tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-47281139582163816572024-02-06T21:26:15.394-06:00Birthday NurseI get to watch miracles happen and help families make memories every time I go to work.BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.comBlogger183125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-29254158333751945822010-10-05T22:05:00.000-05:002010-10-05T22:05:58.701-05:00It's an OPINION!I figured my comment about home-birthing might cause some stir.....and I think I was right. Let me just say up front (again!) that this is MY OPINION. It doesn't mean that it's the only opinion or heck, even the right opinion! It's just how I see things through my eyes.<br />
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Someone asked what we have in a hospital that wouldn't be available at home. I'll admit that I've never been to a home birth, but from the research I've done here's a small list (not all inclusive) of things we would have in a hospital (not necessarily at every delivery but available within seconds) that usually wouldn't be available at home:<br />
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~ 5 L&D nurses<br />
~ 4 NICU nurses<br />
~ 2 Neonatal Nurse Practitioners<br />
~ a full team to take care of mom after delivery and a separate team to take care of the baby after delivery<br />
~ a labor bed that can be adjusted to many different positions to facilitate McRoberts maneuver (plus lots of others)<br />
~ a full OR team/equipment (including anesthesia) ready for an emergency C/S if/when we decided we needed it<br />
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In my situation I think the things that helped the most were having all the (very experienced) hands ready and able to help. If it had been just the doctor and me in the room things could have turned out very differently. There is also no way that I could have taken care of the critical condition baby after he was born AND taken care of mom at the same time.<br />
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I know the great majority of births (home and hospital) turn out fantastic, happy healthy mom and happy healthy baby. I know midwives are trained and many have more experience than some doctors. I know that sometimes in hospitals decisions are made because of the extra monitoring that lots of times happens and that lots of times in the hospital we err on the side of "preventing" instead of "reacting." My experience over the weekend reminded me how quickly a situation can go from normal, routine, and uncomplicated to emergent, critical and life or death. The thought that keeps running though my head is "why would I want to take the chance of the one birth that doesn't go as planned being MY baby's?"BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com23tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-87555647532504613212010-10-04T13:03:00.001-05:002010-10-04T13:19:08.337-05:00If It Scares Us It Must Make Us Stronger...Right?Every nurse has experiences that they never forget....shoulder dystocias are some of those experiences. Not going to go into detail....but all 7 nurses and the doctor were shaking pretty bad after a very cute and chubby baby destined to be a linebacker came out safe and sound. Scenarios like that are what put lots of things into perspective:<br />
~the high acuity of what I get to do every night<br />
~the great teamwork we have as a unit<br />
~and why home birth is such a bad idea in my book!<br />
This mom didn't push very long, nobody would have guessed after a recent sono showed a <7# baby that he'd be a tight fit!! If this mom had tried to deliver at home, the outcome would not have been good.....for her or baby.<br />
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On a less tense note...I got to deliver a baby for one of my friends from church this week. Those are so fun! Not only do I get to help Mom and Dad welcome their new baby but I get to watch her grow up over the next couple years. It's like a premature ending when I deliver a baby and then move them over after 2hrs and maybe see them one more time. I don't usually get to see the "continuing project" over the next few years! This is the fun way to do it!<br />
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It feels like maybe our crazy summer is winding down. The last few nights at work have been a little more relaxed. Several deliveries, but not the crazy non-stop, no more rooms, no more nurses pace we've been running all summer. A total of 339 babies in September! Waiting for the 2 sets of triplets to come in any day this month.....<br />
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<b>Babies this Month:</b>1m<br />
<br />
<b>Babies total</b>: 111M/122F = 233<br />
<b>Vag</b>:82M/94F = 176<br />
<b>C/S</b>: 29M28F = 57<br />
<b>Babies 'caught'</b> = 2f1.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com14tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-87258720245613382382010-09-19T22:19:00.000-05:002010-09-19T22:19:10.744-05:00The Babies Keep on ComingEven though I live in a large metropolitan area, it continues to amaze me how many babies we continue to deliver every month. It's not like we're the only hospital in the city, there are several other hospitals who deliver just about as many babies as we do......and the last few months we've been >350! A week or so ago we had 23 babies in 24hrs...and with only 17 labor rooms that makes for some crazy times!<br />
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I've been doing lots of thinking over the last several weeks as we're losing some nurses to day shift and have a new traveler with us and just in general about how much the last 2 1/2 years have changed me as a nurse. We were all sitting around talking (one of our rare moments of peace and quite!) about 'seniority' and off all the nurses on our night shift I'm 3rd on the list for seniority. Not by experience by any means, but by employee time at the hospital. And there are several nurses with less experience too. I don't feel like I've been doing it THAT long!! But having some of the newer nurses come up and ask ME about what I think about a strip or what I would suggest they do in a certain situation...it still surprises me. The things that used to scare me to no end are things that don't really phase me any more and the things that I didn't used to think were necessarily a big deal see the significance in now! I think I've grown up a lot.<br />
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I worked an extra 15hr shift last week, went in at 2300 and left the next afternoon at 1400 after the delivery. It was a great bonding experience with the patient and her husband, but I don't think I realized it until how much we bonded until I was talking to them in the NICU a few nights later. They kept saying over and over "you helped us so much. We didn't realize how much our nurse would actually do and how little we would see our doctor. We couldn't have done it without you, you made the whole experience so positive even though it didn't go exactly as we had planned." This was the same couple who had a doula who told me that since I didn't have children of my own I didn't really know what it was like to be in labor...hmmmmmmm. She had a point...but I thought that my point of delivering way more babies than she had was a valid one too. But, I think I will always feel slightly dis-advantaged as a labor nurse until I have my own kids someday. <br />
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One thing I always seem to struggle with when I have patients who have doulas is when they ask their doulas for "permission" before they do anything. The patient was thinking about getting an epidural after 10+hrs of backlabor and no real cervical change. She had been talking about it and going back and forth and I asked her if she wanted me to start her fluid bolus prior to her block. She looked right at her doula and said "what do you think?" When her doctor wanted to start pitocin a few hours later after she was comfortable and still not changing her cervix...again she looked at her doula and said "what do you think?" (after waking her doula up from the nap she had been taking on the pull-out mattress) HELLO!! This is not your doula's labor! This is your labor, your baby, your body, your experience! You don't need your doula's permission!!! Doula's are great support people, they're awesome, don't get me wrong. But (most of them...and especially not the one in the previous scenario) they're not trained medical personnel...they're not your doctor or your nurse...don't ask their "permission"! <br />
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Several of us L&D nurses have thought that we could make a killing working as doula's on the side :) Best of both worlds!!<br />
<br />
<strong>Babies total</strong>: 108M/119F = 227<br />
<strong>Vag</strong>:80M/91F = 171<br />
<strong>C/S</strong>: 28M28F = 56<br />
