Translate

Monday, September 22, 2014

how I became a bitch

Working in the ER changes you.

It is unlike any other place in the hospital. You are dealing with a constant stream of people who are having some kind of stressful event in their lives.  We may not think it is a crisis, but for them it is.

The ER never ends. It never closes. Its 24/7.  There is never a break. It can be quiet one minute and chaos the next. You can be dealing with a stubbed toe and in rushes someone with a gunshot wound or a cardiac arrest We live our life on the edge.

You are dealing with everyone from A to Z.  Many of the people who frequent ERs are living dysfunctional lives. They bring that dysfunction into the ER with them. They can be drunks, junkies, criminals, the homeless, the mentally ill, the neurotic.  We deal with violent drunks, drug seekers,  homeless people who haven't bathed for months, out of control psych patients, manipulative people who can turn on a dime if they don't get what they want.

We work in a chaotic environment of ringing alarms, yelling patients, ringing phones, overhead paging... When it ramps up its overwhelming.

You know all of the above going in, or at least you think you do.  When you choose to take a job in the ER, you are the kind of person who thrives on chaos and crisis.  Bring it on.

Here's the thing about the ER that people don't get: It is not like ER on TV.  We are not constantly dealing with a car accident, a shooting, a cardiac arrest.  We get critical patients. Often. That's actually the fun part of my job. Ninety nine percent of the time it is routine, dull even.

My job is the everyday world of the ER: the abdominal pains, back pains, chest pains, mental health, etc. etc. etc. that make up the daily operation of an ER.  Its boring really.  Its predictable.

Being an ER nurse, you see a lot of tragedy.  Tragedy in the form of suffering people with cancer who are dying, terrible chronic diseases or conditions, unwanted elderly people..  People die.  Families suffer.  It is sad.

Then you see people who are such ineffective copers that a cold sends them over the edge and into the ER.  They are the type of people who will never have their own doctor.  There lives are such chaos that the concept is foreign to them.

Every day you deal with drug seekers in their various forms.  They lie and manipulate to get what they want.  You learn to recognize them a mile away.

Then there are the just plain mean people. You learn just how many of them there are in the world. They yell at you, verbally abuse you, threaten you, may try to hit you and succeed. They are the out of control people down the hall yelling at the top of their lungs because they didn't get what they wanted.

All this changes you.  Hardens you.  Makes you cynical..  You develop a shell that protects you most of the time. It changes your view of people, the world.   It exposes you to things most people don't see. It gives you a perspective on your own life and how it ain't so bad.

Being an ER nurse is so very difficult.  You cannot understand how difficult unless you do it. The only things that saves you is the occasional thank you, the thought that you made someone feel better or participated in extending someones life at least enough to get them out of the ER.

Last but not least, you will work with people who are hilarious, smart, dedicated and some of the nicest people you will ever meet.  They keep you coming back.

256 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 256 of 256
Unknown said...

Wow some of these replies are embarrassing to me as a nurse. People please do not think that we are all this bitter and resentful. Most of us will still greet you with a smile and a loving touch even if you are a frequent ED flyer with a lifelong drug addiction, unchangeable mental disorder, or anything else you make be fighting that brought you in that day. As a nurse, as a human, and as a Christian I believe it's not my job to look down upon whoever walks in my ED, it's my job to treat them and to love and send them on their way. It is super hard to be an ED nurse but it's even harder to remain humble and classy while doing so.

Unknown said...

As a former ED nurse. Get a new job. There are plenty of opportunities to utilize your nursing skills with a less intense set of patients. Maybe a vaccine clinic.

Anonymous said...

It is easy to judge, much harder to not judge and take care if the chief complaint. I have been an ER nurse for fifteen years and have been witness to the prevalence of alcoholism in our profession.

Anonymous said...

I accidentally stumbled upon this blog and noticed the topic... The ER.. Something I know about.

A place where I have been comforted and a place where I've met many caring doctors and nurses...

But my overwhelming experience has been negative. I've been verbally and emotionally abused many times by nurses. And twice by a doctor.

In fact.... Being accused of drug seeking almost cost me my life.

The third time in 2 weeks I had gone to the ER in extreme pain...and one of the nurses whispered this to the other nurse... Making a big deal out of it..

