Monday, 24 September 2018

The final chapters...


Day 17 your 5 favourite blogs
I don’t read many blogs, so I don’t think I have 5 but I will come back to this one in a bit



Day 18 a photo of you



This is me in my first uniform in my first year of my training in 1997

Day 19 what’s your favourite nursing topic
Nursing in criminal Justice/ Prison Nursing massive topic very underrated and misunderstood.

Day 20 what 6 things make you happy
My Westie Billy
The seaside
My niece and nephew
Penguins
Laughing at nursing jokes no one else understands
Being a nurse in the NHS

Day 21 your favourite thing about being a nurse
There are so many, I think the variety of the profession is wonderful, I have worked in prison hospice care acute medical and surgery and general practice but all as a nurse.
I like the variety no two days are the same, and the fact that a patient or relative can gain comfort from something you do that may seem insignificant. I make a difference to people’s lives every day that’s my favourite thing.

Day 22 5 things you do on every shift
Have at least four cans of Pepsi max
Travel more distance to and from the medicine stock cupboard than any marathon runner
Loose a pen
Find a pen
Forget one of my many computer passwords


Sunday, 5 August 2018

The Story Continues...


Day 10 best joke a patients told you
It has to be I’m allergic to codiene but not morphine, or I don’t know how it got there.....
Day 11 what do you eat on your break on the rare occasions that I get a proper break usually very boring, yoghurt fruit or sand which maybe crisps or a chocolate bar, sometimes I’ll have cereal or toast, especially on nights or a pasta pot and a very big glass of cold Pepsi max.

Day 12 when did you decide to become a nurse
That’s easy when I was about two or three as shown in the photo, seriously though I can’t remember a time when I didn’t want to be a nurse it’s all I’ve ever wanted to do as long as I can remember...

Day 13 what was your favourite placement, i trained in the dark ages and we did common foundation programme, and were privileged to have mental health paediatrics Learning disability and midwifery placements for 3weeks each one, LD was my favourite.

Day 14 3 self care ideas
Have a hobby that is nothing to do with work
Use your leave wisely
Get a dog

Day 15 where do you hope to be in 5 years time I hope I will be a qualified or working  towards being an ANP in criminal justice nursing

Day 16thoughts on nursing as a degree

This is a controversial subject, but it needn’t be so, Nursing should be a degree, why not it’s an academic qualification as well as a practical one, I think provided the placement time is utilised adequately and the students do not think that they are too good for ward work the fact you have a nursing degree does not make you a better or a worse nurse than me who had an advanced diploma, after all the end objective is still the same....















My Nursing Story

Day 6 what you fear of nursing in the future
I think my biggest fear is that the art of nursing will get lost in the science and technology, we don’t need gadgets that beep and computer programmes to tell us that a patient is poorly a great deal can be said for the nurses instinct.

Day 7your 5 most motivating songs
This is quite a difficult one, I listen to music a lot in my car and at night and many songs mean a lot to me but I suppose if I had to pick 5, 
Cher- strong enough, it is a song about being able to cope on your own and believing in yourself.
Bobby McFerrin- Don’t worry be happy, this was a favourite of my nanny and she would break into song anytime someone said don’t worry...
Micheal Ball- love changes everything, love is in many forms and it really does change everything
Mud- Tiger Feet, my uncle Dave was the drummer and hearing this song makes me very proud
Finally Les Miserables do you hear the people sing- for lots of reasons but it’s a song about the little people overcoming adversity.


Day 8 5 current goals
This is harder than you think to answer, I suppose I have personal and professional goals, I would like to complete my Masters degree
I would like to become an advanced practitioner in criminal justice nursing
I would like to loose several pounds of weight
I would like to visit the penguin post office
I would like to see the northern lights 


Day 9 what’s inside your work bag

This made me laugh out loud, a colleague of mine and me had a conversation about work bags a couple of years ago, currently I have 3 issues of nursing standard yet to be read, my pens and ID badges, my stethoscope and a tourniquet, diary purse cosmetic case with various pharmaceuticals, a singe hair slide, a paper clip a half drunk bottle of Pepsi max and a very squished cereal bar.

Friday, 20 July 2018

The transformation continues


Day 3 Your Favourite Nursing quote.... this is a hard one , there are so many of them 
But I think I’m going to have to cheat and take 3 quotes, the first two are from the famous nurse Edith Cavell who was known for saving hundreds of allied troops in the war and executed for treason , on the eve of her exception she is quoted as saying 

They have all been very kind to me here. But this I would say, standing as I do in view of God and eternity, I realize that patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone.
She is also quoted as having said 
Someday, somehow, I am going to do something useful, SOMETHING for PEOPLE. They are, most of them, so helpless, so hurt and so unhappy.

This is also one of my favourite nursing quotes
To do what nobody else will do, a way that nobody else can do, in spite of all we go through; that is to be a nurse.

Day 4 Your dream job
That’s easy I want to be an advanced nurse practitioner in criminal justice either prison police custody or similar

Day 5 celebrating NHS70

This ones easy too, I was born in the NHS, THE NHS trained me and provided me with a job for my whole life, it’s the envy of the world and no health service is like it it saves lives and makes a difference what’s not to celebrate 

Transforming Nursing

Hi there in the blogosphere , so the NHS. turned 70 this month, hard to believe really
Part of the NHS 70 is a campaign to transform perceptions of Nursing and 
Midwifery NHS Horizons have created a series of 30 day challenges they set a challenge for each day in July to write a blog
related to nursing , I am a bit behind so you will get 20 days all at once from me 
If you want to follow the challenge there are twitter feeds with #NurseBloggers @BloggersNurse #NHS70 #NurseBlogger #FutureNursing have fun and enjoy 

Day 1 blog name and purpose,  well my blog has been around for a while , it has had two names and that depends on my current role it is currently life on the wards and other stories, but it may be life beyond the bars and other stories, it doesn’t have a purpose as such, I just want to share a small piece of insight into my world which may or may not be of interest.