<strong>Babies 'caught'</strong> = 2f1.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-65804676858569840142010-08-07T20:58:00.002-05:002010-08-07T21:08:25.533-05:00Lots of Babies!July was a record setting month at work...for all times! 361 babies in 31 days...with an 18-bed L&D, no antepartum unit...that's a lot of babies! We had 6 sets of twin, 4 of which happend the last week-and-a-half. I had at least one 3-delivery night (all vag!) plus several 2-delivery nights. We were a busy bunch for sure :) I think all of us nurses are more than happy if we don't break the record again for a VERY long time! It was kinda cool though, I delivered the record-breaking baby one morning(356) and then came back that night and delivered the new record-setting baby (361) that night. How cool is that?!<br /><br />We had a lot of earlier babies too...2 sets of 31wk twins, some 32wk PIH moms...our NICU is full to overflowing! Job security is amazing!<br /><br />I was thinking this week that the begining of August marked my 2-years as a L&D nurse, and my 2-years as a nurse period. I sure feel like I've been doing it longer than that (and am very guilty of telling my patients that I've been doing it longer than that...just to make them feel better). I know there is still tons that I have left to learn, but so many things that I used to think were such big deals aren't that big of deals anymore and things that used to get me all flustered don't any more. I think that's a good thing. And yet everytime I go to work and get in the "just another day at the office" funk, I have a delivery, or a patient, or a conversation with someone that makes me remember what an amazing job I have and all the miracles that I see happen every night at work. Whether it be working hard with a mom to delivery that miracle, or working hard with that mom to keep her pregnant just one more day. Ah...life is good :)<br /><br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 100M/114F = 214<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:75M/87F = 162<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 25M27F = 52<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f1.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-68137966216132000322010-06-02T09:03:00.002-05:002010-06-02T09:09:18.180-05:00#200My 200th baby!! I've been waiting for like a week for that and it took one of the nursery nurses to point out that I had it last night! And check out these stats...<br /><br />Babies today:1m <br />Babies total: 94M/106F = 200<br />Vag:70M/80F = 150<br />C/S: 25M25F = 50<br />Babies 'caught' = 2f1.5m<br /><br />A 3:1 split on the vaginal deliveries vs C/S's...<br />Almost a 50/50 split on the male/female deliveries...<br />An exact 50/50 split on the male/female C/S deliveries...<br />And 3/200 babies I got to catch... :D That one's the best one!<br /><br />Less than 2 years to make 200 babies, that's pretty good I would say!BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-33223820941453313722010-05-22T04:45:00.003-05:002010-05-22T04:53:09.793-05:00Birthday Twins!Every year (all 2 so far..._ that I've been a nurse I've worked on my birthday. Last night it was the night of my birthday, this year it was supposed to be both ends. Everyone thinks I'm nuts for doing it, but I personally think that it's kinda fun! I've gotten birthday twins both times, and that's fun for me!!<br /><br />This year I looked like a slight idiot doing it, but it all worked out OK. I had a triage come in for bleeding and she sure wasn't bleeding, and she was contracting every 7min, SVE unchanged from the office earlier in the week, cervix way posterior and she said she wouldn't have come in except for the "bleeding." I sent her home with some vistaril after I told the doctor "she's not bleeding or laboring." She was back 1hr later, contracting every 2-3min and 3-4cm. Chalk one up to my great triage skills!!! Oh well....she delivered a few hours later, blocked and comfortable, girl #3 with 2 pushes! We almost had extra people at our birthday party after I picked up the phone and accidentally switched 2 numbers in the doctor's sleep room and asked the friendly lab tech to come to my delivery. Oops...<br /><br />Almost at 200 babies! I was hoping to hit #200 before midnight on my birthday but I got put on call. Good thing I picked up a couple extra shifts last weekend!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1m/1f <br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 93M/106F = 199<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:70M/80F = 150<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 24M25F = 49<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f1.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-2945100262515482342010-05-15T02:19:00.003-05:002010-05-15T02:36:14.679-05:00Catching Babies!!I must say....I've been waiting to catch a baby for a long time now! It's been almost a year since I've caught a baby! Yet another reason I love unblocked multips with no doc in house :) Yay!! I have yet to catch a nice, normal controlled delivery, all my babies just shoot out at me. And once again, one glove on and one glove off. I guess it's my signature :)<br /><br />Shift change, I had just gotten report. Grand multip, unblocked, on pit, ruptured. The doc had just called, she was 5cm and he said to call him when we were ready. I checked her about 20min later and she was 6cm. I stuck a warmer in my room and put a delivery table outside my door just to be ready. Someone else delivered and needed a <a href="http://pomee-corp.com/productsDetail.asp?SecID=101&CatID=160&PID=562">gelpie</a>, so I went in to help them look for one. I got back to my room and my Mom said "I gotta puke..." I put on a glove, sure enough, there was the head. I grabbed the phone and called the laborist's room.....it rang....the head came out...I put the phone down in the bed....reduced the nuchal while telling Dad to find the delivery button....the rest of the baby came out....Dad found the delivery light and I found my emergency badge button....a nurse brought me the table and I clamped the cord, let Dad cut it (spraying blood EVERYWHERE...note to self, milk the cord next time)....baby to warmer....cord for pH's....cord blood for nursery....about that time the laborist came dashing in and I let her deliver the placenta. Mom was intact and very happy that the baby was out! I was impressed 'cuz the only blood I had on my scrubs was from Dad spraying blood everywhere. Nice!<br /><br />The rest of the shift followed the pattern and I did 2 more deliveries. One a Mom who walked in 9cm with a bulging bag who I was afraid I was going to catch too, but she was a prime who had great control and only pushed for 30min. I learned my lesson though and had the laborist in the room with me for that one!<br /><br />I went in for an extra 6hrs tonight and had yet another unblocked multip on pit who was 5cm when I got there. Thank goodness that doc was hanging out in-house at least, he almost missed the delivery anyway. I would have caught 2 babies in a week, but he wouldn't have been quite as laid-back about missing a delivery as the doc on Wednesday night!<br /><br />So that's 3 babies I've caught in less than 2 years. Yay! My knees were still shaking a little bit, but not near as bad as the first time!! Now I want to do it again!!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 2f/4m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 92M/105F = 197<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:69M/79F = 148<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 24M25F = 49<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f1.5m</p>BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-72825951323091508232010-04-22T15:24:00.002-05:002010-04-22T15:39:20.251-05:00TeachingFor as busy as we've been lately...it's been pretty ok! It's so nice having enough night staff to go around, and my phone hasn't been ringing off the hook every night looking for help! So what's the answer going to be? We're sending more nurses to day shift....of course! But, we will survive, because we always do, and we'll laugh our way through it :) I've realized over the last few weeks how much I love the girls I work with. They are 50% (some nights more) of why I love my job so much!<br /><br />I got my first "thank you" from a student that's been working with me. I got so excited! She wasn't even really "my" student, but she needed some more shifts, so she's been working a couple nights with me over the last few weeks when her normal preceptor wasn't working. It's been fun and really an eye-opener for me. I've never really "preceptored" anyone before. It's hard for me to preceptor new nurses to the floor because most of them are older than me, and have been doing this for a lot longer than I have, just at different/slower/smaller hospitals. Telling someone who's older than me what to do or how to do something is still one of the things I'm working on, so I'll stick with students and new nurses who I've still got some (if however small) senority over! It's fun to watch it click for the first time for these new girls. I remember when it clicked for me and that's when I got hooked...<br /><br /><br />Babies total: 89M/102F = 191 (almost 200)!!!<br />Vag:65M/78F = 143<br />C/S: 24M24F = 48<br />Babies 'caught' = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-28605863521302169152010-03-13T05:59:00.004-06:002010-03-13T06:23:19.913-06:0014 in 7Does Friday night have an OB curse everywhere?! It's like a full moon...Friday nights have a reputation for being beyond crazy!! Walk in the door @ 1830 and there are no empty rooms...and the board is FULL of labors! Labors are good....it means that they will get delivered and open up a room eventually...but they also can't be stacked up with one nurse, so it takes more nurses to take care of a board of labors over a board of antepartums. Still...I'd rather take labors anyday! Most of the labors were inductions hanging around from 0700, anywhere from 4-8cm. <br /><br />First clue that maybe the night is gonna be full of surprises, in the midst of a pushing marathon a family member passes out, splits their head open and is unresponsive on the floor. It took 3 docs and multiple nurses calling down to ED to have them send a gurney up to get her. "Well...can you put her in a wheelchair and bring her down, we're busy." Um...no. She's unconscious, we can't jus put her in a wheelchair and bring her down!! After a few minutes she woke up and after some stitches she came back up to see the new arrival :)<br /><br />I started the baby cascae with a vag delivery about 2030, about 3 minutes of pushing. Yay!! I'd taken care of this mom on multiple antepartum admissions and it was fun to get to do her delivery to wrap up the pregnancy. <br /><br />About 10min into her recovery I took a triage (to our only empty room. She was about 3/100 with a BBOW and contracting every 3min. In the midst of asking her admission questions she mentions "I'm scheduled for a C/S next week." Hmmm...maybe the fact that you're a repeat C/S x3 is something you should mention to the doctor on-call when they tell you to come in. Thankfully that doc was already in-house in the midst of a C/S, so we prepped and followed pretty quickly. Baby #2 for me!!