I WAS THE ONLY ONE

Reblogged from Marianna Crane:

Click to visit the original post

I can’t believe I was the only one.

In my last post I referenced The Truth About Nursing blog in which we are asked to write to two journalists who did not mention nurses in their article about Hillary Clinton’s hospitalization. The story read as if doctors were the only health professionals caring for her.

I’ve always been angry about how we nurses are represented in the media and, in this case, how we are ignored in the media.

Read more… 256 more words

Why don't we as nurses stand up for ourselves in the public sphere? I'm proud of the action of my friend, Marianna Crane, nurse practitioner and writer. Read her story and be inspired to act yourself.

“Got drugs?”

Clean out your medicine cabinets. Dispose of your unwanted or expired medications safely. Take part in the DEA’s take-back program tomorrow, Saturday. Here’s the information:

April 28, 2012

10:00 AM – 2:00 PM

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has scheduled another National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day which will take place on Saturday, April 28, 2012, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.  This is a great opportunity for those who missed the previous events, or who have subsequently accumulated unwanted, unused prescription drugs, to safely dispose of those medications.

Click here to find a locale close to you.

The Seal of the Drug Enforcement Administration

The Seal of the Drug Enforcement Administration (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

You’ll feel better knowing you are rid of that old stuff and that you’ve done your civic duty by not adding to the contamination of landfills or water supplies!

Nurses: Counting drip rates? A lost art

It’s an overcast chilly day in Chicago, just the kind of day for a good joke. And I got one this morning from a former nursing student at Trinity Christian College, now a seasoned grad. She’d had a “crazy” day yesterday. Here’s why:

Our primary IV tubing is on back order. This means we can’t use our IV pumps. I’ve never not used a pump. DRIP RATES? Seriously.

Did she expect my pulse to race in sympathy? Not a chance. Instead, my mind raced back to a PM shift in the 70s. I’d started that shift on my usual floor – twenty-eight med-surg beds. Half-way through report, the PM supervisor “floated” me to another med-surg floor. Thirty-two beds. Starting report late—it was oral in those days, given by the day nurse in a conference room—got me off to a frazzled beginning.

I walked out of report closer to 4:00 than 3:30, and bee-lined to make rounds, just to make sure all my patients were in their beds and breathing. As the only RN with four aides, I was especially worried about the eight post-ops, with more to come back yet from surgery, plus the eleven IVs to monitor. (Yes, monitor means to personally count the drip rate of each one.)

My rounds were cursory. In bed, yes. Breathing, yes. Bleeding, no.  IV infiltrated, no. IV bottle (yes, glass, no plastic bag), marked with adhesive tape by day nurse with the amount out at 3:00pm, yes. Right drip rate, yes  (i.e., x number of cc’s per hour to have a 1000cc bottle run for a specific time period). Good. On to next patient.

Just routine rounds. Fly, fly, fly. Fly back to med room and start setting up five o’clocks. 9-1-5-9 meds. No unit dose. No med carts. Cafeteria-sized aluminum trays papered with medication cards color-coded for time to be given. Phones ringing, no unit secretary.

Is your pulse racing yet?

I worked in overdrive the whole shift. More post-ops came back from surgery. In a really stupid policy move, the RN on the floor had to go to the recovery room to accompany the patient back to the unit. I’d think how dumb that I was leaving thirty-some patients with four aides while I’m gone for at least fifteen minutes to make sure of the safe arrival of one patient. I prayed for no emergency.

Back from surgery, I’d have orders to note, doctors to call, nine o’clocks and sedations to set up.  In the flurry, as I made my after supper rounds (only there was no time to go to supper), I stumbled over something next to a post-op’s bed. Pushing the bed curtain aside, I got that sudden feeling of a boulder crushing my chest.  Checking my feet, I saw the familiar crossbars of an IV pole. Slamming the curtain way back, I saw IV tubing leading to the patient’s arm. An IV I  didn’t know about, hadn’t checked.

The bottle was dry. Empty.  Blood backed up in the tubing at the insertion site. Bad enough that the IV would have to be dc’d and restarted, but bad also, of course, that the patient had gotten them too quickly. The tape on the bottle, so much out at 3:00pm, indicated the bottle was supposed to run most of the PM.

