Monday, January 7, 2013

Escape Fire


I do not have the solutions, but just about everyone in healthcare knows there are problems, and we will not be fixing them anytime soon. One of my clinical rotations has me working with many homeless and uninsured individuals. Another clinical rotation has me working with an upscale rural population. None of that is the problem. The problem in this country is we do a horrible job educating and preventing disease in the first place, e.g., Primary Care.

 
 
 
 
 

Monday, December 31, 2012

Patient Satisfaction Survey

When PediNP wrote about "Customer Service" in relationship to her clinic, it was something that most practitioners, from the techs to doctors, understand. We are the ones who actually touch the patients and talk to the patients and families on a daily basis.  
  
Most health care facilities around the country now provide some sort of “Patient Satisfaction Survey” after the patient has had their care. Hospitals, clinics and other healthcare services rely heavily on these surveys. Some information can be beneficial, but most of it is for the administrative bean counters and managers who never touch a patient.   

Facilities tailor these questions to their specific needs, but here is a generic form from the Department of Health and Human Services. See the flaws, sometimes these surveys look like something you would fill out after staying at the Embassy Suites or Days Inn.  When was the last time someone had a hip replaced, heart valve surgery or got a cast at a hotel or restaurant. We who touch the patients provide a different service. OK, sometimes we provide you a blanket and some mediocre food. (That is another post topic).

These hospital scores are posted online through a National database (No not Yelp). How does a survey compare a hospital or clinic that treats the under served and homeless versus one in the gated upscale suburbs? New hospital additions have private rooms and flat screen TVs, while the community hospital still has two and three beds to a room. Do you think the satisfaction score might be lower, if the patient on the other side of the curtain is on the commode all night doing his GoLytely bowel prep. Patients will provide positive or negative feedback depending on the amount narcotics given out or refused at a clinic or ER.   

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Clostridium difficile and the dog

Really. This WebMD article says researchers in the Netherland taught a dog to sniff out C. difficile. Poor dog.  The dog was a 2-yer-old beagle named Cliff. Come on Cliff and C. diff, researchers are not very cleaver with word play. Anyway, when other dogs are taught to sniff out drugs and bombs, they are rewarded with tasty treats. What do you give a dog that is taught to sniff out C. diff.  I’m thinking maybe a bath.

Seriously did they spend a lot on this research, because I bet 75% of nurses with some experience at the bedside can tell you if a patient has C. diff. Even from the hallway at that particular time, nurses can make an educated guess as to whether someone has C. diff.

If fact nurses are so good we can tell the difference between the smells of a GI bleed bowel movement, C. diff diarrhea and hospital cafeteria food flatus.  Don’t try to impress your friends or family with this fact during Christmas vacation.  

Another good way to know if a patient has C. diff.  When you are floated to a new floor, look at your assignment. Yes, your patient in isolation will be the one with C. diff.   

 
 
You want me to spend my life doing what? Pick him, no pick him.
 
 
 

Friday, December 7, 2012

Labrador

Just need a break.

One more week and finals will be over. Tests are stressful, but not as much as when your instructor comes out to your primary care site to evaluate you. That is stressful. They come and sit in the corner of the exam room and say just ignore me. The patients don’t have a problem with it, but the students are a wreck. Did I diagnose it right, did I come up with the appropriate differential diagnosis and did I order the right meds and consults.

I would love to be out in the woods breathing fresh air and walking a Labrador. That is the best way to beat stress. Until then I just need to keep the goal in mind for six more months, then I can get a job and dog.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Nurse Practitioners Week

HAPPY NURSE PRACTITIONERS WEEK
November 11-17, 2012

OK I did not know there was such a thing until yesterday. Nevertheless, I guess everybody gets a day, week or month these days and thanks to Hallmark.

According to the AANP, there are approximately 155,000 nurse practitioners in the US. I would guess they work in more than 20 different specialties and areas in and out of hospitals and clinics.

Compare that to the roughly 850,000 active physicians, of which about 350,000 work in primary care. There are many different statistics from different sources about the numbers, but this seems to be the average. Anyway, for years they have been predicting an MD & DO shortage.

Nurse practitioners are not doctors or junior doctors; we are nurses with advanced degrees that can do some diagnosing and prescribing. A nurse practitioner will never have the book smarts of an MD and their medical school and residency training. However, in the wake of the aging population we should be able to work alongside and help with coming patient load that will tally in the millions.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Time management

Thought blogging though school was a good idea. However, I cannot believe how busy things have become. One day a week, we have lecture and classes for 10 hours, then 2-3 days a week we spend in clinical settings.

As a nurse, time management is a part of the job. In graduate school, I believe one of the biggest tests becomes time management. Yes, you are warned to put your life on hold until it is over and in some ways you do.  However, as an adult student that is not realistic. Family, kids, bills and work to pay those bills, all becomes a part of your time management. As important as those are, school, lectures, tests, papers, studying and clinicals are more important to get to your goal.     

