Tuesday, February 25
Friday, February 14
Thursday, January 23
First deployment to the CCU
This week has been quite good to me despite how I might have perceived it to be. I believe it is important to have regular checks on your mood roller coasters and reflect on your feelings, actions and words, because sometimes what we feel may not be legitimate. Feelings can be real but they might not be appropriate.
Very recently, I had the opportunity to work a day in the Coronary Care Unit. I am still quite a junior nurse so there should be many more "first times" ahead in this career; every day is a time to learn new things. Anyway, the CCU was short on staffing during my shift so I volunteered to help out when my charge nurse was planning the day's staff assignments. I went over, expecting relative easier work; as it is an unspoken common courtesy to assign simpler tasks to deployed staff, after all I do belong to a different unit though still the same department; not to complain but I ended up extubating one of my patients, discharging another to a general ward, and even admitted a man who just had a heart attack and surgical intervention. Honestly, I did have a good time.
Happy to realise how far I have come in intensive care nursing! A few months ago I would not dare work in a less-familiar environment without the assurance of observation and guidance by nurturing seniors, what more volunteer to work in a different ward?
This deployment may not be some great accomplishment but it meant something to me.
Cheers!
Very recently, I had the opportunity to work a day in the Coronary Care Unit. I am still quite a junior nurse so there should be many more "first times" ahead in this career; every day is a time to learn new things. Anyway, the CCU was short on staffing during my shift so I volunteered to help out when my charge nurse was planning the day's staff assignments. I went over, expecting relative easier work; as it is an unspoken common courtesy to assign simpler tasks to deployed staff, after all I do belong to a different unit though still the same department; not to complain but I ended up extubating one of my patients, discharging another to a general ward, and even admitted a man who just had a heart attack and surgical intervention. Honestly, I did have a good time.
Happy to realise how far I have come in intensive care nursing! A few months ago I would not dare work in a less-familiar environment without the assurance of observation and guidance by nurturing seniors, what more volunteer to work in a different ward?
This deployment may not be some great accomplishment but it meant something to me.
Cheers!
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