I was informed that the ER wasn't the place for chronic illness..

I explained that I had made an appointment but my doctor... At EMORY couldn't get me in for a month. What was my other choice? Lay at home and suffer to death???

The nurse said arrogantly... "Why don't you put a pad on?" As blood soaked my sheets and bed... "ya know..... Lots of girls have heavy periods and painful periods and don't come to the ER"

"This blood isn't from my period it's from my intestines" I said with shock...

"Well I didn't know.." The nurse replied as she flipped her hair and walked out of my room.

Every nurse I had that night treated me like crap... Like I wanted to get high

The doctor who had accused me of drug seeking and who had earlier in the week refused to do a CT scan and told me that the lump in my gut was because i was constipated... Finally ordered a CT scan..

Then tones changed and excuses were made... Lots of excuses.... No apology

As I was prepared for my 3rd emergency surgery to remove more intestine..only to realize that because the ER staff was playing police or god passing judgment.? They didn't find the blockage fast enough and my guts ruptured inside my body..

Ty ER doctors and nurses... I suffered because of your arrogance and righteousness..

I hear all these excuses from nurses about their attitude and why they get to be a bitch and be rude to the people in the ER... And sure it may be tough...

But I am sick. I've had multiple surgeries and I've been hospitalized dozens of times.

And if I don't use my pain... Intense pain... The pain and experience of having my intestines bust in my gut... To be mean and rude to people... Then how dare you?

Your negative working experiences are not an excuse.

Let's trade? I will take your job as a nurse and deal with crazies and being hit and spit at and whatever...every single day..

Because I can assure you that it doesn't compare to being NPO for a month.... Being in pain and being treated like a druggie because you've come begging for help 3 times to the ER... Throwing up so much that your teeth break from acid

You take my severe case of crohns...

I will be the nurse...

Irritants reveal the inner properties...

My crohns has revealed what I'm made of... And for many health care workers... (Not all because I've had some amazing nurses and doctors) but for some? A bitch is what they are made of..

Pressure on a rose = sweet scent

Pressure on a skunk = a bad smell

The pressure is irrelevant to how we respond to the irritants and pressures.


- Girl with Crohns



Anonymous said...

It is men who save healthcare. Most nurses sit on their fat asses all day. Eat, shit, facebook, repeat. Not to mention 85% are overweight. Why would i put my life in the hands of somebody who doesent even give a shit about themselves? Yet you advocate health!¿ haa the irony. Most nurses are a waste of resources

Unknown said...

Every single ER nurse is my brother and my sister, I will defend you till death. Only ER nurses will comprehend. After a shirt 12-14 hours, guess what? We are ready to do it again and wouldn't change it for anything else. To all of you ER nurses out there God Bless you and your families! Love you all! So others may live!!!

chicsurfs said...

WOW! First off I have no desore to ever be an Rn, no offense. I ♡ being at the so called lowest of the totem pole (not)? I do blood drws, catheters wound care, Ekg's, trach-suctioning, and much more. I know my scope of practice & stay within my boudaries.

To this poster. Imo it's time to move on if you are saying you've.become a bitxh that's not only scary to these pt's, but your entire attitude about what nursing is. We become hardened because it's beat to not get attached. But, I am certainly NOT a bitch! How can you alao threaten zomeone who has an opinion on how your responding to thers by saying 4 holes, and restraints.hmm the abusive, vile, nurse..you are indeed burned out! Dr's, therapists, any job can become a burn our for some & when it does it's called take a mind break and back off the job for a few weeks and gather yourself because this..all this tells me omg I'd dread having to be near aomeone like you on my shift with such a shitty attitude! A stubbed toes, a vetran JUDGED and smells..SO WHAT! STOP BAGGING & STHECK UP..YOU ARE A NASTY, MEAN PERSON!!

chicsurfs said...

WOW! First off I have no desore to ever be an Rn, no offense. I ♡ being at the so called lowest of the totem pole (not)? I do blood drws, catheters wound care, Ekg's, trach-suctioning, and much more. I know my scope of practice & stay within my boudaries.