<br /><br />As soon as I come out of the OR we keep the OR's running and double up PACU recoveries. I headed back out to the battle field and took another labor patient from a nurse going home. This gal never really made leaps and bounds of change but she was hurting and contracting pretty frequently and wanted an epidural. The doctor wanted to AROM her, but I convinced her to let me get Mom comfortable before AROM. <br /><br />Epidural went fine, and so the doc came in to AROM her. She was having quite a bit of bloody show, and when the doctor checked her there were several clots. The fluid with AROM appeared to be clear but we kept a pretty close watch on the bleeding. About 10min after AROM, heart tones started sliding. Turn, turn, O2, fluid bolus etc. No response. Doctor was sitting at the desk and she came in and put on a scalp lead. Still low heart tones. So to the back we run. No time for an epidural dose, so we had to sleep her. By the time we got to the OR heart tones were much better and we all breathed a little better. 7min from the time we left the labor room to delivery (including waiting for anes to put Mom to sleep) and less than 45sec from incision to delivery. Our manager was there working the floor with us and both she and the doctor said they were pretty impressed with how fast we moved. That was the most people I've ever seen in the OR at one time, but I'm so thankful for each one of them!! Baby came out only slightly stunned but did great and Mom was good afterwards. Pretty good size abbruption. <br /><br />As a whole, we had 14 babies in 7hrs that night, and I had 3 of them. Needless to say...I slept like a LOG the next day! Funny thing too, I wasn't even originaly scheduled for that night, but had switched nights with someone else...That's one of those nights you don't forget!<br /><br /><br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 80M/99F = 179<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:62M/76F = 138<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 18M23F = 41<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-14101836082448553482010-02-15T18:45:00.003-06:002010-02-15T18:58:49.630-06:00Still Here!I know...it's been over a month since I talked about babies...but trust me, they're still coming! We beat our record for deliveries in January...ever. >330 in 31 days...we thought that was pretty impressive! It's seemed to me that for as many deliveries as we've had I personally haven't done very many :( Lots of cervidils and antes. Maybe my turn is coming soon :)<br /><br />I did have some excitement Sunday morning @ 0600 when a SROM walked in and was in the best abbruption pattern I'd seen in a long time! Right off the bat banging out contractions every 30-60sec. Baby looked like one nice straight line (NOT a good thing). When I went to check her instead of a gush of clear fluid I got a handfull of blood. Of course we didn't have a laborist (in-house OB) that night, so I had to call her doc and get her to come in. I am so thankful for my amazing labor-nurse friends! We had the doc on her way, an IV started and a chart put together in about 15min of her getting there! After some IV fluids and some O2 baby started looking beter and she wasn't saturating pads with blood, so doc decided we had time for a more controled C/S. We didn't have to sleep her or anything too scary-run-down-the-hall, but still had a (>9lb) baby in 1hr 15min! Nice way to end the shift I guess.<br /><br />Poor girl, she was more than a little scared, and was planning on going all natural. I have my doubts that baby would have fit anyway, didn't seem like a very big pelvis. Hopefully next time around she'll get the chance to VBAC!<br /><br />I promise to start making a better attempt at posting on a more regular basis!<br /><br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 75M/95F = 170<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:58M/73F = 131<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 17M22F = 39<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f0.5m...I'm TOTALLY in the mood to catch another baby! Another nurse got to catch one this weekend when the Dr. got stuck in the lounge when the infant security alarm went off...I want my turn!!BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-49806241016820822632010-01-01T11:42:00.002-06:002010-01-01T11:52:20.137-06:00End of A DecadeAnd how did we finish the last week of the year?! Like crazy nurses at work! Our "goal" to beat a yearly record of babies was to deliver 315 this month. Because of the holidays we were a few behind, but I think this last week we went crazy and ended up at 300. I worked Christmas night...and the next 3. Christmas night was super slow, we were in the middle of a huge snow storm. I sat for 8hrs without a patient! It was pretty amazing :) We sat around and made no-bake cookies in the lounge and had some good laughs.<br /><br />The next 3 nights...were not so laid-back and relaxed. We had like 19-20 babies every day, there were a bazillion inductions/c-sections scheduled and we kept hoppin'! I had a good delivery each night, did my first c/s with the new (kick me!) charting system and survived :) We all learned a valuable lesson about not opening our mouth about our shift being over and took a crash c/s back at 0643 at change of shift. Craziness!!<br /><br />Ready to see what another year brings! How many babies, how many new experiencs, how many more things I can learn!! I feel like a totally different nurse than I did last year, and that's a good thing :)<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 3f/4m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 72M/88F = 160<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:55M/68F = 123<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 17M20F = 37 <br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f0.5m<strong></strong>BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-86548038794968050852009-12-19T06:51:00.002-06:002009-12-19T07:02:34.577-06:001:1What an interesting beginning to my week. One that I wasn't too happy about...until after the shift was over and I took time to think about it.<br /><br />We're one of the only hospitals in the city that has a psych unit (and it stays pretty busy!) For the last several weeks they've had a pregnant woman upstairs who came in with suicidal intentions (she wanted to cut her baby out). So they've been doing NST's etc on her and had just done an amnio and schedule her for an induction. Well, lo and behold, the same day she was scheduled for a cervidil, her water broke. So down to our unit she came. Her and her 1:1 status.<br /><br />When I got there she had just gotten admitted and started. She was on pit and planning to go unblocked. So I settled down in my hard wooden chair for a very long night. When the FOB decided to come up to see her (one of many social problems) she decided to get an epidural to make him happy, and proceeded to progress nicely. She was a super pusher and let's just say there was some serious "counter pressure" waiting for the doc to come. Note to docs sleeping in the lounge: if you're going to sleep, please make sure the phone is on so we can get you when we need you!<br /><br />When I left in the morning, I had left that room a grand total of 3 times. Once to pee, once to shove some food in my mouth and once to page the doctor. I felt rather helpless not even being able to go get zofran on my own. I felt even worse b/c I knew the rest of the girls were dying with people walking in and staying, but I couldn't do anything to help!<br /><br />Afterwards, when I really got to thinking about it, it was a pretty cool experience. Being able to be there, at the bedside, and not knowing I was next up for triage, or knowing that I had other patients to take care of, but being able to focus on one woman, her labor and her experience. I would do it again. If only our staffing would allow for that...<br /><br />Babies today: 1f<br />Babies total: 68M/86F = 154<br />Vag:52M/66F = 118<br />C/S: 16M20F = 36 <br />Babies 'caught' = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-67993992435029791162009-12-12T10:13:00.002-06:002009-12-12T10:22:59.705-06:00FiredI know, 3 weeks is a long time to go without blogging...but 3 weeks is a long time to go without a baby too!! We've all been running our tails off at work the last several weeks, but I've seen no fruits of my labor. I keep getting antes, <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidils</span> or getting a labor patient started and then leaving them blocked, comfy and well on their way in the morning...just to let someone else get the fun of delivering :( Even worse are the nights I've come in and had 3 recoveries to move...that's just the dirty work!! Oh well...I guess it's all a part of the process, so I'll do it anyway.