Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Nursing School-First Semester Recap



I survived my first semester of Nursing School! Yay me!

I have a HUGE binder full of notes already! WOW!

What did I learn the last 4 months? Here's a tongue in cheek recap:
  • If you go to the hospital and you have to have a Foley Catheter put in, don't be surprised if the Student Nurse assigned to your care is all excited to "try this on a live person"!
  • In the world of Nursing School, getting a 90% is a B. Why? That is so mean.
  • If you are in the hospital and have to choose between having a Foley Catheter inserted in your urethra or a Nasogastric tube up your nose, pick the catheter, hands-down. Don't ask why. Just trust me.
  • There are things that make young people sick that cause dementia symptoms in older adults. Why would a urinary tract infection cause dementia? Who the hell knows, but if your elder becomes suddenly confused, that might be one cause.
  • To be able to do the things that nurses do that involve bodily fluids and may be unpleasant aspects of the job, nurses have seriously twisted senses of humor. More proof that I have picked the right profession.
  • I am already making what I hope will be lifelong friendships. There is no joke there. I just really have a lot of affection for almost all of the people I go to school with. Getting through a tough program like this is as bonding as sharing a foxhole. Only with more pee.
Thanks to all my supportive friends and family for putting up with me in full stress-mode the last few weeks.

School starts again on January 26th.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Stacie,
    I just want to say thanks for writing about such an unpleasant subject from a fun angle.

    Although I am not a nurse, I work for a medical manufacturing company who works with nurses daily... more specifically, on the subject of catheters. So unpleasant.

    Luckily for male patients out there, we have developed a product that does not require the intrusion of Foley catheters or the risk of infection. It's call Liberty and it is completely external. Oh, how technology wows me! :)

    If you or your colleagues want to know more about it, feel free to contact me at acoelho@bioderm.us
    or just visit our Web site, www.bioderm.us

    Thanks again for the witty post.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I can't decide if this is spam or not. Is it somebody's job to read blogs looking for references to catheters? Bizarre.

    I don't know how an external catheter would help with problems like urinary retention due to things like prostate enlargement, but I'm not sure if I am curious enough to encourage medical vendors to basically advertise on my blog.

    Thanks for stopping by and taking an interest in my blog.

    ReplyDelete