To this poster. Imo it's time to move on if you are saying you've.become a bitxh that's not only scary to these pt's, but your entire attitude about what nursing is. We become hardened because it's beat to not get attached. But, I am certainly NOT a bitch! How can you alao threaten zomeone who has an opinion on how your responding to thers by saying 4 holes, and restraints.hmm the abusive, vile, nurse..you are indeed burned out! Dr's, therapists, any job can become a burn our for some & when it does it's called take a mind break and back off the job for a few weeks and gather yourself because this..all this tells me omg I'd dread having to be near aomeone like you on my shift with such a shitty attitude! A stubbed toes, a vetran JUDGED and smells..SO WHAT! STOP BAGGING & STHECK UP..YOU ARE A NASTY, MEAN PERSON!!

chicsurfs said...

Well sais, and professionally

chicsurfs said...

It's not about saying what people who work in ER don't get tired of it. It's rude she is, and knocking down, vagrants to food seekers extra. She's a mean, cold peraon basically & her attitude is disturbing.

Heatherdetroit said...

If a nurse is threatening a patient with big needles im sorry but that is a weapon and a crime. What does this say about you besides your obviously psychotic and need to give YOURSELF a little poke. You should definitely stay anonymous! In fact i dare you to say who you are n where you work YOU may be needing an er visit hunnnaaayyy!!! The majority of nurses are drug addicts taking advantage of easily accessible prescription drugs them damn selves!! Why do you think rehab is included in your benefits. The people in the er are sick whether its mental illness or a stubbed toe its really not your place to judge. What is your excuse? Youre far from god and this is what most of these cracked out nurses seem to think. What goes around comes back around being rude and mean to sick people is just bad karma. Soon enough it will be your spouse or child that is sick bet you wont be so numb and desensitized then. I so badly just wanted to take a shit in one of your pee cups and hand it to one of these junky narcistic nurses. This reply does not include techs or medics either and not EVERY nurse is a twat. Heatherdetroit@gmail.com

Unknown said...

Immediately treat your hemorrhoid disease with ace maxs, hemorrhoid medicine made from nutritious and are registered in the BPOM RI. http://obatnyaambeien.com/

Anonymous said...

I agree, Anonymous. (From a past cynical ER nurse). Stepping away from the ER to another department for a while and then returning to the ER gave me better perspective.

Anonymous said...

Then who would take care of your anonymous ass when you come in?

Anonymous said...

Try begging these people for money everyday. Try putting up with seeing the same faces everyday abusing the medicaid system coming to the ED for nothing. I've done bedside registration for 15 years. We are paid well, but my job can turn you into a bitch or asshole just as fast as nursing can. Our job is thankless. We don't save lives, but what we do insures the hospital's financial success and helps us all get paid. Thankfully I'll be finishing my IT degree in a few months and I can work with inanimate objects rather than welfare sucking, medicaid abusing, ED abusing, drug seeking, whiny "patients" errrrr customers everyday.

BEStarr said...

It's people like those threatening Mr Anonymous with 14 gauge angios and foley caths or the one who wrote this article that make me feel embarrassed sometimes to say "I am an ER Nurse". Before you start judging and bashing me, I've been an RN for nearly 30 years. 28 of those 30 have been in the ER. I've spent several of those years in Level 1 Trauma Centers and the rest in community ER's. I'm also a flight nurse part time. I've been hit, spit on, cussed at, had my life threatened... just like most other ER Nurses have. To say you're going to just "stick in hoses and big IVs" to teach someone a lesson proves that you're very young in experience- either life or professional , perhaps both. We all know, any invasive procedure must have justification AND if it is justified and you abuse your position, you should lose your license. Let me just ask you bitter nurses:
Have you ever watched your sweet child become so ill that you thought you would lose him? Perhaps as a parent, you're just looking for some small shred of power you can take back because you feel like your whole world is slipping away with that child... I have... I KNOW that making sure the nurse washed her hands was all I could do for him- the one small thing I could do to protect him.
Watch the man that you can't imagine spending one minute of one day of your life without lie unresponsive on a stretcher while the nurses and doctors prepare for intubation- now think about how insane that would feel if you had NO idea what was going on and everyone ignored you like you didn't exist - OR worse, if they made you leave his side.
Have you ever gone through withdrawal? ER nurses have a high incidence of substance abuse. I hope you never have to. I think we're all just one big physical or emotional catastrophe away from being Homeless Mary on the corner.
Please, don't get cocky. You really are no better than ANY one of those patients who come through your doors. I did heart and lung transplant for about 14 months. You have no idea how many lives those "addicts" and gang-bangers actually saved. Nobody wants to see their baby die - even if they're 30 and covered with gang tattoos- somebody somewhere lives that person. Try living with mental illness and feeling so sick with yourself and useless- like all the butterflies in your stomach just died.
Just TRY to find something good with everyone you encounter. Trust me, it may be hard at first, but it REALLY does mean a world of difference to you and every single person you encounter in your life...make peace and always be humble<3

