovery to the family.





IV IQ

This test evaluates the nurse's ability to think critically.  You have a patient with a single lumen PICC* and a 22 gauge peripheral line.  How do you arrange the following drips to ensure compatibility and safety?




*anyone who puts in a single lumen PICC should be shot



CHARTING CHALLENGE

The final event in the Nursing Pentathlon is the Charting Challenge!!  Everything done up to this point must be charted on accurately.  No eating, drinking or bathroom breaks allowed!




Go for the gold!

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Fairy Lane

I had he opportunity to drive around downtown Seattle recently.  The traffic was monstrous--one-way roads, trolleys, bus lanes, bike lanes, pedestrian lanes and lanes with the words, "FERRY ONLY" painted on them.  After being stuck in a "FERRY ONLY" lane for an hour, I started thinking, "Don't the goblins, nymphs and ogres get irritated that only fairies get their own lane here in Seattle?"



Friday, September 13, 2013

DIV ORCE





A nurse told me once, "I'd rather come from a broken home than live in one."  That's the best argument I've ever heard for divorce.






Divorce is unpopular.  Little girls dream of their wedding day.  Wedding Barbie is a runaway hit...





But Divorce Barbie doesn't sell well at all...





No one plans their divorce day.  But no one plans on getting open heart surgery, either.

Think about other major relationships in your life.  Friendships, for example.  Most of us have had friends--really close friends--who we are no longer friends with.  Why?




People change.  They grow apart.  Do they need to STAY friends out of some sense of tradition?  Are they bad people if they don't?  Is the whole friendship now a FAILURE because it ended?




What about jobs?  How many people stay at their first job?  Our first job is usually has two critical qualities:

1. it's close
2.  it's willing to hire us




Do we need to stay at that job out of some sense of loyalty?





The same is true with marriage.  We marry some person who pays attention to us.  Since we've never been married before we have no idea what to look for.  Most of us marry when we are young.  Our hormones are raging our judgment is nonexistent.

But time passes and we grow.  And change.  We become more aware of what makes us happy and what doesn't.  

I'd rather come from a broken home than live in one.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Self-Scheduling

One indication of how far nursing has come is the idea of self-scheduling.  Not long ago, nurses had their whole lives on hold, waiting for the next schedule to be posted.  They weren't sure month to month if they would be able to host a birthday party for their child on a certain day.  

Self-scheduling has its problems.  Like concerns that the skill mix will not be adequate or that the weekends will be skeleton crews. 






But somehow, the empire has staggered on.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Statistics

Statistics help us get a grip on our fear and uncertainty.  Consider these true but unpopular facts: 

Peanut butter kills more people every year than terrorists.



You are more likely to be shot by your dog than to use your gun legally on an intruder.


  


Statistics are easily manipulated.  They can "prove" that something causes something NOT to happen.  Like elephant repellent:




Here's another questionable correlation/causation case:  statistics clearly show that when ice cream sales start to rise, drowning deaths also rise.  Does ice cream cause drowning?









There are things we SHOULD fear:






And things we should not:



Compassion Fatigue


Nurses are vulnerable to compassion fatigue.  Our capacity to care can be severely challenged by patient's behavior. 

For example:

Patients who unplug their IV's and sneak outside to smoke

Obese patients on insulin drips who call patient relations because their nurse won't get them another bag of candy

Patients who leave AMA, go to the bar across the street, stagger back and pass out drunk in front of the hospital

And patients who smoke meth in their hospital bathroom, causing their monitored heart rate to double  

Nurse's break rooms should have a special vending machine for compassion rejuvenation!


Monday, August 19, 2013

Swan Dive

Doctors are as vulnerable to fashion trends as any other herd of people. The Swan-Ganz catheter is an excellent example.

When I first became an ICU nurse, swans were wildly popular.  Most ICU patients--regardless of their diagnosis--were swanned.  Swans generate a flood of esoteric numbers, so they MUST be beneficial, right?  ICU's had so many swans back then, they resembled aviaries!






