Healthcare...
Healthcare is a calling, not
just a job for a paycheck. If your heart isn't in it, you shouldn't do it.
Patients are people, not bar-codes. When I did floor-nursing, I put my heart
& soul into it. I read constantly about different conditions, meds to treat
them, I read psych care plans to try to deal with "difficult"
patients and studied lab tests and normal/abnormal values for them. I answered
call-bells and worked on anticipating my patient’s needs. Pain meds were
dispensed in a timely fashion, wound care was done
gently as possible and I spent time with patients on the DNR list, to make sure
they weren't alone when the end came. I never took advantage of my nursing
assistants either. Never asked one to do something I wouldn't do myself, and
made myself available to help them if patients needed cleaning up, or linen changed.
Working in the OR, I was still
an advocate for the patient, along with my circulator. I did my best to help
maintain a calm, quiet atmosphere when the patient came into the room. I
learned new things, asked questions of the surgeons when I could. I've held
hands, soothed foreheads and talked to family members. I made sure to stay
"on top of my game". This stuff seems to be lacking in today's
nurses. Not all, but enough that it disturbs me. I don't care for much of what
I've seen recently.
This was my practice while I
worked as a staff nurse @ SJHMC, circa late-80's to early 90's. The max # of
patients I had was 12, and I worked night shift (11-7). When I did per-diem in
nursing homes, this was NOT how it was, and nothing I did could make it like
that, which broke my heart. I came home crying every Sunday because I hated
that people were treated like livestock. The point of the post is, that anyone
going into such a field should have the heart and compassion for others,
instead of it just being a job. For every one nurse that is good, and nice, I
see three that aren't. Makes me so sad.
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