Anonymous said...

Guys, chill. Pretty sure the guy who said, "Find a new job," just meant the writer of the article should find a less stressful job. Not that they were bad at it. While I don't come anywhere close to this I work in retail. And it's true. People are awful. And it is stressful. And I'd love to work another job. In fact I'm looking for another job. I can almost promise you that comment was not made out of spite but with the poster's own well-being in mind. That's how I took it, anyway.

Anonymous said...

I'm leaving this Anon because I don't feel like going through the effort of signing in to my Google account... but to be completely honest, I think ER nurses should go out and find a new job, not because of their attitude but because of the patients' lack of gratefulness.

ERnursey said...

Exactly. Love my techs. I have worked without them most of the time....and now am working with them. I say thank you a million times a night. And I have been an ER nurse for 17 years. Why???? B/c it is who I am. I never let someone's bad hair and aching vagina day become my bad hair and aching vagina day. I just love my job.

Anonymous said...

It is a sad reality of our health care system that those who deserve the most respect are often the most abused by someone who is usually the one quickest to feel their rights are being abused. Why as a human must I take verbal and physical abuse if a patient or their family just because I wear the uniform of a nurse? Should I treat you and your family this way you would be the first to report and scream you have been abused. I am still a nurse and always will be but I have taken my skills out of the traditional setting and now am a telephonic nurse. Even as rewarding as some patients could be I don't miss that constant fear of saying the wrong thing to someoneand being in my bosses office defending myself. I don't miss the drama or the 12 hour shifts. I don't miss the punches and swinging call light buttons as a weapon from the drunk who is detoxing and has an exwife in the room saying we can't sedate them. I can now practice nursing and still have a family life, good luck and god bless every nurse who continues to face the hotel nursing mentality our healthcare system has become.

Anonymous said...

Im with anonymous, if the er has turned you into a bitch, time to move on

Anonymous said...

To all the ER nurses and especially the ones that were there during my 3 trips over my lifetime THANK YOU. Actually this needs to go out to every Nurse that has ever been there in my times of need

Anonymous said...

Perfect. It is exactly like this. The person in REAL pain can't even speak, has no thoughts of food, pillows or blankets and would not mind or argue if laid on the floor so long as they are treated. All these people that come to the ED don't seem to realize -- we got your number -- it's not our first day. Experience has taught us that we only need one quick look to know when someone is in REAL need for emergent care without saying a word. To the front of the line you go! Now, saving these people is very rewarding. This is what we do best! This is why we work in the ED!

JD said...

As a patient with a chronic illness whose primary, and secondary effects can send me to the ER, over the years I've witnessed much of what the ER nurse(s) have said (i.e. stress, abuse, and general chaos that an ER is.) I've also seen the dedication with which they do their job.

Nobody sticks with a job that tough, unless they love it. You don't last in a job like that unless you love it. And to survive that environment you need a protective shell. It's not tough to see the actual human beneath the shell, but sometimes you do have try. It's a tough job that requires a tough person.

So before posting and assuming it exaggeration, or "whining" make sure you've read and comprehended the entire post. It's an explanation about the environment, the shell that develops and the love of the job required to keep doing it, day in and day out.

Anonymous said...

