Making the transition.

5.23.2005

I've just started a nursing externship and Sunday was my first day on the job. The hardest thing for me was to make the transition between a student, where you can do pretty much anything, to an extern who has limitations, but greater responsibilty in their scope of practice. Throughout the semester I have been giving meds during my clinical rotations, but now as an extern I can't. It takes a great deal of energy to keep yourself in line and only do what you are allowed to do. Failure results in termination and being reported to the board, thereby effectively canceling any possiblity of ever working as a nurse when you finish school.

The other thing that is hard is talking about my experiences without breaching patient confidentiality. And it's not just here, but even in town. I don't live in a very large town, sooner or later you're going to run into a patient or the family of a patient and if you happen to be talking about the patient, the damage you can do is devastating.

That has its upside as well. The last rotation of the semester I went to both the Health Department and to the Jail to get a perspective on community nursing. Being a small town, when I was at the jail I saw people I knew, and met a lot of people who I would later remember. So I was out with my wife at Blockbuster one night not too long ago, when I saw a guy who looked too familiar. But I just couldn't place him. I was deep in thought as we kept going through and checked out. The moment I walked out the door, the lightbulb came on. Ohhhh, I know where I knew him from: the jail. Not that it is a big deal in a smaller town to run into people in this way, but running into someone outside you frame of reference sometimes sets you back on your heels a bit.

And speaking of law enforcement, to all those who say crime never happens in Flagstaff, I have a bit of news for you. First, in property crime per capita we lead the state. Yep, we have more property crime per captia than Phoenix, Tucson or anywhere else. The highlight of this is that twice in as many weeks, the DPS helicopter has been overhead tracking someone. I moved away from the city to get away from seeing the cops in my neighborhood everyday, and now I have them shining the Nightsun into my window. It goes without saying that you're never really safe.

Until next time...

Posted by Tom at 11:23 PM 0 comments  

In the "well duh?!" department.

According to this article, kids who drink caffinated beverages are less attentive and generally have higher Connor scores (a standard measure of ADHD/ADD) than kids who drink decaf. And it took a big study to figure this out. If you walk into any Wal-Mart in the US on a Saturday you see the effects of this right in front of your eyes with kids bouncing off the aisles hyped up on Coke and Super Sugar Bombs. One good thing to come out of it though is the assertion that kids need to be looked at on multiple levels, including diet, for diagnosis of ADHD/ADD.

I guess Mike Judge got it right 10+ years ago!


The

Posted by Tom at 10:23 PM 0 comments  

Don't you people get it?

5.21.2005

Some people just don't get it. I mean taking care of yourself should be a given, but most people don't (myself included for the most part.) But hey, I look at it as job security. The worse shape people are in, the better my propects as a nurse are going to be. It's just a sad fact of life.

In relation to that check these stories out:

Type II diabetics refusing to take insulin, even the newer inhaled variety.
Noncompliance of Type II diabetics getting worse. Scary statistics in this one.

After taking a full day of computer training for my internship, this one caught my eye. Like it or not, electronic documentation is the charting of the future. And the message from consultants, doctors and it seems like everyone elese is: don't worry about the standards, just do it!

See you next week!

Posted by Tom at 10:42 AM 0 comments  

Revamped and back at it!

5.04.2005

Yes, it's been a long hiatus, but it was good. I'm fresh and ready to go again. Anyways, on to the headlines...

So you thought Katie Couric and Rudy Gulianai endorsing testing for cancer was a good thing? Apparently not according to an article, posted today on both Medpage Today and Wired News. In fact, getting testing may be detrimental in the psychological and emotional sesnse and may even detract from more serious concerns a patient may have.

And in the just when you thought it was safe to go back to the hospital department, a new study shows that safety in US hospitals, while increasing is still abbysmal. And it's worse if you're poor...go figure.

Until later...

Posted by Tom at 8:48 PM 0 comments