<br /><br />I did get "fired" for the first time by a patient this week. I was more than a little upset and hurt by it...until I found out that there hadn't been a nurse yet that she'd gotten along with...including the "reverend mother" of the unit (the sweetest, most caring, gentle, knowledgeable nurse on the unit). The first words out this woman's mouth were "how old are you, how long have you been a nurse and do you have any kids?" I guess my answers of "23, 2 years and no" weren't good enough for her. I didn't mention the fact that I've helped/observed with birthing a baby many more times than she has. I know, it's no replacement for actually doing it myself, but it has to count for something, right? She wasn't happy with the fact that since she was already being induced early for <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">PIH</span> and really high pressures that I said that an epidural might be something to think about, simply because as labor progressed and her pain got worse her <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">BP's</span> were going to naturally keep getting higher...and wasn't really what we wanted (hence the fact we were delivering her early). She did go on to deliver unblocked, so I guess that showed me. From here on out I will no longer be asking someone if they would "like" me to check their cervix to see how far they're dilated...since I'm the nurse and supposed to be managing them. Good grief. I felt bad for the nurse I handed her off to...<br /><br />Since Thanksgiving I have yet to work another 3 in-a-row. I've been using up some of my required <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">PDO</span> time, so I've only been working 2 scheduled days, plus whatever extra I pick up. This next week I go back to my 3 nights...and I hope I survive!!BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-42552564205360439742009-11-20T17:49:00.003-06:002009-11-21T08:12:23.126-06:00Back to the Babies...I'd forgotten how hard it is to go back to work after a long stretch off! Maybe that's because it's been so long since I had more than 2 days off in a row! After going in extra for a few hours both last Thursday and Friday I was off 'till last night! Count it...that's 5 whole days off!! It continues to be super, crazy, insane busy at work. We had 7 deliveries just on night shift alone, with a board full of <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidils</span> and <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">antepartums</span> to beat. We were busy, but thank goodness we had 7 nurses there too! I had my first delivery in what's seemed like ages. At least 2 weeks I think.<br /><br />I wasn't all sure that it was going to be vaginal, but she did it!! I was so proud of her! 1st baby and a great support system in her sister, boyfriend and boyfriends' mom (even more impressive that the baby wasn't this boyfriend's but from a previous relationship). It was fantastic!<br /><br />We've had 210 babies as of midnight on the 18<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">th</span>...that's a lot. If it weren't the holidays next week I think we'd really be breaking numbers this month...is everyone else this busy!?!<br /><br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 68M/83F = 151<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:52M/62F = 114<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 16M20F = 36<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-75004895406253440102009-11-07T04:11:00.004-06:002009-11-07T04:26:44.002-06:00Babies Everywhere!I set a new record at work last night...3 babies in a shift! I don't think I sat down all shift! And I know I didn't have a chance to pee all night (but that's nothing new anymore) :(<br /><br />I had one delivery right off the bat @ 1845. Sweet little gal I had <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidiled</span> the night before. Getting induced early for low fluid, never really thought she'd deliver vaginally. She did awesome!!<br /><br />Got delivery #1 recovered and moved, then took over another labor patient from another nurse. She was 5, blocked/comfy and went from 5 to complete in about 45minutes! She was a great pusher and had a fantastic soundtrack of "pump-it-up" music that we played while we pushed. It was the best pushing session I've had in a while! It gives the nurses energy too! She had a little bit of a long repair afterwards, but was a trooper about it.<br /><br />Got delivery #2 half way recovered before my next patient got there. She labored pretty well, tried the tub, tried an epidural that didn't really work. She <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">SROM'd</span> then was really hurting. In the midst of trying to <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">redose</span>, then finally having them just put in a combined spinal epidural she was laying on her side involuntarily pushing. We called the doc for delivery, had the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span> standing at the bedside and about 3 nurses in the room. We knew as soon as we laid her back we'd have a baby, you could see the perineum bulging with every involuntary push...<br /><br />The <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">CSE</span> worked great and she got comfy really quick. Her doctor got there and then didn't I look like the idiot when we pushed for an hour and delivered straight OP. Fun, fun times. That was the first baby I'd ever seen delivered straight OP though. It does look quite odd when they come out looking at you instead of looking at the ground...<br /><br />The day shift nurse who came in and tried to take over in the middle of the delivery (my turf...back off!) asked how the night had been. I said we'd been pretty busy, 5 or 6 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">deliveres</span>. She said "we long for the pace. Must be nice." I bit my tongue but really, really wanted to say something along the line of "must be nice to have 2 or 3 times as many nurses on day shift too..." Oh well, all the babies get here and it always works out :)<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1m/2f<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 67M/83F = 150<br /><strong><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">Vag</span></strong>:51M/62F = 113<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 16M20F = 36<br /><strong>Babies 'caught' </strong>= 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-23392299303633867382009-11-07T03:48:00.005-06:002009-11-07T04:27:19.323-06:00She's Finally Here!One of my favorite things is when I get to deliver someone who has personally asked me to be her nurse. It gives me a warm, fuzzy feeling in my stomach that someone picked ME to be their nurse and I wasn't just the one who got assigned to her! One of my friends asked me months ago to be her L&D nurse and we've just been waiting and waiting. I think the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">waiting's</span> been worse on her than me...she's been ready for this baby to be here for months I think!!<br /><br />I just finished a stretch of 8 days off and was out of town for part of it and we all knew that's when Little Miss was going to make her appearance. Mom had been contracting for days and days. She'd gone in for a labor check and wasn't doing anything. She was scheduled for an induction a couple days past her due date and wasn't too thrilled about that. Finally, my first day back at work, she came in ruptured and delivered in 3 hrs!! It was so fun! Super delivery and a super sweet baby. Congrats to Mom, Dad and big brother!!<br /><br />That was the night we did 5 c/s in a row. Started W 1845 and rolled the last patient out of the OR at 0400. We had at least one nurse in the OR or recovery room all night. The patients just kept walking in and staying. It was crazy.<br /><br />P.S. To doctors sleeping in the call room down the hall: when I call you for delivery, please don't take 5min to walk down there, sit on a stool to put on shoe covers and take your own sweet time then yell at me because I'm not "holding the head in well enough." I am ready for delivery when I call.<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1f/1m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>:66m/81f = 147<br /><strong><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">Vag</span></strong>: 50m/61f = 111<br /><strong>C/S</strong>:16m/20f = 36<br /><strong>"Caught":</strong>2f/0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-64473996566453127072009-10-24T11:33:00.003-05:002009-10-24T12:10:45.124-05:0012 Out Of 14Just finished up working 12 shifts in 14 nights...not something that I would <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">recommend</span> doing again for a long time to me or anyone else. That's a lot of work in a not-very-long amount of time!! We have been so busy that the norm anymore is to have no empty room and have to put the elective <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">inductions</span> on hold just because we don't have anywhere to put them!!<br /><br />I could have easily worked both of the nights that I didn't if I had wanted to...but I just couldn't knowing that the first time it would have been 9 nights in a row and the second time would have been after I had stayed over from night shift 'till noon the next day and couldn't force myself to go back at 1900 that night. Anyway...is everyone else seeing a big increase in baby #'s for October?! Our thing is too it's not just "babies" it's <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">pre</span>-term stuff and <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">antepartums</span> filling up the board! A complete <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">previa</span> at somewhere around 30<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span>...that's gonna hold a bed for as long as possible, kidney stones take a bed for a couple days, all this H1N1 stuff floating around...never a dull moment!