WOW!! Get off your high horse, and yes you chose this career. If you don't like it find something else! You are what makes the ER a terrible place! Listen to ALL of you!!! What may not seem to be an emergency to you all might be an emergency to someone else. Your getting paid either way. What is the difference? I understand you get fed up with the same old stories but maybe you should think about your own before posting terrible things about your patients. I personally know more nurses and nurse practitioners that have more mental issues than anyone! You keep this attitude and diagnose half the time without even running the proper test. I do understand the drug addicts and homeless and I absolutely do not agree with them getting drugs or attention there. I do not know any family member or friend (tragic or not) from car wrecks,pneumonia,to heart attack, that has ever had a visit to the ER where they have felt cared for/have had the level of care they truly needed. It really is sad.

Bonnie said...

Been a nurse for nearly 30 years...cried my share of tears in frustration after going through everything you mentioned. Been angry, hungry, exhausted, thirsty and still did the job. Missed family events, got kids up early and picked them up late and still did the job. Went through that cynical phase and came out on the otherside...it was hard sometimes, really hard, to find humanity in all the want rather than need that walks through an ER'S door...yet I did.

We medical people get this is a 'crisis' to our patients. That this is miserable, that they feel like they just can't deal with it anymore. We get that by choice and sometimes financial reasons, people choose not to have a personal healthcare provider...that is a choice and it comes with consequences...like 6 hr waits and "it's viral go home" treatments that come with a hefty price tag that often goes unpaid.

What the public doesn't get is...every time you choose to not go see a private Healthcare Practioner and choose to go to an ER for problems that could be treated in office you choose to be low priority in the triage protocol and will be seen using that protocol....not first come first serve. Be prepared to wait. And don't complain...you are not dying...but the person in the ambulance, having chest pain, with an obviously fractured limb, head injury, the child with a high (104 or higher for older kids, 100 for newborns) or the asthmatic struggling to breathe just might be and they are the priority.

Be appreciative of the care you are giving...and recieve...be patient...be honest...understand thoroughness is key to making the best decision for the care delivered...don't think you can BS the nurses/docs/PAs/CNPs...they have heard and seen it all already and can read you like a book.

As for my fellow medical caregivers...remember we chose a profession that always demands of us to GIVE regardless of whether the person(s) you are caring for acknowledges it or not. Take pride in the work you do, know you did your best and routinely find some place to decompress. You are battling the Angel of Death on a moment by moment grind...that IS your SUPERPOWER.

Anonymous said...

Ann I could never thank you and people like you, enough for being there when I come to an ER I really need you, if people would think about what you are doing for them in a time of crisis, what would they do if people like you were not there. their would be a lot more suffering and death, ignore the bad comments and keep doing what you do, there are a lot of people that appreciate you that just fail to say it

Lenny Friend RN BSN said...

It's only as dramatic as you let it become. I did it for 26 years. Including 2 of the busiest Trauma Centers in the United States. I'm glad I chose this as my profession. I'm sure I was tense and stressed out at times, but, no big deal if you ask me.

Mom of a ER Nurse said...

As the mother of a ER nurse, I can attest that it does change you. Having a daughter working in a inner city ER and working night shifts for over 5 years with the drug seekers, the drinks, the mentally unstable, the abandoned children, the forgotten elderly and abused mentally challenged he'd and the list goes on, takes a toll. It can harden the sweetest and kindest souls out there. They were born to this calling and they love their jobs, it doesn't mean they want out or regret their profession, but people don't understand the change in their personalities or the shell they develop. It's to protect themselves so that they CAN go in each night and do it again and every once in a while they get that one patient that appreciates them or that family member that thanks them and recognizes that they just saved a life or helped their loved one from being in so much pain. Those are the moments that make it all worth it. So telling them to get another job is ridiculous. They could never function behind a desk or any other job because they were born to be healers and without then where would the ER be? If a tech wants to complain about what a ER nurse makes, go back to school and you stay up until 3 am studying and take on $40k or more in student loans and do what you need to do to get your RN or BSN, if you gave up at being a tech don't put that on a nurse who made it her life's mission to get where she's at. Before anyone wants to bitch about how someone should change their job, go walk in their shoes for a day, shadow them and ask yourself what would we do if they all got another job!? Maybe when it's your son or daughter clinging to life after a herioin overdose or your husband or wife suffering a heart attack or you yourself that was in a horrible accident and the nurse you suggested get another job treats you even though you are obnoxious and rude and have zero respect and that nurse treats you like she would treat her own family... maybe you'll understand and have more appreciation.!

