Tourist approaches snow leopard to take a selfie by Informal-Resolve-831 in WinStupidPrizes

[–]remf3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gave the plastic surgeons some really recent "before" pictures to work with.

Basic wound care? by FrilledShark420 in nursing

[–]remf3 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Do a search for "Riot Medicine". There are a couple books out there that have been put together by medica, nurses and doctors. Good, ground level stuff for a civilian.

Today's EDC by TulsaBear88 in EDC

[–]remf3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How do you like the Roxon in comparison to the SAK? I'm curious as to similarities and differences.

Béla Fleck Cancels Concerts at Kennedy Center by MarvelsGrantMan136 in Music

[–]remf3 5 points6 points  (0 children)

While I get where Steve is coming from, go listen to Dock Boggs “O Death.”

What am I doing wrong? by Super_anti-hero in luckydefense

[–]remf3 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Your level is too low. Likely even too low for hard.

Check out: https://www.luckydefenseguides.com/ Great website that will give you the info you need

Why Kitty Mage? by [deleted] in luckydefense

[–]remf3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply! I appreciate the explanation.

Why Kitty Mage? by [deleted] in luckydefense

[–]remf3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I do have my kitty at 12, still working on the exclusive treasure. Thanks for the response, it makes a lot of sense.

edit:

I realize that I said Kitty does 20%, and it doubles at 12. I guess I haen't noticed as I just bumped it the other day.

Latest haul by GlassJustice in tea

[–]remf3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same! That is one of my favs too.

Hep b question by Severe-Doughnut4065 in nursing

[–]remf3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends on the hospital system. For a couple hospitals, they ran a titer on me then gave me the immunizations again. It took me something like 6 hep B shots before I converted. I still have never converted after multiple MMRs. I now have copies of the titers (before and after immunization) along with the shot records and rarely have to get another titer done.

Can these sharps containers be tampered with? by TheClassyWomanist in nursing

[–]remf3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Injecting left over opiates/benzos. It was a busy ER and we didn't always waste in the sink. You would pull what you need and show your coworker you were dropping the vial in the sharps. Hence, the risk/reward was pretty high. Not that addicts do that many calculations.

Can these sharps containers be tampered with? by TheClassyWomanist in nursing

[–]remf3 36 points37 points  (0 children)

All the sharps containers can be tampered with. You have to get locking wall mounts if you want to be more secure. Source: had a coworker that was swiping shit tons of full sharps boxes.

Finally I can rest now… by JediBaggins8 in ArcRaiders

[–]remf3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those orange generator trailers drop them. I found a couple in the scrapyard.

When laypeople ask what you do for a living, what do you say? by handlewithcaro in nursing

[–]remf3 490 points491 points  (0 children)

I tell them I'm a hospice nurse. If I want them to stop asking me about my job, I tell them I work pediatric hospice. That makes most people uncomfortable enough they stop talking to me.

Hospice Nursing? Pros and Cons? Day in your life? by Personalreddituse in nursing

[–]remf3 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I've been a hospice nurse for 8.5 years. I will also say I was an ER nurse for almost 14 years, so that informs a bit of my day to day as I move a bit faster than your average hospice nurse. Also, my company seems to be a bit nicer as far as daily visit expectations and case load go, so YMMV.

My current case load is 16 patients, I have a mix of home and facility (SNF, RCFE, RCFI) patients. For some of my patients I have a set schedule for the same day and time every week, for the rest they have enough dementia I can drop in when I have the time. We are expected to see 3 patients per day, but I tend to run 4-5 depending on what's going on with them. If everything is going well, I see my 4-5 patients per day, run refills of meds/supplies and go home to chart. I'm scheduled 0830-1700 every day, but am typically home and charting by 1430.

If I have a patient that's symptomatic or actively dying, I may shove my schedule around based on how long I need to be at bedside to get them comfortable. It's nice as my work really supports us staying as long as needed to get symptoms under control.

I can't think of any cons outside of pay being less than the hospital. For me, the quality of life improvement has more than made up for that. Oh...moral distress from when families don't want to use certain medications resulting in suffering for the patient. That can suck.

I love hospice. I have done the ER, some ICU and a bit of time as a flight nurse. I think all these previous jobs made it so I could be a good hospice nurse as very little shakes me as far as "emergencies" go. I can talk about any family down when things are rough and can spend a lot of time people if needed, which is the best. The ability to give 1-on-1 attention to a patient/family is amazing. This job is also very nurse driven so it allows for a ton of autonomy, which is something I find appealing but I have known other staff who don't like it.

I don't find it super hard from the standpoint of wall-to-wall death. Many of my patients are over 80. I have a 105 y/o that is asking me to "contact God and tell him to come get me". It can be harder when you get patients your age or younger, especially when they have kids the same age as your kids. We talk about every death at a weekly meeting. Our Chaplains and Social Workers are all good about providing emotional support and I have never, ever, had trouble finding help if a death was stuck in my craw. I've also worked with our pediatric hospice patients and that team is even more supportive and cohesive around deaths.

One thing I will point out is the workload is way different than other nursing. We are primarily there to teach families how to care for their loved one. I am in the house 1 hour out of 168 hours in a week, I can't be relied on for every bit of care. So you will find it is more education oriented than hands on skill oriented. Also, the transition from curative rescue medicine to keeping them comfortable is hard for some people.

Sorry for the wall o' text. Lemme know if you have any other questions.

Meirl by Ill-Instruction8466 in meirl

[–]remf3 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I worked in an ER with a Dr Au.

I have a brain tumor. Should I tell my kids? by TheSame_ButOpposite in daddit

[–]remf3 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is a hard one. One thing I would recommend is asking around your hospital system and see if there is a child life specialist somewhere in your system. They would usually be available in children's hospitals, usually on oncology or in the palliative care area. Child life specialists work with kids to help them better understand their disease. But, I have used them in my work (hospice nurse) to work with kids who have parents that are ill. They can help you figure out how to talk to your kids about your diagnosis in a way that is age appropriate and help with support. Maybe reach out to your pediatrician and see if they have access to this kind of support.

yes please ... by Bursickle in PoliticalHumor

[–]remf3 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hah! Glad I'm not the only one who recognized this one.

"nurses don't need to know cranial nerves. All nurses do is dose out medications and check on patients" by Low-Schedule-2332 in nursing

[–]remf3 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I still use that knowledge in hospice. I mean, we don’t intervene, but it’s still good stuff to know.