8/8/2008 10:27:56 AM
i graduate from wake tech's nursing program, which btw is a 2.5 year program once you actually are accepted to the nursing program after doing the 2 or more years of prereqs, on december 8th. nursing school is a bitch. your social life consists of working on case studies with other classmates over pizza. forget going out drinking on a thursday night for ladies night because you have to write up an 8 page analysis on "therapeutic communication" q week about your psychotic client (yeah i just finished mental health nursing 3 weeks ago).i still get a good chuckle when patients ask if we are getting paid, and i tell them no actually we have to pay to come and take care of them. i did my prereq's at ECU, but due to lack of space i didn't get into their nursing program, but i was accepted at pitt and wake tech. a girl that i did do all of my prereqs with who actually did get into the program at ECU failed out a year later. Grades and GPA aren't everything because the smartest "book smart" people have little to no common sense which is a huge part of nursing. I have worked at Outback part time in nursing school, but starting with adult med/surg 1 this past spring i had to completely quit except for when i had a break from school because for me it was just too much. loans and grants are what i am trying to survive on, but good thing is my dad gives me free rent and is very helpful financially. and just remember how much time the nurse spends with you vs the 15 minutes a doctor spends with you when you are in the hospital. we ARE the ones who give care and let the doctor know wtf is going on so they can treat you. btw, how horrible was the NCLEX?
8/8/2008 11:24:49 AM
wait how'd i make it into this thread
8/8/2008 11:40:55 AM
GIRLFIGHT
8/8/2008 12:58:28 PM
the nursing shortage for many parts of the country is pretty bad and its getting worse every year. Can you imagine how much worse its going to be if the only entry into the profession is via a BSN? There simply are not enough BSN programs around to churn out nurses. The health care system needs nurses, who cares where they come from. All nursing school graduates take the same NCLEX.honestly if betty from podunk, nc wants to go to podunk cc to be an rn at podunk memorial hospital and never leave podunk, nc......great. who are we to judge. its the small rural hospitals that are hurting for staff. The larger teaching hospitals are always going to have a revolving door of nursing staff.anyway, the nclex really isnt THAT bad. i studied for it for maybe 2 nights. honestly if you payed attention in class, lab, and clinicals you have the knowledge and tools to pass that test. it has 3 tiers of questions. If you find you have mostly infection control, patient teaching and prioritization questions, chances are you are doing well. the test will give you harder and harder questions until you answer one incorrectly. if you suddenly find yourself with a lot of dosage calculations... that means you could be in trouble.Ive not heard of anyone failing in 75 questions(god forbid), but many folks have passed after taking all 265? 275? questions.the worst part of the nclex was the 49.5 hours it took for my results to post. and yeah i paid the 8 bucks to see my results early.
8/8/2008 5:02:14 PM
8/8/2008 5:12:44 PM
8/8/2008 7:47:04 PM
^^400 people applying for 100 seats means that OMFG not enough room...due to lack of instructors because of the previously mentioned burnout and nurses not wanting to go back to be a teacher.and btw, most ADN people have to wait a few years to return and finish the rest of the prereqs before they can do a BSN or RN to MSN program, but i already have that done and will start it probably next fall, so i can have a short break from school and so that i will be with a hospital for 6 months and they will refund my tuition.
8/8/2008 11:57:56 PM
I'm not trying to be a dick, but 400 applicants for 100 seats isn't that competitive.
8/9/2008 12:48:44 AM
8/9/2008 2:24:36 AM
from my favorite nursing community on LJ
8/9/2008 6:37:51 AM
you know how i can tell you're insecure? you're username has brainy in it.
8/9/2008 7:01:40 AM
you're really fixated on me aren't ya?even got up early on a saturday morning to run check this thread just to add an inane comment that adds no value to the thread at all.its sweet really, i have a new post stalker. run along now like a good boy and make some sort of meaningful contribution to society kkthx.
8/9/2008 8:10:03 AM
i couldn't sleep knowing something new might've been posted in this thread.
8/9/2008 8:11:48 AM
they make drugs for insomniayou should go get a script for that or something[Edited on August 9, 2008 at 8:14 AM. Reason : your PCP would be happy to oblige]It was a slow night on the unit.... this thread provided much entertainment for my colleagues.[Edited on August 9, 2008 at 8:16 AM. Reason : we were bored]
8/9/2008 8:13:22 AM
i did my prereq's at ECU, but due to lack of space i didn't get into their nursing programi did my prereq's at ECU, but due to lack of space i didn't get into their nursing programi did my prereq's at ECU, but due to lack of space i didn't get into their nursing program
8/9/2008 8:29:37 AM
hahayou said unit
8/9/2008 8:30:24 AM
yeah its a big one too ya know, for some college edjumakated folks....there are a few reading comprehension issues up in here.[Edited on August 9, 2008 at 8:43 AM. Reason : ehhee]
8/9/2008 8:40:16 AM
^^^to be fair, it wasn't brainysmurf who said that.[Edited on August 9, 2008 at 8:40 AM. Reason : .]