Anonymous said...

hello all ! i have been an er nurse for about 15 years. it can be very frustrating at times but i guess my biggest complaint would be about some of the people i work with and for. most of my coworkers are exceedingly caring and hardworking, but then there are the slackers (people who do their utmost best to avoid working) and some of the physicians who i think just don't care anymore, that make your job really hard. you strive to be the best pt advocate you can for your pt and their family and just don't seem to get the response needed by some of the medical team. i had a pt nearly die becaUse of that while trying to juggle 2 other pt at the same time. one with a pe and one with chest pain. i just had to get out of there. i left the er for 9 months and got myself a different mindset ie God grant me the serenity to change the things i can and to accept those i cannot. i returned to the er with renewed vigor and optimism. i love my job. from the girl who comes in for a serum preg even though her pcp got a neg urine preg, she just still felt pregnant (last menses 2.5 wk ago). i cannot change her way of thinking about what the er is for, i accept her for who she is and respect her concerns. i remember holding the hand of a dead teenage girl trauma victim. no id on her, no one to call. i stood alone in the room with her and held her hand, cried, and talked to her like she was my one daughter. i think her mom would have liked that. i feel like i did good for not just her but for me also. i agree with the above comments about getting hardened and would like to elaborate or suggest that hardened does not mean uncaring, you feel it means that for self preservation you have to stay strong and try to remain unemotional so you can be effective for the family and for yourself.if would do no one any good if the ER nurse fell apart during a traum, cardiac arrest, stroke, etc. we are not made of steel however. i was triaging a pt and we had a young man in his 20's come in as a trauma. i knew if didn't look good for him and he ultimately died. while i was triaging a pt, a woman came into the ER lobby just outside of my triage room and began crying and wailing. i stiffened up my face and tried to continue with my triage but i began to sob. i knew this mom just found out her son was gone. i apologized to the pt i was triaging as she no idea what was going on. i took a few deep breaths and resumed her triage. i feel it is quite easy for someone to say if you don't like your job then why don't you quit. what i would rather see or suggest is bid out of your department, refresh yourself. if you miss the ER, go back. it did me a world of good to just get away from it for awhile. i agree that many drug seekers do come in to the ER and that in turn makes it difficult sometimes for people to get good pain control for legitimate cause. i will generally ask a pt what works best for their pain, esp if i feel they are legitimate and i find when i tell the dr what works for them (even some of those still in training) they will say, yeah and i bet they are allergic to everthing but di-la-la. that is something that perhaps we all need to work on and that is to not pre judge the pt. i don't like it when i see/hear a fellow er nurse treat or speak to a pt poorly and i try to work on that nurse a little at a time to change their attitude. i guess now i might sound like i am rambling on or preaching so i am going to sign out. i had never seen this blog before and it was therapeutic for me to add my 2 cents worth. i hope my comments help someone as yours did me...God Bless and keep your chins up toledo

vobanorama said...

Please all ER techs, nurse techs, med techs, CNAs, STOP saying you do as much (even almost as much) as the RN for half the pay.
You have NOOOOO idea. That's why you're a tech; you don't have half the responsibility, knowledge, or education. I've been a tech AND I've been an RN for 15 years now. It's insulting; you have NOOOO Idea. If you want the money (which isn't that great once you realize the responsibilities we have, BECOME AN RN, it's hard work getting there and it's a tough job. I DARE YOU.

Anonymous said...

I have been an ER nurse for almost 20 years and...I have to say, Anonymous might be right. If the ER turns you into a bitch, it's time to go. I have a whole speech for this that I give to nursing students but the short version is:
Don't be arrogant, don't assume anything.
Google shit....---->It's the browser tab that comes up right before you log into Facebook.
Take the time to listen to your patients...what is their actual need?
Learn things...like receptor upregulation. Do you think 2 or 4 years is the end of your education?
Is that demented old lady agitated because she has to pee and has a prolapsed bladder and can't? Is she withdrawing from benzos? Is her blood sugar 30? Or her CO2 60?
People can hear you..in fact, even the dead can hear you LOUDLY make fun of the poor schmuck in Room 17. It reflects badly on you as a person and your ancestors are ashamed of you.
Oh...and this post is also for the rest of you who think you're better than the poor bastard lying in the bed in front of you. Ask yourself- is it absolutely necessary that I be an asshole all the time? And if the answer is yes....time to go.