<br /><br />We were even having babies in the hallway this week!! One night the phone rang about 1940 and I picked it up. I hear "This is the ED, we're bringing you a patient in <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">active</span> labor and we need the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span> to meet us in the room." They say that all the time and lots of times the patient ends up being like 10<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span> pregnant or something. So I asked when her <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_9" class="blsp-spelling-error">EDC</span> was, who her doctor was, etc. The freaking-out-lady on the other end says "No, no, no! Listen to me, we need the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_10" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span> down here." I asked if the patient was delivering and the lady said "yes" and hung up the phone! So someone when to go grab our <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_11" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span> who was in the middle of surgery and I flew over to the ED with a <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_12" class="blsp-spelling-error">precip</span> pack and asked the nurses where the delivering lady was. They said "oh, they just took her upstairs." Hold it...I thought she <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_13" class="blsp-spelling-error">was</span> delivering and they needed the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_14" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span> stat...<br /><br />I met the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_15" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span>, the gurney with a grunting patient on it, and an ED tech in the hallway on the way to L&D. The patient kept saying "I need to push..." and when we rolled through the door of the room we heard the screaming under the sheets. Sure enough...welcome to the world baby! Mom was a <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_16" class="blsp-spelling-error">grandmultip</span> and baby's <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_17" class="blsp-spelling-error">UDS</span> came back positive :( Sad story, but sure added some excitement to our evening...we were simply counting our blessings that the baby didn't come out in the elevator on the way up from the ED! The ED told us they looked under the sheets and didn't see a baby so they thought they should bring her up to us.<br /><br />For as much as I've worked, I don't even really feel like I've had that many babies! I had 4 this week...and I thought that was impressive!<br /><br />1st one was a <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_18" class="blsp-spelling-error">primip</span> who acted about 10 years younger than she really was. If your mom is talking baby talk to you...are your really ready to have your own baby?! She was unblocked because "you know epidurals <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_19" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">paralyze</span> you...". When I first checked her I could have sworn she was complete, so called the doc, put her up in stirrups and pushed twice....then when she finally let me really feel...nope, she was more like 8. So out of stirrups and to her side. Thank goodness by the time the doc got there she was more like a rim that slid back pretty easily. The delivery was a little chaotic, she pulled her IV out twice while we were pushing, wouldn't listen to the doctor, wouldn't push...but baby finally (somehow) <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_20" class="blsp-spelling-error">came out</span> and screamed right along with mom. Healthy mom, healthy baby, and mom could walk to the bathroom on her own...fine with me!!<br /><br />Another fun baby that same night, mom came in and did great, got her epidural about 7cm, doctor was there and <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_21" class="blsp-spelling-error">AROM'd</span> her and she pushed about 30 minutes. Thankfully it happened to be a little slower moment in the shift and before mom got her block for about 2hrs I got to pretty much sit in the room with her and coach her through it. The dad asked me afterwards "do you always get to sit in the room with the patients like that? That is so cool!" I wish I DID have the chance to do that with everyone!!<br /><br />My last night of my stretch was the best one, even though even before I got to work that night I had decided in my head that I was quite done with work for a few days and was not too excited about going back. When I walked in the door they told me that I was going to need to take care of a recovery who wasn't moved because "she hadn't eaten yet." Her recovery was over, but since she was still working on her dinner tray they hadn't gotten her up to the bathroom yet. I'll be honest...the recovery/up to the bathroom/moving process is my least favorite thing about L&D. So...as soon as day shift left I went in, got her up to the bathroom and moved her. Now why couldn't have have been done before I got there? I don't understand.<br /><br />So after moving my recovery the patients keep on rolling in. Took a non-contracting <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_22" class="blsp-spelling-error">SROM</span> back to her room and got her settled, just as my <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_23" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidil</span> showed up. Loved both couples!! <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_24" class="blsp-spelling-error">Cervidil</span> was a couple so excited about getting to have their first baby. Dad was just finishing up his residency and it was so nice to have someone in the room who knew how to help if I needed it! An extra set of hands when I was starting the IV, he knew how to silence an IV pump...but was so non-<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_25" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">threatening</span> about it. Other couple was their 2<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_26" class="blsp-spelling-error">nd</span> baby and had lots of family in the room all night.<br /><br />I don't know where they ordered the batch of <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_27" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidil</span> that we had that night...but it was doubly potent for both of them! I put it in and both of them took off! About 5min after I put the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_28" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidil</span> in the "scheduled" <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_29" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidil</span> she was contracting every 1-2". I got both of them epidurals before midnight and ended up pulling both <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_30" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidils</span> and both labored on their own. An hour after I pulled the scheduled <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_31" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidil</span> she was still contracting every minute and I ended up <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_32" class="blsp-spelling-error">terbing</span> her. I NEVER <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_33" class="blsp-spelling-error">terb</span> <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_34" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidils</span>!!! I figured the doc would be ticked in the morning. My <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_35" class="blsp-spelling-error">SROM</span> girl delivered right at shift change and I handed her off to a day shift nurse right after baby came out. I went in to say goodbye to my other patient and just for <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_36" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">curiosity</span> sake I checked her. She was 7! How to do you get to 7 after I <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_37" class="blsp-spelling-error">terb</span> you for <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_38" class="blsp-spelling-error">hyperstim</span>!!!<br /><br />I begged to stay and deliver her and somehow it got approved, so I got to stay! When the doctor came around about 0745 she was almost complete..and delivered within an hour!! I was so excited and it was a great delivery. Both mom and dad said Thank You over and over for staying over my shift for the delivery. That makes it even better. Great ending to a LOT of work! Isn't that the way it was supposed to be?!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 2f2m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 65M/80F = 145<br /><strong><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_39" class="blsp-spelling-error">Vag</span></strong>:49M/60F = 109<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 16M20F = 36<br /><strong>Babies 'caught'</strong> = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-41510529212603551972009-10-14T16:26:00.003-05:002009-10-14T16:35:07.758-05:00Still Here...Promise I haven't fallen off the face of the earth! More like into the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">crater</span> of work! Even though it's the middle of October we're still busting at the seams and somehow managing to survive and laugh about it.<br /><br />Several fun babies lately...all girls, go figure!!<br /><br />There were moments that I felt like and idiot, a bad nurse and almost shed a few tears on the job...but then I look back on that night and think of all the things I learned and all the things I did that I didn't know I new how to do! I learned all about doing a D&C in our OB <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">OR's</span>...something I'd never done. How to do a sterile <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">vag</span> prep (I've talked to 1 nurse on the floor who'd ever had to do that...). I learned that I could put a scalp lead on someone who was 1/60/posterior when I had heart tones in the 50's (even the doctor was impressed at that!)