I hadn’t been told about this IV in report.  And clearly, the day nurse had not counted this drip rate correctly, or had counted it when the patient’s arm or tubing were a bit bent, so that the IV went whoosh when they were straightened out. I still choke in horror thinking the patient could have died if all 1000cc’s (about a quart) had been infused within minutes. Then I might have found the patient cold. And dead.

The fear of IVs gone awry lives on in my bones today. I was happy to read my former student’s solution to her drip rate counting dilemma:

Found a new website www.rncalc.com

In my day, that information on how to calculate drip rates was in our heads. No smart phones then.

 When I asked if I could use this incident for a blog post, this nurse said, “Yes, you may quote me, but you have to try to feel a little sorry for me.”

Sorry, did you say? No way.

 

A Healing Environment on an Inpatient Psychiatric Unit

Fountain Hills, AZ

“Our goal was to make this unit a healing environment,” the RN said. She was leading our pre-opening tour of the inpatient psychiatric unit at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Healing. Her word caught my attention. She maybe didn’t know how healing it was just to hear her say they wanted their new milieu to focus on healing.

If you’ve ever been a patient, visitor, or employee on an inpatient psychiatric unit, you may have the same memories that I do of gargantuan dayrooms, glassed-in nurses’ stations, stark semi-private rooms (or even wards). These images never struck me as healing.

I’ve been retired eleven years from teaching mental health nursing to BSN students, but when a friend from our Mental Health Ministry at church called to invite me along on this tour, I immediately said yes. She had added, “The unit is supposed to be state-of-the-art.”

Curious, I hoped that state-of-the-art meant substantive changes from my memories.

We were a small group of NAMI members. The National Alliance on Mental Illness.  I’d let my NAMI membership lapse from my teaching days, but had recently joined to support them and receive their updates. At one time, my students, attending NAMI’s  open groups, had been moved by pleas of family members to consider their feelings when they visited their loved ones. “You have no idea how often we leave here and go out to our cars and cry.”

“Have you ever seen anything like it?” my friend asked as we rounded a corner of this spacious unit with wide hallways.

No, I had not.

Our tour had begun off-stage, the hallway where employees delivering something to the unit, say pharmacy or dietary, can access their delivery points without coming on-stage, the unit itself. The on-stage area is like having an inner sanctum that only those who need to have direct contact with the patients can enter and, therefore, protects the patients’ confidentiality.

The color scheme was that of the outdoors—a cream as subtle as a ray of sunshine, a sand resembling a warm summer seashore, and a sea-foam green reminding me of a Caribbean afternoon.

There were floor-to-ceiling windows, everywhere. “We wanted lots of light,” the RN said.

There were blue skies with bright clouds providing lighting in the three conversation-friendly dayrooms.

There were back-lit murals along the hallway of nature scenes—woods, rivers, gardens—and facing the footend of each bed in the private rooms.

The open nurses’ stations curved along the wall in a flow of marbled counters, appearing as elegant as those seen in upscale hotels.

There was much more to the healing environment–such as TVs, DVDs, computers, exercise equipment–so patients can stay engaged in activities promoting both mental and physical health.

When the tour finished, our group mingled quietly, awed by the healing milieu.

Does your time in retirement belong to you?

Retirement home (Israel, 2010)

Image via Wikipedia

A week ago yesterday, I had the privilege of being the speaker at a Vespers service in a retirement village. Never having done this before, I still readily accepted the invitation. I’m happy I did.

You see retirement homes hold an attraction for me. I conducted my doctoral research in one, spending a summer–it felt as though I had moved in–conducting indepth interviews with forty of the residents on the topic of leisure. I’ve often said that if you have to do a major research project for a degree, I had the best possible experience. Except maybe when a resident or two would ask if I, at age 48, was a new resident.

I also got comfortable in retirement homes because my folks did the continuum of care thing–starting out in independent living, moving when needed to assisted living, and then moving down the hall to the nursing home section. Living out of town, I made a point of driving up several times a year to visit.

I liked to go with them to their Sunday afternoon Vespers service. My dad would hold the door open for people with canes, and my mother would play the organ (well into her 90s). The other folks would smile at me and say hello. They were always happy to see younger folks or to see someone’s child visit.