Nursing in Australia said...

Thank you for sharing. Its informative and full of information.

Anonymous said...

Most deferentially find a new job. You knew all this going into the job and being a "bitch" to patients is not ok. I understand what nurses go thought and the stress of an ER. This is the worse article that I have ever read and as a ER nurse and am offended and embarrassed. There are 1000 of ER nurses out there that are understanding and compassionate and go though the same stuff this person does in the article and does it without being a "bitch". Find a new profession and do it soon be for you hurt someone!

Anonymous said...

Who ever wrote this is too judgemental to be taking care of people, they need a new job, preferable away from people

Health Careers said...

I like your blog a lot. Its informative and full of information. Thank you for sharing.

washmom said...

I'm so very thankful for the job that you all do in the ER. Having a quadriplegic son, we end up there a couple times a year. Sometimes we have the gruff nurse are Dr. that hasn't really listened about the quadriplegic part and will ask him to sit up on his own or what his pain level is below his injury. But we know that it just takes a little bit of time for them to really be present in the room. As they have been dealing with the other people you mentioned.....thankd

Elisa said...

Funny how anonymous doesn't have the balls to reply with a name? I have a saying: " Be nice to your nurse. We control the size of the needles and tubes that will go into you." I don't have to make the procedure comfortable. I choose to do so. It's jerks like you that make us into bitches and then have the nerve to complain! Go find another site to troll.

Elisa said...

Why don't you find a new site to troll. Hope you do t need emergency care anytime soon. We DO control the size of the needles and tubes that go into you jerk

Unknown said...

Your blog is very interesting. Thanks for sharing nice information on .... Nursing Colleges in Bangalore | Top Nursing Colleges in Bangalore

Anonymous said...

Try living where there is no paying work. I have to. If it weren't for snap I'd be starving. And mind U I am married, college educated, and have worked in other states with no problem. Connecticut sucks. Only jobs I've gotten last 2 months, pay 8.50 and are seasonal. The wonderful State even closed the LPN program I was in due to mis budgeting. After being in school 10 years, 6 months Combined clinicals still no license due to getting ill bring exposed to the other students coughing and nursing home under isolation the cleanliness so bad. So what do they do ? Pass them immigrants give them a CNA and make the educated resident whites and others take food stamps. Screwed up state.

Unknown said...

Hey anonymous ....Your means your. You're means you are.

Anonymous said...

Jesus. As an RN I truly believe most of these comments come from deeply selfish people... not much different from most of my colleagues. Traditionally nurses have been known as compassionate people with more altruistic traits than self serving traits. Enough with the narcissism! It's not a difficult field to enter. I left to become a biochemist not because of patients, but my disgust with the nurses who believe the suffering patients, even the mentally ill addicts who are suffering, are inconveniencing them! What did u expect? Nurses used to become nurses because they were altruistic... and Christ! Critical thinking abilities? Nurses are not intellectuals! People with 65% averages pretending they are bright? Come on. .. patients need to be cared for and helped. .. not condescended... this alone prevents people in need from going for help... yet you want to be credited as Damn heroes for putting yourself above the suffering... this was just a very simple annoyed response. .. read the u of Ottawa study on the culture of abuse in Healthcare and how much harm you selfish nurses are doing.

Justa Dude said...

Thank you for this rant. You should try being a psychiatrist in a public clinic someday. It isn't as fast paced but I have never seen anyone handle it without becoming cynical lol. I swear I sometimes want to choke the living shit out of the next adult male who comes in whose mommy still takes care of his meds or the next adult female who comes in "crises" wanting more klonopin cuz granny is sick. Fuck them all.

Anonymous said...

That medic saying their job is more difficult can eat shit. Yes your job is difficult, yes as an ER nurse, my job is difficult. At the end of the day you can dump and run. We are definitive treatment. You try your best but ultimately get to leave the situation, so fuck off

Unknown said...

