Sunday, February 13, 2011

What Nursing can Mean

Nursing is many things to many people. It is often a profession, a career, a calling and to some, just a job. To love this job is to learn early on that when the rewards do not outweigh the negatives it may be time to re-evaluate. In the current nursing shortage/crisis, whatever some may call it, many are re-evaluating what this profession means to them. Every day they drive to work, often wondering, what the day may bring. Each day is often very different.

Will you have those few patients that make it all worthwhile, the 2-year-old that, once her fever has broken, follows you around holding your hand? She lets you know with her innocent trust, that you helped her feel better and that she has just made your shift a brighter piece of time, this is the one, that while you may not really have the time to play, you decide it’s a good time to make time. Is it the older woman with multiple organ disease and a loving family, who just wants her to be able to go gently into the night? Her family understands her desires and needs for a peaceful end; so, you soothe her with cool cloths and keep her as comfortable as possible, leaving the family the chance to share her final moments in time. While this may not be a physically busy patient, the emotional investments it generates, play a different havoc with your coping mechanisms on a busy shift. On the other hand, will it be that man, that, though seemingly sailing along on the road to recovery, the inexplicable occurrence happens. You find yourself and many others on the medical team, fighting to save this man from the circling four horsemen, whose dogs are nipping at his heels. When you pull him back from the breach, will you have the staff to cover his increased level of need? Will it have been another day of coming in only to find that there are not enough nurses on the floor and that the intensive care unit is currently full, but they are trying to find a bed?

1 comment:

Sherry said...

Terry - I can tell you from my experiences (my own and both my parents) that I trust the nurses more than I trust the doctors. Nurses are the ones down in the trenches fighting for the patients. I can only thank YOU and all of the other nurses of the world for your gut instincts and for advocating for the patients.