...and I learned that I could stand up to a doctor and get what I needed for a patient. I also learned that I have some of the BEST co-workers ever. They're always there when I need them, they always are willing to help me out and I love them!! We just got 2 new nurses coming off orientation on day shift and they said they've already noticed a big difference between days and nights and how <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">supportive</span> night shift is of one another and how it's a team approach <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">instead</span> of everyone nurse for herself. I like that :)<br /><br />I almost got to catch a baby the other night, I was all excited! But the doctor was in the lounge so I made sure she made it. You gotta love those <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">multips</span> who push once and all of a sudden the baby's crowning :)<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 4f<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 63M/78F = 141<br /><strong><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">Vag</span></strong>:47M/58F = 105<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 16M20F = 36<br /><strong>Babies 'caught'</strong> = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-28083866986207207232009-09-28T05:56:00.000-05:002009-09-28T05:56:01.108-05:0050 Best Blogs for Neonatal Nurses | Nursing Schools : LPN RN BSN MSN : Online Nursing Degree<a href="http://www.nursingdegree.net/blog/54/50-best-blogs-for-neonatal-nurses/">50 Best Blogs for Neonatal Nurses Nursing Schools : LPN RN BSN MSN : Online Nursing Degree</a><br /><br />This is what I find surfing the blogging world...I had no idea!! Check out #9!! It makes me feel special :) Congrats to all the other bloggers out there who made the "Top 50 List" too!!BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-41976743629837565052009-09-26T22:39:00.004-05:002009-09-26T23:10:13.635-05:00Question to All My L&D Nurse Readers!!!Things have been super busy/crazy/insane at work these last several months (welcome results of winter "coziness"!) and it has led us night shift people to think about our staffing situation. I'm asking for your advice/input/ideas!! My question is...how are you staffed on your units? What have you found that works best and what doesn't? How do you handle putting nurses on call? Any suggestions would be MORE than appreciated!!<br /><br />A little bit about our unit...<br /><br />We are a 17-bed L&D unit for both labor/delivery and <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">antepartum</span>. We average between 320-340 deliveries a month during most of the year, closer to 300-320 during the winter. We don't have a <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">separate</span> <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">antepartum</span> unit/rooms nor a triage area. We have 17 rooms that we use for all of the above. We triage/labor/deliver then after 2hr recovery move patients to postpartum.<br /><br />We have 2 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">OR's</span> and then 4 separate <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">PACU</span> rooms for our 2hr C/S recoveries before we move them to postpartum. Our L&D nurses do both <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">vag</span> and C/S deliveries, and then we are are the ones who are responsible for moving them to <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">postpartm</span> (a good 30minute process). Unless we have to we don't usually have both a C/S recovery and <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">triages</span> out on the floor. If we take a C/S back we're "in the back" until that recovery is over.<br /><br />We have <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">NICU</span> nurses staffed in our well-baby nursery and the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_9" class="blsp-spelling-error">NICU</span> "admit" nurse comes to all our deliveries to catch our babies.<br /><br />We have one charge nurse who is over L&D/postpartum/<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_10" class="blsp-spelling-error">NICU</span> and our Women's & Children's unit (usually an extension of M/B but can also take <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_11" class="blsp-spelling-error">GYN</span> surgeries/<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_12" class="blsp-spelling-error">peds</span> patients). The charge nurse doesn't do patient care.<br /><br />We are usually staffed 4:1 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_13" class="blsp-spelling-error">antepartums</span>, 2:1 or more often 3:1 labor patients and whoever can handle it takes the next patient that walks through the door. If we have Mag patients we are usually 2:1 as along as they're somewhat stable, sometimes have a mag patient + a labor or something else.<br /><br />Our L&D nurses can all float to mom/baby and if we're OK on labor and M/B is short then we get floated. None of the M/B or <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_14" class="blsp-spelling-error">NICU</span> nurses float to L&D.<br /><br />Our core staffing is minimum of 3RN's. Most of the time we're staffed with 4-5RN's/night. If we're lucky we'll have 6 or 7. We usually have 2-3 scheduled cervidils on the weeknights plus a 0730 C/S that comes @ 0530. Day shift usually brings in between 10-12 RN's. If the day charge nurse thinks we are overstaffed for the night shift someone (rotates by dates or requests) is put "on call." If we need the "on call" person during the shift they have to be there within 30min of being called. If you get "called in" before the shift is half over (0100) it's time-and-a-half 'till 0100, and if you come in extra it's time-and-a-half.BirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-86182239471648505312009-09-26T04:29:00.003-05:002009-09-26T04:42:12.271-05:00Finally Some Babies!!Wow, I'm been doing this blog in spurts lately...I end up doing it AFTER I've worked for the week '<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">cuz</span> there's not much energy <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">in between</span> shifts! This month has been crazy busy, we were already pretty close to 300 babies when I left on Thursday morning!! I've had several nice deliveries, 2 of them last night!! <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">Yay</span> for double deliveries!<br /><br /><br />The two last night were 2 within an hour, that's always good for getting the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">heartrate</span> up! I did one delivery of "my girl" that I'd had since the beginning of the shift, then walked out and there was another girl that was 7-8 and for some reason the nurse that had her wanted me to take her and finish her delivery. I'm not sure why but the girl was unblocked and there wasn't much time to argue!!!<br /><br />By the time I walked down to the room (for the first time) the midwife said that she was 9+ and wanted to get back in the tub. I wouldn't have gotten her up to the tub at that close to delivery, but the midwife did so I <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">didn't</span>' say anything. I'm realizing about this time that there is NOTHING in the room. No IV fluids hooked up, no pit for after delivery, nothing set up for cord gas collection, no delivery equipment. Wonderful...<br /><br />I got everything <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">ready and</span> thank goodness too '<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">cuz</span> when the midwife got the girl out of the tub and back on the monitors we had heart tones in the 70's and needed to have a baby NOW. It was a long 5 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">mins</span> while she broke her water, tried to have her push, then cut an <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">episiotomy</span>...I was calling people, getting the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_9" class="blsp-spelling-error">laborist</span> to stand by, asking some of my nurse friends to come be some extra hands, etc. Baby came out fine though, mom did great, and my heart rate finally returned to normal...<br /><br />I had antes a couple times this week. I was supposed to be orienting a new hire one night, she's been a nurse for a while, used to do L&D but then took 12 years off to raise her kids. She's like twice my age and I always feel a little funny "telling" people who could be my mom what to do. Anyway, first time I was orienting anyone in the first place so I'm already a little nervous, I don't like antes, I feel way more comfortable with a labor patient, and yet I'm supposed to teach someone how to do it. We had a FULL load of antes, and one of them had been admitted a week or so ago for bleeding...and had bled 4 times during admission and was on her 6<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_10" class="blsp-spelling-error">th</span> bleed for the day. The doc showed up right at shift change to assess her and got another clot out, wanted to cut her, it turned into a long process, we had to call in another nurse to take her back to the OR, and it was almost 2100 before I got to my other patients rooms. Not good patient assignments, but everyone turned out OK!<br /><br />I feel like I've been living at the hospital lately. If I hadn't been sick one night last week I would have been there 5/7 nights and all the nights have been crazy! Thank goodness it's job security!!