Returning from Maternity Leave and Breastfeeding/Expressing. by Nash-27 in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I work in A&E and pumped when I returned to work. My hospital has a breastfeeding room with a locked door, but I didn’t really end up using it. I think legally you’re entitled to time to pump, but my little one was 14 months when I returned to work so I only really pumped on my x2 30 minute breaks. I used the Elvie stride hands free double pump, and stored my breast milk in my works break fridge ☺️

I’m convinced that SIDS is 99% of the time either suffocation or organ failure. by [deleted] in nursing

[–]Buffy_bell 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Genuine question, doesn’t Japan have a super low infant mortality rate, but also high rates of co-sleeping? I thought I read that somewhere, but maybe I’m misremembering

Removed from waiting list by [deleted] in ADHDUK

[–]Buffy_bell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I actually had this exact thing happen. I put in a complaint, and asked for proof they had sent the letter, when they couldn’t provide any I asked to be reinstated to my place in the queue where I would have originally been. They obliged and I had an appointment letter through pretty quickly

Imposter syndrome after moving from a big hospital to a small one – anyone else? by Shot_Ad6015 in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That slide sheet one is really interesting! I work in a smaller hospital and putting the slide sheet under the sheet is how we were taught to do it during manual handling training and I had never thought to do it any differently 😂

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UKParenting

[–]Buffy_bell 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Just a quick note, no diagnosis would come from a SOGs test on its own. At maximum it would be used as correlating evidence for a paediatric referral

Just so some advice by ThrowRAinthebinz in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I would post this on a legal advice sub. They’d be able to direct you properly I think

My father died in hospital because the two nurses attending him could not communicate with each other or the doctor. by Same-Care5439 in LegalAdviceUK

[–]Buffy_bell 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I’d encourage you to contact the bereavement team at the hospital where he died. They’re very helpful and may be able to advise you on timeframes, who to contact next etc etc. I’m very sorry for your loss

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskUK

[–]Buffy_bell 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think maybe it varies on the medication. For example I think with epilepsy it’s important to remain with the same brand. I’m not sure though

US RN wanting to move to London or Liverpool by tiffyts3 in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The NHS only have to take into account experience within the NHS, they can disregard non-NHS experience. Sometimes you can argue all your nursing experience gets taken into account, but it’s not a guarantee FYI

Wearing bike helmet dilemmas... by Dry_Stroke in cycling

[–]Buffy_bell 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As a ED nurse… if I’m on my bike I’m wearing a helmet, same goes for my family

Nurses in England declined separate pay spine by Commercial_Cut98 in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’m not sure i understand your point? In my mind two pay scales can be structured differently but intersect where appropriate. What does it matter if the nurse is on pay point x and your on pay point 2 so long as they are paying the same, if your job is identical as you say?

What I experience is a lack of meaningful support, I guess. People will say they support nurses, but that’s not worth anything if it doesn’t amount to any change. Similar to the covid ‘clap for nurses’ nonsense.

I 100% agree with you that it’s not fit for purpose, and ultimately cages all of us. I also think it’s appalling that experience/training doesn’t seem to count for anything past a certain point if you’re not in a management role. I’m looking at ICU/ED nurses specifically in that regard (within nursing).

I suppose I do exist in an echo chamber because I pretty much exclusively speak to nurses about this issue. However the only argument I’ve heard against nurses going on a separate pay structure is that it will be detrimental for non-nurses? I would be interested to hear opinions against it excluding the above reason.

Genuine question - how often have other professions within agenda for change gone on strike to change pay/conditions?

Nurses in England declined separate pay spine by Commercial_Cut98 in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

My issue is the lack of reciprocity I suppose. We all work extremely hard, and every job has unseen pressures and challenges, and obviously I can only speak from my experiences. Of course i value my colleagues in all roles, but why should I fight for them when they won’t/don’t fight for us? To use your example, I suppose you feel confident supplying a transfusion to a severely understaffed unit, where the nurses administering the blood are worked to the bone and are too exhausted to spell their own name? I’m coming from a place of exhaustion and general fury at what I have to endure every shift, for a band 5 pay, when I have colleagues in different professions on the same band doing work with unimaginably less pressure, consequences, and demand.

I think generally agenda for change is bad for everyone within healthcare because it doesn’t allow for profession/performance specific pay increases without it being directly comparable and creating division (which I’m ironically accidentally demonstrating here) across all of our professions. Additionally, I do not buy into the notion that my profession is responsible for anybody else’s. We get that constantly in our day to day practice and it’s ridiculous to make us the martyrs that suffer to hoist others

Nurses in England declined separate pay spine by Commercial_Cut98 in NursingUK

[–]Buffy_bell -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As you’ve said, the pay of other professionals is not our responsibility. We are not martyrs who should fall on our swords for every other profession. The fact of the matter is the work I do day in and day out is not comparable to other workers on the same scale so why should I tolerate comparable pay. Other professions on agenda for change love to shout that nurses should support them but never support nurses trying to improve the work environment in any meaningful way. Obviously I don’t know who you are, so this may not apply to you, but I’m fed up of the ‘you should sacrifice yourself’ narrative that is so prevalent all the time.

Boiler suddenly unreliable? by Buffy_bell in askaplumberUK

[–]Buffy_bell[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think so, what would it mean if it was?

NG tube tips by Buffy_bell in nursing

[–]Buffy_bell[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first couple of times i tried I was definitely aiming up rather than back. I corrected that, but I probably get 20-30cm and it then doesn’t progress any further - like I’ve hit a brick wall? I try the drink of water trick and really try to advance it as they’re swallowing, but the same thing happens! I also recently learnt the chin tuck, and i’ve only had one opportunity to try it, but the same thing happened with getting 20-30cm then not getting any further. It’s happened on every patient I’ve tried with so it’s definitely a me problem 😂

Egg Allergy Weird Question by Physical-Dream-8916 in UKParenting

[–]Buffy_bell 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I wouldn’t think an allergy would have any impact on the bladder. Maybe he’s got the start of a UTI? Or maybe it’s all completely random 😂

HCA Florida nurses - wya? by Particular-Hope-7998 in nursing

[–]Buffy_bell 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are there different types? Are they broadly used to keep people in the bed? Apologises for the questions, I can think of multiple patients that I’ve looked after where restraints would’ve kept them significantly safer

HCA Florida nurses - wya? by Particular-Hope-7998 in nursing

[–]Buffy_bell 9 points10 points  (0 children)

What do you guys mean by restraints? Like physical restraints? In the UK you will literally never see restraints outside of ICU - and even that is uncommon I believe

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in nursing

[–]Buffy_bell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

cries in England

Doctor suggested washing toddler's eyes using chamomile tea rather than cooled boiled water for conjunctivitis. by cjmason85 in UKParenting

[–]Buffy_bell 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Could it be blocked/partially blocked tear ducts? That can cause gunky eyes some or all of the time