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god bless nurse janey, our medically-trained cacher in the rye
“Don't ever tell anybody anything. If you do, you start missing everybody.”
― J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye
I have to admit the drinkers are the most challenging closing the gap by a horse head of the mentally ill that come in with medical problems from the psychiatric wards.The belligerent drunks are a challenge.
One last night was exceptionally so, when I went to bring him to my room and he tried to get belligerent with me, the response in my head was "you don't want to fight me, buddy, cause i own more bitch than you own belligerent". I remember a split sec of 'you can't say that to a pt!" but my mouth had already opened and the words had started. Miraculously, those words were translated into, " Buddy, do you act this way every time you're surrounded by pretty women? 'cause if you do, that's really not gonna get you very far with them." LOL he stopped dead in his tracks, gave me a sideways look, and said, "you are a pretty damned good lookin woman". I said, "I know, and I'm a damn awesome xray tech, you just do what I say and I'll impress the heck out of you". He was a pussy cat with me after that. Unfortunately, he went back to being belligerent with everyone else.
I have had families ask me 'how many patients do you have today?'12.04.2013
18 year battle
200,000 Signatures in Support of Two Health Care Ballot Initiatives to the Secretary of State’s Office via Hospital Gurney
Dec. 4, 2013
A delegation of MNA nurses and patient advocates from across the state held a press conference outside the Massachusetts State House
and then immediately went on to deliver nearly 200,000 ballot-related signatures to the Secretary of State. The conference and signature
delivery were in support of two ballot initiatives: one that will dramatically improve patient safety in Massachusetts hospitals by setting a
safe maximum limit on the number of patients assigned to a nurse at one time and another that will ensure that taxpayer health care dollars
are dedicated exclusively to patient care and needed community-based hospital services.
Nurses attending the conference wheeled the signatures from the State House over to One Ashburton Place on a hospital gurney while the
RNs chanted, “What do we want? Safe limits! When do we want them? Now!”
The goal ? Placing these initiatives on the ballot for 2014. http://patientsafetyact.com/
LOL it better be about 100 or I would say: this is not high quality CPR.my favorite is when the resident asks for the pulse during chest compressions..
"I'm hoping it's about 100."
and then asks how we're sure..
:::shaking head:::
Nursie Janey--
Sweeping up hearts since 19XXX![]()
Dear Last of the International Funboys,Whoa are you from the future?!
So me an lovely Nurse Curtsy might have shared a moment over piercing my flesh, but now all I'm left with is a fading memory, and tape goo on my arm that won't be washed. What's a fella to do?
Signed...
The Last of the International Funboys
It is said that as many days as there are in the whole journey, so many are the men and horses that stand along the road, each horse and man at the interval of a day’s journey; and these are stayed neither by snow nor rain nor heat nor darkness from accomplishing their appointed course with all speed.
—Herodotus, Histories
Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.
~USP Service
The Surgeon entered the room.
I began to describe the detailed neurological assessment, follows simple commands......
He said: follows commands, all I want to know. Slow down it's getting boring.
Haha! He is precious handy with sharp objects, stitches, staple guns, and blunt facts.he sounds precious.
you should marry him!
My mom was a nursing student when AIDS was just emerging (graduated school in 1970). She worked at a large city hospital remembers getting the Karposi sarcoma patients who were young and otherwise healthy. Gloves on during super bloody procedures and when you needed sterile technique. She remembers changing bloody dressings and emptying bloody foleys and urinals bare handed on patients that later would be diagnosed with AIDS.
The culture has changed. Now everyone wants you to glove up before you touch them. Hey buddy, gloves are more for my protection than yours.
I find these stories to be interesting from the medical perspective. Was everyone confused, as they tried to figure out what was happening? I found two documentaries on netflix, but they were mostly about activists and personal stories about the friends and loved ones who were dying. I want to know what the nurses and doctors were thinking.My mom was a nursing student when AIDS was just emerging (graduated school in 1970). She worked at a large city hospital remembers getting the Karposi sarcoma patients who were young and otherwise healthy. Gloves on during super bloody procedures and when you needed sterile technique. She remembers changing bloody dressings and emptying bloody foleys and urinals bare handed on patients that later would be diagnosed with AIDS.
The culture has changed. Now everyone wants you to glove up before you touch them. Hey buddy, gloves are more for my protection than yours.