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today: </strong>1f2m<br /><strong>Babies total:</strong> 63M/73F = 136<br /><strong><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_11" class="blsp-spelling-error">Vag</span></strong>:47M/55F = 102<br /><strong>C/S:</strong> 16M18F = 33<br /><strong>Babies 'caught'</strong> = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-84684698074190945312009-09-18T23:34:00.004-05:002009-09-19T00:07:38.526-05:002 Little BoysNo babies this week, but last week I went <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">OOT</span> (out of town) <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">before I</span> got to talk about the 2 nice deliveries I had one of the nights I went in extra. The first was a C/S that was walking to the back as I came on. I almost feel guilty "claiming" that baby because I hardly even got to say "Hi I'm <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">BDay</span> Nurse" to the mom before the drape goes up and the baby comes out. Then in recovery they are usually so out of it, and after laboring all day, all they want to do is sleep. Doesn't leave much time for the "bonding" time. But nice, quick section. We were actually in the OR from in time to out time less than an hour. That's pretty impressive! It was a one of my favorite <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">CRNA's</span> on too, so that always lends some humor to the situation.<br /><br />I was ready to go home after my section recovery was over and I probably could have, but there were 2 patients who were almost complete so I told them I would stay until both of them delivered so that then they would have 2 more nurses open. The 1st delivered pretty quick but the second one was an <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">un</span>-blocked <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">primip</span> and she took several hours to get from 9cm to complete. She was about 9.5cm and it was almost 1am when a <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">SROM</span> came in that I went ahead and took all the time thinking "I kinda wish I had just gone ahead and gone home already!" But I took her down to her room, she was 4-5cm, ruptured, <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">multip</span> who had gone natural with her 1st baby (all 28hrs of labor) and wanted to go natural again. <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">Ok</span>, that's all cool. Until she'd been on the monitor for 5min and I was doing the "interview" and she had a contraction...and I had a nice <a href="http://www.aafp.org/afp/990501ap/2487.html">variable <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_9" class="blsp-spelling-error">decel</span></a>. (I thought this article on interperting a fetal heart rate tracing was <strong>really </strong>good. It's a decently short overview, and does a good job of covering the basics of what takes lots of time and experience to understad and apply!)<br /><br />So after watching a few contractions there were several things that became apparent...these variables weren't going away with position changes, mom was NOT going to get off the monitors on my watch (or license) and she needed to make cervical change QUICK or she was gonna get a section. The doc for that group is known for NOT watching ugly strips for very long, and the last "questionable" strip I had with her I got my head bit off for not calling her sooner, so within 15<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_10" class="blsp-spelling-error">mins</span> of Mom showing up, I had someone start my IV while I called the doc. I told her right up front that I was having decent variables with each contraction, and that mom wanted to go natural. Surprisingly, she came in to the hospital without me even asking!<br /><br />When she got there mom was a good 5-6cm, and in GREAT control. The doc came down to the room, checked her and looked at the strip. Then <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_11" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">proceded</span> to tell me that baby was "fine" and that what I was hearing was the monitor moving during a contraction and picking up mom's heart rate. Then she left and went back down to the Dr's lounge. I don't usually argue with doc's but I KNEW that wasn't mom's heart rate, so I slapped a pulse ox on mom's finger (to monitor mom's pulse), had another nurse come down and listen and when she agreed with me that it wasn't mom's heart rate I put a scalp lead on <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_12" class="blsp-spelling-error">baby's</span>head. The more of those I put on the better I'm getting at them!! Anyway, by this time mom was a good 7-8cm and my <a href="http://www.nurse411.com/images/Course_Content/FHMVariableDecels.jpg">variables </a>weren't getting any better. Variables into the 60's and 50's (dropping from a baseline between 130 and 140<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_13" class="blsp-spelling-error">bpm</span>) sound horrible to a labor nurse and you find yourself holding your breath between beats just willing it to beat again. I finally called the Doc again and said "just FYI I put a scalp on and now my variables are in the 50s lasting throughout the contraction." She came down and thankfully mom was complete. She pushed twice and had a baby with a tight <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_14" class="blsp-spelling-error">nuchal</span>...but came out screaming!! Thank heaven she was a <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_15" class="blsp-spelling-error">multip</span> and went fast!<br /><br />She delivered 2hrs to the minute from walking in the door. And about 15min before the previous patient that I had been waiting on to deliver before I left! Mom was in SUPER control of herself and I would do an unblocked (or blocked!) delivery like that anytime. She was fantastic. I told her before I left that doing deliveries like that remind me 1) why I love my job and 2) why I don't mind coming in extra :)<br /><br />Nothing like a little excitement at 2 or 3am to liven things up and get your heart racing!!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 2m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 61M/72F = 133<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:45M/54F = 99<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 16M18F = 34<br />Babies 'caught' = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-78509716160167692412009-09-09T11:17:00.005-05:002009-09-09T11:43:00.639-05:00Ready for Another BabySo let's see...I haven't had a baby in a good week! I think I'm failing in the "delivery" part of my job! I can labor them fine apparently...but I have a hard time getting the baby out! I have had 3 nice (well, exciting if nothing else) births the last couple weeks.<br /><br />1st baby was a super fun couple that I <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">cervidiled</span> one night and then ended up doing the section for the next night because her cervix stopped at 9cm. They were lots of fun and their baby was ADORABLE! Honestly, most new<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">borns</span> aren't that impressive looking...but this little guys was super cute :) I even went back to visit them the next day on my day off to see how they were doing. I love stories like that!<br /><br />Next delivery was one of those "all of a sudden" ones where I had the C/S papers sitting on the desk because she'd been about 4cm for the last 3hrs. We had put in an <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">IUPC</span> and said we'd give her 2hrs and then were going to the back. 2hrs later she was complete! <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">Yay</span>!!! She did super and half way through pushing we were chatting and come to find out, Dad was an ICU doctor at one of the other hospitals in town. Great! Thanks for the heads up...He was quick to point out that he didn't know anything about L&D but still...a doctor is a doctor! They did an OB rotation in school and he's probably <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">actually</span> "caught" more babies than I have! Oh well...he was a great help when Mom passed out X2 in the bathroom on me 3hrs after delivery. Sigh...I had another nurse in the bathroom with me and the 2<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">nd</span> time Mom went down she really went down to the floor. So there's two L&D nurses sitting on the floor with a naked patient (she'd puked all over her gown on the way down...) on top of them and ICU-doc-Dad holding Mom's head and nobody could reach the wheelchair. So I hit my emergency badge and when everyone else from the floor came thundering into the room there we all were! Sitting on the bathroom floor! All we needed was a wheelchair...<br /><br />Next baby was the "exciting one". Problem #1: Mom was 5'0"...Dad was 6'4". Not a good combo for a baby. Sure enough, baby was pretty big, we pushed for 2hrs and baby was "gettable" but not quite coming out on her own. So doc came in and put on the vacuum and pulled baby out...all 9#5oz of her! Well, when all of baby came out, poor mom got a really bad <a href="http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://ebsco.smartimagebase.com/imagescooked/1790W.jpg&imgrefurl=http://ebsco.smartimagebase.com/generateexhibit.php%3FID%3D1790&usg=__0YWB4y3_8Gbr3WAFRWn39koghWA=&h=293&w=432&sz=32&hl=en&start=10&sig2=R3nuzo_ow9I_L9qQeKnDMg&um=1&tbnid=7OrYJ27b3vyF6M:&tbnh=85&tbnw=126&prev=/images%3Fq%3D4th%2Bdegree%2Bperineal%2Btear%26hl%3Den%26rlz%3D1T4TSHB_enUS235US235%26um%3D1&ei=odqnSsj7NZnEtAPps4DMBQ">4<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">th</span> degree tear</a>. It was<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">n't</span> very pretty. So doc gets ready to repair...and Mom's still bleeding...and bleeding...and bleeding. 