So last week, I tied some of my experiences together and spoke at the Vespers service on a topic brought up by one of my research participants: “God’s Time”. One man had pointed out, way back in 1990, that the leisure time we have in retirement is not really our own, it’s God’s time.  He’d added that “…I was brought up that way that whatever you do, do everything to the honor and glory of God.” Work time, leisure time, whatever.

I’m sure that man is in heaven now, and I felt blessed to pass his message on to the appreciative folks at this Vespers service. Of course, the message is not just his. First Corinthians 10:31. Check it out.

Literary Life Booksigning – 9/10/11

Many thanks to Amy Nagelkirk for setting up this book signing at Literary Life, a delightful bank-turned-bookstore in Grand Rapids, MI, started up and owned by physician Roni Devlin.

And thanks to Dr. Devlin for now carrying Caring Lessons! If you’ve not seen this cozy independent bookstore, you must! Stop in at Wealthy and Eastern, peruse the shelves, and find your favorite books. Roni selects each one personally.   It was fun to see new and familiar faces! Note fireplace and sink-into seating.

Marv and I saying good-bye to Amy, an avid advocate for Caring Lessons

9/11 Memorial – Healing Field – 2011 Cannonsburg Ski Area, West Michigan

A somber tribute: thirty-two hundred flags attached to white poles slipped over thirty-two hundred strips of rebar that are placed in checkered squares.

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Labor Day in the Cool, Crisp, Clear Northwest

Some time ago, I wrote that you can take a boy off the farm, but you can’t take the farm out of a boy.

Proof once again: My husband on Labor Day driving a late 40s Farmall in the Black Diamond, Washington, parade. Older fellas lined up to discuss the make, year, and restoration of this old favorite.

We also “experienced” a clam bake and loved a rhubarb/blueberry struesel.

The flowers in the state of Washington shout happiness! And the greenery, even in this dry month, sings up to the heavens.


Thanks to our Seattle kids for a Labor Day sensory blast, interlaced with cozy chats and hugs and laughter. And burned chocolate chip cookies. My favorite!

Triathlon – SWIM – Chicago, 2011

In the following slide show, walk along with me to and from the swim portion of Chicago’s Triathlon. It was crisp and sunny this morning, a perfect day to enjoy the outdoors and the wonders of the human body.

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There are thousands of tourists in town. One participant (staying at our home!) said, “This race is incredibly well-organized.” Nice for me to hear as a Chicagoan.

All the swimmers/bikers/runners deserve congratulations for keeping so marvelously fit.  I hear the oldest participant was 81.

That means there’s hope for many of us, yet!!!

ICRS #1 – Hopping MARTA to Downtown Atlanta

One big blessing is the best way I can describe my experience at the International Christian Retail Show last week in Atlanta.

My friend Marianna Crane, featured in Caring Lessons, and I arrived within minutes of each other and met up at a Delta gate. We hadn’t seen each other in over a year, and immediately we were talking as if we’d been out together the night before.

Over lunch at Chili’s in the airport, we began our week’s plans. Whenever we go to a new city, we make it a goal to learn the public transit system. That has led us into some juicy neighborhoods, but Marianna was a community health nurse, so she’s comfy anywhere. Never mind that some of my friends in Chicago are skittish to come downtown to visit me because they’ve never taken public transportation, don’t want to learn, or are afraid–any or all of the above. But Marianna and I thrive on adventure.

It costs $2.50 on the MARTA system to take a train from the airport to Peachtree Center. Just walk a half mile or so in the airport to find it. Not any farther than I walk at O’Hare to get to the Blue Line. A hotel shuttle would cost $16.50, and, as Marianna said, the money we saved would leave us more for lattes and hot fudge sundaes.

After taking a mile-long elevator up to the Peachtree Street station, we spotted a sign telling us the direction to our hotel, The Westin, and we were there in a jif, dragging our suitcases behind us.

Did I mention it was hot? The heat index was in the low hundreds.

At four PM, we settled into our room with a supposed view of Stone Mountain—too hazy all week to see–with our first commitment scheduled at six. So what do weary travelers do? Weary nurses-turned-writers do? Weary older women do? Weary grandmothers do?

You guessed it.  TALK. (We always give each other equal time…)

More later in ICRS#2 as I tell you about the inspirational activities planned in conjunction with the show.