The nurses spent a lot of time leveling, wedging and bolusing.  And charting all those numbers.  It was all paper charting back then--there was no such thing as downloading values from monitor to chart with a simple keystroke.  We faithfully charted EDVI, SVI, SV, CO, CI, PAS, PAD, PAM, PAWP, PVR, SVR, SVRI, MAP, RAP and CVP into tiny cramped flowsheet boxes while call lights went off and patients called out for help.  But, since this was IMPORTANT, we prioritized and charted on!

The result?  Did the attending physician call at two in the morning to check on the pulmonary artery diastolic and add dobutamine?  Did the cardiologist stop by, see the cardiac output and tweak the fluids?  What was the impact of all this writing, flushing, leveling and wedging? 

Not much.

I felt like someone who makes seven course dinner for guests who never show up.  Why were we doing this?  Is anybody there?  Does anybody care?

Then studies started coming out demonstrating clearly that swans do not improve patient outcomes.  In fact, with the combined risks of infection, overwedging, valvular damage, thrombus and pulmonary artery rupture, swans actually result in worse patient outcomes.

Younger physicians, current on the data, left the swans to fly in the wild (the cath lab and operating room).  To evaluate sepsis and cardiogenic shock, they used less intrusive means. 

When a swan is sighted now, it's almost always partnered with an old doctor too deaf to recognize the swan song.





Friday, July 26, 2013

Team ICU

ICU nursing is a team sport.  Some nurses don't get that.  They are too insecure to admit they need help, so they try to do everything themselves to prove their competence.  Offers of aid or advice can cause them to boil over with intense anger.  

Would you go into a basketball game and yell, "I got this!  Stay out!  I can do it myself!"







Your co-worker's eyes and ears and experience are like silver in a mine.  Use them.  A group is always stronger than an individual.  We are all learning and growing.  Policies, protocols and equipment change constantly.  Don't be afraid to say, "Will you take a look at this Arctic Sun and see if I've got it set up right?"  or, "I can't figure out why this balloon pump keeps alarming," or, "I'm concerned that I'm missing something here--got any ideas?"

And if a co-workers says, "Hey, that's not how this Swan is supposed to be hooked up," or, "Do you want your dopamine  running at this rate?" or "The heating coil should be on this return line," be strong and secure enough not to take it as a personal affront.  People who reach out with constructive criticism are trying to HELP YOU.  Getting angry and defensive and making stupid excuses will make you co-workers go silent, step back and let you fall. 

Take a deep breath and say, "Thanks for catching that!"

Together, we make a great team. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Mos Def, be Les Dum

There's an online video showing the rapper Mos Def attempting to tolerate having a small-bore feeding tube placed.  I have to say this to his outraged audience:  you don't need to go all the way to Guantanamo Bay to see this.  Poke your head out your door and peer down the street at the nearest hospital.  There are dozens of patients right there with feeding tubes.  

Besides that, brides pay big bucks to have feeding tubes so they can lose weight before their horrific weddings and exercise fanatics proudly wear them to control every calorie.   





I have placed plenty of feeding tubes, mostly in frail, elderly people.  But I've NEVER seen a wild, sobbing breakdown like Mos Def's.  Only about 10 cm of his tube went down--but I guess that's more than this delicate flower can handle.  Where's his murderous public persona when it counts?  Man up, Mos Def!  Be Les Dum!   

I've also never seen handcuffs disappear like they do in this video, (although it allowed his hands to flail around desperately and then cover his eyes while he cried piteously).  And how did his head strap come loose from the chair where it was clearly shown in the first take?

Mos Def--you're a bad actor and you have a very bad film editor. 
.
About Mos Def's statement that this was the worst pain he's ever experienced--what a sheltered, petted life he must have!  What if he had to give birth or something that is actually uncomfortable?


Nurse's Note:  To the upset people posting comments about how "the doctors" were trying to get the feeding tube down:  doctors don't place small bore feeding tubes.  Nurses do.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Costume Faux Pas


What people wear makes a statement.  Our costume choices reveal a great deal about us.  We expect something different from a man in a tuxedo than from a guy with a Confederate flag wrapped around his head.