Life has been so miserable after my girlfriend broke up with me 6 months ago. I never thought she could hurt me just like that then i realized how much i loved my girlfriend when she ended our relationship and i had to look for options to make sure i get her back to myself for i wasn't living fine anymore. I was directed to a Spell Doctor known as Lord Doctor Zakuza by my cousin who he claimed he helped him in winning a lottery. I made contact with the Doctor and i was surprised and amazed when my girlfriend came back to me with her knees on the floor pleading to me for forgiveness to take her back as my lover. I thought i was dreaming because all this happened just within 48 hours and it happened as the spell Doctor as said. For that wonderful encounter with this man, i took a decision on my path that i will let the world know about Lord Doctor Zakuza for he's able and capable to solve any problems. Get in touch with him now. Here's his E-mail: Doctorzakuzaspelltemple@yahoo.com

annoyeddude said...

ER staff are mostly stuck up bitches and assholes. I work in an ER and they are terrible people. They are bullies, nothing else. They make fun of patients and everyone else who isn't in their little group. The rest of the staff at the hospital even say the ER is full of bitches. It's disgusting. Don't ever go to the ER at a chinetwork facility...they only hire bitches. There are a few nice people, but mostly garbage.

Anonymous said...

Fuck you cocksuckers, erasing my comments. I work in an ER and all the nureses are fucking cunt bitches. The doctors are awesome, so are the PA. Nursess are evil and eat their own. Erase this and you suck nigger cocks!!!!

Anonymous said...

Mr. Anonomus, I also work on the ER as a Tech. Most people who come to the ER truely do not need to be there. People need to learn that the ER is for true emergencies and we are not your primary care physician. We work our was off under very stressful conditions and I am positive most could not handle the chaos for a day. Yes the ER hardens you to people like you. Bring on a true emergency !!!

Unknown said...

You have done amazing work. I really impress by your post about approach a Website designing. This is very useful information for

every one.

Emergency Department training in Hyderabad

Pretty Badass RRT said...

I'm an RRT and I put a child on a vent tonight. Nurses, techs, and DRS are NOT the only medical professionals that experience the stress .I went to school for almost 3 years to do what I do and I love it. No one ever stops to think about the one who manages the airway and the vent. Bless all of you for only thinking of yourselves .

the truth said...

Nurses who know nothing about how to keep addisons patients from dying should be sued into oblivion!

Anonymous said...

You should run for congress.Smartest thing I've read all day. And I've been a nurse for 30 years. How many more years can I do in this system? nurses are aging out, and the young ones don't stay.

Unknown said...

I agree get a new job. For some reason nurses have an issue with a spouse coming back in pre op . was told by one nurses its easier for them. who gives a shit about whats easier for you. patients are nervous before surgery and want their spouse with them. that is their right so stop bitching. I actually had a nurse close the curtain on me because she had to examine my husband genitals and told me he needs privacy. i opened the curtain and said we have been married over 30 yrs so stop it with the privacy. i then overheard her taking with the nurses saying we dont want a spouse in there so they dont see what we do with his genitals. Are you kidding me. The you have the nasty bitch who cant even put an iv right then you have them all who are controlling and think they are the boss... sorry ladies most of you are not angels but controlling and bossy. I hate nurses...been a long time since i have seen a nurse with compassion. I am a nurses worst night mare when it comes to my or my husbands care. I am informed and know our rights and we will be by each others side for any procedure weather the nurses like it or not

Anonymous said...

What no one talks about is the horizontal violence that RN's commit on a daily basis to non-RN medical staff. Constantly seeking to "write someone up" or "get someone fired" for the smallest offense .All the time sitting at the RN desk, framing food in their birch face mouths. Their anger spill out onto the lowly people who work along side them. God help the xray tech, the respiratory therapist, the phlebotomist, the housekeeper...

yanmaneee said...

timberland boots
nike epic react
michael kors outlet
golden goose
curry 6 shoes
jordans
nike vapormax
jordan shoes
yeezy 500
kobe byrant shoes

«Oldest ‹Older   201 – 256 of 256   Newer› Newest»