8/9/2008 8:40:32 AM
a girl I know who just graduated from Durham Tech worked nights and every weekend at a restaurant on top of her clinicals.
8/9/2008 10:58:12 AM
8/9/2008 1:57:34 PM
doesn't anyone think of the medical students? we get there before the nurses, leave after they do, and repeat this 6-7 days of the week. it would be nice to have a 7a-7p shift for 3-4 days a week...
8/9/2008 3:22:55 PM
"on the unit"
8/9/2008 3:27:14 PM
^^ listen, we all know that it's harder to go through med school than community college nurse school. it's this brainysmurf character that keeps ragging on doctors.
8/9/2008 4:00:26 PM
there you go simon with that reading comprehensionmedical students /= doctorsmed students are actually pretty cool. I havent met an obnoxious one yet. They ask questions and are generally respectful of nurses. Interns are obnoxious for a few days.... but then they make their first big mistake or so and realize they really dont know nearly as much as they think they do. OR, they are obnoxious to the wrong nurse who has been there for umteen years, and then they have their asses handed to them.PGY2s and higher the attitude changes somewhat....often not for the better. Attendings.......you never really know what you are going to get when you encounter them, some are awesome and some i would never let them near me if i were a patient.unfortunately my favorite icu intensivist only works a few weeks per year in the icu.
8/9/2008 8:19:13 PM
8/9/2008 8:26:56 PM
8/9/2008 8:28:57 PM
unreal.
8/9/2008 8:48:25 PM
^^^, and ^^^^ everything brainysmurf said here is right on.as to the thing about MySpace... i cant say, maybe Bottombaby has a legitimate grievance. but the fact is, in many hospitals nurses are given crazy workloads because they're perpetually understaffed.my wife has worked many 8 and 12 hour ICU shifts where she didnt get ANY breaks and had to eat on the run.
8/9/2008 9:25:46 PM
unit
8/9/2008 11:13:18 PM
^ Fired up. Feels good.
8/9/2008 11:17:46 PM
8/9/2008 11:22:15 PM
8/9/2008 11:57:47 PM
i will say bottombaby, that as a nurse my biggest fear is that something will happen to one of my patients when i am elbows deep in the other patient's room.so it was probably to your advantage that they were just dicking around on myspace rather than literally stuck in another patients room. Otherwise it would have taken much longer for someone to help you. although part of me wants to know what you expected the staff to be doing at the time.
8/12/2008 8:56:55 PM
I certainly did not expect them to be playing on MySpace or Facebook or shopping for clothes (true). If you are on a well-deserved break, do not take it at the nurses station. On every floor that I have ever been on, there is a break room less than ten feet away from the nurses station where you can go put your feet up for a few minutes. It is unprofessional to surf the web where parents and patients can watch you as you do it. Even if you are on your break and your patients do not need anything, do you have any idea how it looks when someone has a real medical issue that needs addressing and there is a nurse (or 3) clustered around a computer checking out someone's vacation photos? It does nothing for the profession.[Edited on August 12, 2008 at 10:28 PM. Reason : apostrophe s]
8/12/2008 10:26:13 PM
i see what you are saying, but i dont think we will completely agree with each other.If a nurse takes a break at the nurses station...at least she can see the monitors, hear the alarms, and see/hear the call light. You cant do that from the break room. Its night shift!! it is rarely busier than day shift. You get to work you get report, you get your shit done so that hopefully your patients can get SOME sleep. If there are 3 nurses sitting around while call bells are going off or alarms are going off then, thats unsafe. But if all of their work is done for the moment then let appearances and reality be what they are. Who cares what it looks like if the patients are safe, at least they can immediately leave the computer to see to your son's needs. dicking around on the computer is better than falling asleep in the chair from boredom. i guess my point is.... meds are passed, patients are turned, pillows fluffed, dressing changes done, assessments completed and documented, ivs are started, tubings are changed out... basically all of those little necessary but time wasting things are done. And there is nothing to do until the next med pass or assessment is due.....what would you like them to do?I am trying to establish what patients and patient's families expect vs what really happens.
8/12/2008 10:59:07 PM
^ the thing is, professionalism should be a FULL TIME task. a major part of the overall experience patients receive in hospitals is their impression of how professional and dedicated the staff are. the hospital isn't a place for the "it ain't my job" attitude. just ask yourself, if a JCAHO rep were standing behind you at all times, would you do anything differently?
8/13/2008 12:20:58 AM
yeah, bottombaby, i totally sympathise with your medical situation...but you need to lighten up a bit.
8/13/2008 4:05:42 AM