Here are some of my favorite--REAL LIFE--bad costuming choices:


The Cool Doctor with the black Vampira nails and trendy tattoos




The even Cooler Doctor with the greying ponytail





The exposed thong




Nurse's Note:  To save laundry costs, people should  just have their thongs tattooed on. 

Monday, June 24, 2013

What has the government done for me lately?

One afternoon as my daughter and I were trailering to a nearby park, and I heard a radio commentator criticizing the government.  I joined right in, complaining bitterly.   

My daughter protested mildly.

But, I retorted, "Really--what has the government done for me?"







She stared at me, shocked and appalled that I could be so ignorant  Then she said,  "How about:  the condition of this road,"




"The safety specs on this truck,"

 




"The ingredients in your can of soda,"

 


"the education in your head,"





"And the immunizations in your body."







"That's just a start."

Embarrassed, I shut up.




Nurse's Note:  When our youngest daughter was in third grade, she learned this poem in school:

"Services!  Services!  Our taxes pay for services!
Schools and pools, parks and roads.
Services are good as gold."

I try to keep that in mind when tempted to complain about the government.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

The Attenders!

Nurses have superheroes just like Batman and Spiderman.  Here are some of them:



Nazalyzer has a supersensitve nose that can make many diagnoses.  She doesn't need lab tests, xrays or CT scans.  She can SMELL what is wrong with the patient!





Nasalyzer is famous for her superstrength!





Ultima  has been a nurse for many, many years.  She remembers when trepanning was done at the boulderside!  Ultima brings with her long and wide experience.  Her most famous line was to a physician who was arguing with her:  "Perhaps I am not being clear..."





When a patient is found pale and semi-conscious, with a rapid pulse and profuse perspiration, many experts are called in...





They offer different opinions...

Ultima sweeps in to save the day!!








Ultima devises an amazing, high-tech solution...




All ends well!!






Rez-Q-erz  can quickly assess any emergent situation and immediately predict what should be done and what the doctor will need.  By the time the doctor arrives, Rez-Q-erz  has all the supplies and equipment at the bedside, the labs drawn and the tests ordered.




Res-Q-erz is not afraid to take on drug reps in the parking lot!







Later, when this story is told to other staff members, some questions arise...
 





Solaci is a nurse with a magical soothing voice.  When patients are confused and climbing out of bed, when family members are argumentative or sarcastic, Solaci can walk into the room and de-escalate any stressful situation with his voice.  It works better than a warm blanket!






When a nurse yells for the code cart, if the wheels are locked, that doesn't stop Solaci!!





Solaci  doesn't know his own strength when it comes to the door latches...





But that doesn't prevent him from getting the code cart into the room!!




Solaci can leap large sewage floods with a single bound.






He can be turned into a toad by his nemesis, Dr. Duh Nyle.






EmpaSee has the unique ability to always see the world through other people's perspectives.  He wears Ryaban© eyeglasses, which can be adjusted to allow him to understand anyone's point of view.  






Empasee has the ability to contort his body into ANY SHAPE!!





Together they make up, THE ATTENDERS!



Nurse's Note:  Their shirts spell, "NURSE".  No one's seems to be getting that...I guess no genius is understood in their own time...*sniff*

Monday, May 6, 2013

In that sleep of death what dreams may come

Propofol is a milky-white drug that sedates patients beautifully.  I like propofol!  Its short half-life makes neuro assessments easy;  it controls hypertension and its soy base even provides some nutrition. 



But since Michael Jackson's death, I just gotta add this:

1.  Propofol is used ONLY IN A HOSPITAL'S ICU
2.  Propofol is used ONLY ON VENTILATED PATIENTS
3.  The only other exception is when it is used during conscious sedation BY A PHYSICIAN WITH DEEP SEDATION PRIVILEGES

Trust me--I'm right about this.