3 bag of <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">pitocin</span>, 2 doses of <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_9" class="blsp-spelling-error">Methergine</span>, 1 dose of <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_10" class="blsp-spelling-error">hemabate</span>, 400<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_11" class="blsp-spelling-error">mcg</span> <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_12" class="blsp-spelling-error">cytotec</span> orally and 400<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_13" class="blsp-spelling-error">mcg</span> rectally...2000cc <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_14" class="blsp-spelling-error">EBL</span> and doc could start the repair (8 sutures...). Yahoo for nursing teamwork!! We didn't leave that room for an hour and half after delivery. Mom did fantastic afterwards...but she's going to be SORE for the next several weeks!!<br /><br />Within an hour of my hemorrhage there was a scary delivery next door with a Family Practice doctor. I know many women go to family practice doctors and continue with them for their OB care. It's nice...same doctor can take care of you before, during, after your pregnancy and you can throw in the kid's visit at your doctors appointments too! But think about this: would you let a family practice doctor take care of your heart attack and do open heart surgery on you? I didn't think so...consult the experts for your OB care too...just a word from a labor nurse. Take it or leave it :)<br /><br />Anyway...this baby was 10#, had a NASTY strip, a bad <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_15" class="blsp-spelling-error">dystocia</span> (shoulders and body) and then it took the placenta an hour to come out after delivery. We had to call in the OB backup (all family practice doctors have to have an OB back them up during deliveries for emergencies, C/S's etc.) to get the placenta out. Scary stuff.<br /><br />I don't know if they don't trust me after my Mom hemorrhaged or what, but I've done nothing but antes and triage's since! I did 8 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_16" class="blsp-spelling-error">triages</span> the other night...that is craziness!! Here's hoping for some actual babies in the near future!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1m/2f<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 59M/72F = 131<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:44M/54F = 98<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 15M18F = 33<br />Babies 'caught' = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-6614772912582920912009-08-20T05:41:00.002-05:002009-08-20T06:00:56.764-05:00Only 2Only 2 birthdays in the last week :( We've been having babies right and left it seems...I just haven't been involved in them. That makes me sad!!! I want some babies!! It seems like I've had cervidils and antes a lot lately. Boo.<br /><br />Neither of my birthdays have been terrifically outstanding either. Pretty "run-of-the-mill" almost...for lack of a better word...boring! The first one was a close friend of the doctor...so get this...the doc stood in the room and pushed with her for an hour and a half!! Seriously?! I love this doc, she's great, one of our favorites. But come on. I can think of only a handful of things that can make an L&D nurse feel more useless and a waste of space than standing at the perineum and pushing with the patient the entire time. Makes it even worse when the patients husband is there, and so is her sister...who is a pediatrician. So for an hour and a half I stood in the corner, dumping some astroglide everyonce in a while while doc, patient, husband and sister carried on their own wonderful conversation and the doc did my job!! I was a little sad :( The poor kid crowned for about 20 minutes "stretching". Mom didn't have any major tears...but that poor baby head was bruised and looked horrible!!<br /><br />2nd birthday was a C/S after pushing for an hour with a kid who wasn't in there straight and a doctor who ran out of patience and a mom who wasn't the hottest pusher. Baby ended up being >9#...the most exciting part of the whole section was the section that happened across the hall at the same time.<br /><br />We only have 2 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">OR's</span>, so our rule is not to run them both at the same time (to ward off the emergency walking in). The first time I ever saw them run @ the same time was a couple weeks ago when we had to crash a patient...let's not do that again. Until Monday night. We had just taken my mom back and baby had just come out, when the charge nurse sticks her head in and says that the scrub tech needs to open up the other OR for another case. Huh? When we hear that we suspect emergency, so the scrub tech left to open and prep for the other case and sure enough, pretty soon the other patient came back. After my 2 docs were done closing, they broke scrub and left my OR. So I'm left in a pool of blood, my patient still draped, and the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">CRNA</span> hanging out at the head. I asked the docs if one of them could do a final count with me and I was told bluntly "we can't. we didn't do the initial count so we can't do the final count." And they walked out.<br /><br />So now what? I <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">scrubbed</span> in and at least covered the incision. Then counted and thankfully found everything. Then I called out to the desk to see if someone could come back and help me move my patient. My patient was number than a 2X4 and not the smallest mom. So I started cleaning her up by myself and finally the 64yr old charge nurse comes back to help me move out. All the more interesting. So 30min after closing time...we roll out of the OR.<br /><br />I was NOT a happy camper and when I asked what the emergency was next door...I found out it was a failure to progress section and the doc called it right after I went back for my section. There was no fetal distress, no maternal distress, no fever. No complications, just no cervical change. Then she said that <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">ACOG</span> <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">standards</span> are "30minutes from decision to incision" and insisted that they go back that instant. The charge nurse tried to get her to wait, but she said no. Then they said she could go to the main OR if it was an emergency, but she said no, she wanted to go to our <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">OR's</span>. Seriously?<br /><br />Thank goodness everything turned out OK, all the instruments, laps, sutures, blades, everything was present and accounted for when I counted and when 2 other people went back and counted. The whole situation made me nervous and a little <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">frustrated</span>. Patience doctors...patience!<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1f/1f<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 58M/70F = 128<br /><strong>Vag</strong>:44M/52F = 96<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 14M18F = 32<br /><strong>Babies 'caught'</strong> = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4728113958216381657.post-78030580701893378762009-08-12T08:59:00.002-05:002009-08-12T09:08:00.453-05:00I Hate IUFD'sWe've had 5 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">IUFD's</span> (<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">Intra</span>-Uterine Fetal Demise) in the last week. 21<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span>, 33<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span>, 32 <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span>, 35<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span> and 36<span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">wks</span>. Come on! That is WAY, WAY, WAY too many. I haven't taken care of a demise in a long time, since that one last Christmas that hit me so hard. I feel like I've helped with almost every one, but last night was the first one that I've actually taken care of since last December.<br /><br />I hate them so much. All these babies who never have a chance, most of the time we never even know what happens. Mine last night was a rare case, he had a chromosome anomaly that the parent's had known about for most of the pregnancy. They were prepared, then were expecting something like this, and they knew exactly what they wanted. That makes it so much easier on us nurses, and in some ways, I think it makes it easier (at the time) for the parents. They had all their family there, they had all the little outfits for him there, they had their cameras, they had a name, they had everything and they had a plan.<br /><br />The baby was perfect. He was handsome, adorable, and looked AMAZINGLY good for probably being dead for going on 36-48hrs. I was thankful for that. Mom, Dad, and all the family got to hold him. Dad got to give him a bath, they took picture after picture, they all helped with footprints, I did plaster molds for them, and when I left, Dad was sleeping in the recliner with baby on his chest. Wow.<br /><br />I hate <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">IFUD's</span>. They're my least favorite part of OB nursing, because they're not fair. Not fair at all. And there's nothing that I can do to prevent them.<br /><br /><strong>Babies today</strong>: 1m<br /><strong>Babies total</strong>: 58M/68F = 126<br /><strong><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">Vag</span></strong>:44M/51F = 95<br /><strong>C/S</strong>: 14M17F = 31<br /><strong>Babies 'caught'</strong> = 2f0.5mBirthdayNursehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12962150294351033563noreply@blogger.com8