Why Everyone Loves Nurses
By Jordie Papa
Image courtesy max pixel |
Sine Valentine’ Day is fast
approaching, I thought I’d take the time to show some appreciation for the guys
and gals out there who dole out tender loving care for a living. I’m talking about nurses of all stripes. Whether they labor in the ER or the OR, or
work in a hospital, doctor’s office, medical clinic or word private duty
assignments, nurses have always given way more than they received. So, today I am going to count ten of the many
ways in which the public love the fact that nurses are there to help them deal with
injuries and illnesses galore.
1. Nurses are
always there when you need them. –
Unlike the old adage about there never being a cop around when you need one,
nobody could ever say that about nurses.
Whether you walk in off the street or are brought to a hospital in an
ambulance, odds are the first face you’ll see is that of a nurse. One of the reasons you’re more likely to be
seen by a nurse first is because there are nearly three million of them in the
US, as opposed to 1.1 million doctors.
2. Nurses
thrive on adversity. – Where most of us
are programmed to shun adversity, nurses thrive on the stuff. They have to, since their duties run the
gamut from dressing wounds and dispensing medication, to assisting surgeons and
doing it all day in and day out. Did you
know that many nurses routinely put in 10 to 12-hour shifts? That means they not only have to deal with
your calamity, they have to do so while fighting to stay awake and alert until
the end of their shift.
3. Only a nurse
can read a doctor’s handwriting. - Another one of the tasks that nurses need to
handle on a daily basis is deciphering patient charts. These relics of the 19th Century
are still found in all too many hospitals today. An article in Forbes Magazine reported that,
“About six
percent of U.S. hospitals have yet to convert even the most basic ancillary
services of laboratory, pharmacy and radiology to electronic medical record
systems despite billions of dollars in funds available to these
facilities, health information executives said at
the Association of Health Care Journalists annual meeting.” The article goes onto point out that
most of those that do fail to share electronic medical records. This leaves the burden of deciphering paper
charts squarely on the backs of nurses.
4. When
everyone else is gone, they’re still there. – Long after most doctors and therapists have clocked out for the day,
nurses are still there to care for you.
While you may sometimes resent those late-night checks that sometimes
wake you, most of us are just glad that someone’s there through the night when
we’re at our worst. Besides, it’s only
fair since we sometimes disrupt their routines by hitting the bedside buzzer at
all time of the day and night.
Image courtesy flickr |
6. They know
how to make the hurt go away. – None
of us likes to be poked and prodded, but that’s what happens an awful lot when
we wind up in a hospital, ER or doctor’s office. Whether it’s giving you an injection or
drawing blood for testing, nurses know how to use a needle without driving
patient’s crazy. They’re also awfully
good at dressing wounds, sprains and fractures.
That’s because they have so much practice at tending to the sick and
injured.
Image by Public Domain Pictures |
7. They turn
technical jargon into plain English.
– If you’ve ever had a discussion with a doctor about treatment protocols or
prescription medication, it can leave your head spinning. That’s because doctors spend a minimum of seven
years learning how to become a doctor, and they want you to know it. If you ever come out of an examination room
after speaking with a doctor only to look like a deer in the headlights, do
what I do…Ask the nurse. Nurses can
translate doc-speak better than anyone else.
That’s because they hear it all day long.
8. Nurses are
the ultimate chill pill. – Not only
are nurses expert at calming us down when we’ve injured ourselves, they are
also experts at calming down family members who are often frantic when someone
they know and love has been injured or takes ill.
9. When we’re
at our worst, nurses are at their best.
– If you’ve ever walked into a busy emergency room, then you know what
orchestrated chaos is all about.
Accident victims cry out in pain, family members berate hospital staff
trying to get someone to see to their loved one, administrators ask the sick
and wounded for their medical insurance.
If it weren’t for the nursing staff, there would be no way to sort out
the chaos to make sure that everyone who needs medical treatment gets it at the
proper time and place.
10. They’re the
first to see you when you’re admitted to the hospital and the last to see you
off when you’re well enough to go home.
– Long after your doctors have signed off on your treatment, it’s always a
nurse who helps you complete the paperwork and then wheels you out of the
hospital before you head home.
Jordie Papa is owner of Uniform Destination with four locations
in North Florida offers scrubs and medical accessories, including stethoscopes.
Those darn hospital beds are diabolical.
ReplyDeleteI don't give thanks for having great nurses in NEFL. Without them things would but bad.
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