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

How to become a Nurse Practitioner

Frequently at work other nurses ask me about my journey through my nurse practitioner program. They want to know what it is like, how hard it is, and is it worth it. I tell them it is worth it and yes, it can be hard at times. For some nurses this is just our small talk, and for years they have asked me the same questions. However, a few are really interested and I can sense they are feeling the way I was a few years ago. If they are serious, I will encourage them that this is the time to apply and go into a Nurse Practitioner or CNS program. Their next worry is about the admission process.

There are some tricks to increase your odds of being accepted. However, the first thing is start your paperwork, goal statement, and lining up those people who will write your reference letters. In the end, waiting will be the toughest part. As for the reference letters, they should be from influential people related to the health care field you want to enter. Preferably, from doctors, alumni, managers and other nurse practitioners etc, and not your nurse lunch buddy from the renal unit.

Have some volunteer or other experience to put on your application that reflects your area of interest. They notice if you are applying for a community health specialty, and the closest thing in your background is working at Kmart. That does not match your goal, so go volunteer at a free clinic or somewhere with people. Just because you might have a family, does not qualify you for a family nurse practitioner. Working with kids, seniors or under served people not related to you.      

Those are some important things, but what is really important if you want to be in school next fall and not saying I should have again for another year, then you need to be flexible.
 There are many graduate nursing programs and schools around the country, so you need to apply to more than the one in your hometown. Chances are the school closest to you is smaller with only a couple specialties, like family nurse practitioner (FNP) and nurse educator. A small school near here admitted 12 FNP students last year. Other universities will offer more areas of study for a nurse practitioner and may have clinical nurse specialist (CNS) programs. A good option if you want to stay in the hospital setting.
Then there are the large universities and institutions that offer an extensive number of specialties for nursing students. An example of these larger and better-known schools would be the University of California San Francisco, University of Washington and the University of Pennsylvania. Yes, there are other big schools like Johns Hopkins University, but I think these are the biggest and have upwards of 15-20 different specialties beyond a BSN degree. The one I attend has approximately 600 nursing students in the Masters, PhD and DNP programs. Meaning instead of 10 new students a year, they admit more like 150-200. I explained this to a nurse at work, who was thinking it would be easier to get into a smaller program. People need to apply to these larger schools.  
The other most important thing to increasing your odds to being accepted at a larger school is to think outside the box. Having talked to faculty and individuals working in the admissions office, do not be like everybody else and think specialty.  
Your admissions office might be able to give you hints, but the most heavily applied to areas in my school and probably most are of course the hardest to be accepted, these include:
Family Nurse Practitioner: I understand this is by far the most heavily applied to area and hardest to get into. For some reason everybody wants to be an FNP, they remind me of the old family practice doctors and they treat just about everybody. This was not for me, because although I like kids, I do not want to deal with their parents.
The Nurse Midwife/Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner
Pediatric Nurse Practitioner.
Acute Care Nurse Practitioner; most schools require at least a year or two of ICU or ER experience to even apply. Even so, they get more applications than spots available. Most of these student want to stay in the hospital setting.   
Doctors have been specializing for years and I think you will see more of this in the NP programs, so look at other specialties that interest you. Apply for an Adult Nurse Practitioner with a specialty in Occupational and Environmental Health or a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner. Apply for a CNS in Oncology or Cardiovascular care. If you really do not want to have direct patient care you can go into research and get your PhD. Adding a minor to your specialty like forensic science, palliative care or global health can only help.
Again, the biggest thing is to apply. No matter who wins in November there is a growing need for nurses with advanced degrees. I remember in the fall of 2009 thinking I am too old and it will take too long to go back to school. Well, I am done soon and anyone starting next fall will be done before the 2016 person is sworn-in.

If you have never been a nurse and have a degree in another area, there is always the MEPN option if you want to be an NP, CNS or other specialty.

So how do you become a Nurse Practitioner. Apply

*This was all my opinion and if you have any questions ask. I only guarantee that if you do nothing you will not get in.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

It is all about the money

The two commercials you see on TV constantly are pharmaceutical companies advertising their drugs and lawyers wanting to sue pharmaceutical companies.

Why do so many drugs created to cure one thing, have twenty-times as many side effects.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Through the Cambodian interpreter, retired patient tells me how he got a laceration on top of his thumb while using a handsaw four days previously. He was able to stop the bleeding, but now it was so infected he had to come in. After a prescription for some antibiotics and some instructions to elevate and use warm compresses, he was on his way. Although, I had to say that just because it is called a handsaw, does not mean you saw your hand. Lame, but least I got a small laugh from the interpreter and patient.

Monday, July 2, 2012

New Clinicals

Started a new clinical rotation over the weekend in an urgent care clinic for a large HMO. There were about a dozen MD’s & NP’s working, and my preceptor handles mostly musculoskeletal injuries. She also had a good sense of humor, which helps when you see so many people in the course of a shift.
I found the patients rather pleasant to deal with, maybe because they had insurance and did not have to wait around in some ER to be seen for their minor injuries and accidents. We saw bike riders who found out pavement is not very forgiving and a trail runner who now prefers flat ground after a nice spill. Although she blames her boyfriend because he made her go. A father who was practicing acrobatics with his daughter and had to leave in a foot cast, and I never realized so many people slammed their fingers in car doors. Thirty seconds and the use of a cautery pen to relieve the pressure and they were on their way.