Day 2 20 facts about you, ooh this is an interesting one, I suppose it depends what the facts are doesn’t it, well let’s see, 
1. Im an Aries
2 I am the eldest sibling of 4 
3 I have lived in 3 different counties of England
4 I can speak French 
5 I got my first tattoo at age 40
6 I am scared of clowns and spiders
7 My first proper job was at Burger King and I was fired after less than a week!!!
8 I have met Micheal Ball and Alfie Boe in person (amazing)
9 I know all the words to all the songs of every version of Les Miserables ( so do my family)
10 Penguins are my favourite animal
11 I converted to Catholicism  in 2013 after a trip to South Africa
12 I am an Open University Graduate 
13 I have a west Highland Terrier called Billy 
14 I was proposed to on the sea front at Skegness 
15 My favourite colour is Green 
16 I love to be by the sea 
17 My Uncle David was the drummer in the 70s Glam Rock Band Mud ( and I’m very proud of that ) 
18 I used to suck my finger
19 I had braces for 7 years from aged 14 to 21 (see 18)

20 I failed my GCSE Maths (twice...!!!) 

Saturday, 20 May 2017

Enough is Enough Mr Hunt

A letter to our Secretary of State for health
Dear Jeremy,

So I just got my wage packet for April, we got a pay rise this year an amazing 1% wow how far does that go, well let's see, my wages have increased by less than £300 a year, I have to pay more tax and NI on those wages now and the cost of inflation has gone up by 2.3% so in real terms I have just been given a pay cut, and my amazing extra wages just about pays for my pension.
When it comes to pensions that's another story, I am not going to be able to afford to retire when I am 65 probably not even when I am 75 or 85, so I will be working for a very long time yet,
Don't get me wrong, I love my job, I didn't come into nursing to be rich, that was never going to happen, but I would like to be paid for the work I do I don't expect to be a millionaire, or even to be able to buy my home, if I expected that I would have gone into politics.
I would like to be able to pay my bills, not worry about having enough in the bank at the end of the month a week before payday and having to move savings around so I don't go overdrawn. I would like to be able to actually have some savings, but never mind I am a nurse so my average wage is clearly well above that of an average person, in fact I think you believe that on average nurses earn about 28000, well I can tell you that you and all who believe this information are so far from the truth ,The starting salary for a newly qualified band 5 nurse under the 2016/17 AFC was just over £21000, in order to earn 28000 they will need to be qualified for at least 8 years and progress up the incremental scale.
I am a senior nurse, I have been qualified for 17 years and it was not till last year I hit the 28000 pay band. In real terms I should be earning at least £33000 now but I'm not, the 1% pay rise took my pay up by £280 a year.
But I am lucky, I can afford to feed and clothe myself, unlike some of my colleagues who are struggling to do this, they are using food banks and relying on extra jobs or family support just to be able to eat. In this day and age we should not have poverty on this scale. how can you expect someone to be able to carry out their job as a nurse when they are starving.
And then there are the staffing levels, that's a completely different ball game, many organisations are relying on agency staff to fill vacancies, and are covering with non registered staff, and despite their skill and determination they should not be put in this situation.

Well Jeremy this is it, enough is enough, we are not going to stand for this anymore, and this time we mean business, my Union, the biggest professional union for nurses, has made a stand, we are not going to stand back and let you tear us and our beloved NHS apart without a fight, we will make this summer one you will not forget, and if that's not enough then we will ballot for industrial action, and we already have the junior Doctors support.
We have fire in our bellies and we are ready for a fight Jeremy, we have put up with this for too long and it's time for you to start to value your NHS staff and your Nurses,
So if you are lucky enough to get back into power on June the 8th and I really hope your not, then you had better pick up your sword and shield because we will not go down without a battle.

Monday, 6 July 2015

What does being a nurse mean,

I have been a nurse for 15 years, people often ask me why I wanted to be a Nurse and they ask me what I do at work.
As my previous post stated I have always wanted to nurse, the reason is simple, it's to make a difference. This can be done in a lot of different ways but most often it's the small unnoticed actions that give the most reward to both Nurse and patient.

Let me explain, many people think that nursing is about taking temperatures, giving out medications and rushing to respond to a cardiac arrest, they think it's all blood and guts and beeping machines.

There is an element of this, in my current job, I do have emergencies and do give out medications , but this is not what gives me the most reward. Why do I do it then you may well ask, well I will tell you, I do it because I get the chance to spend time with people at their most vulnerable and they share some of their most intimate and deepest thoughts and fears, they trust me to do the right thing and they truly believe that I can help make them feel better.

All I have done is listen, given compassion and time, sometimes this can heal more than any drug.
I found this to be true very recently , I spent five days in Lourdes , volunteering as a nurse travelling with my diocese, I won't say too much here because I plan an article for the diocese news letter, but I will say this. I didn't deal with any emergencies, I gave out no medications and I didn't even take a temperature, but I probably did more Nursing in that week than I have done in a long time, I spent time with people in some of their most vulnerable times, I gave my time and my compassion and I listened. I was even rewarded by receiving some of their time and compassion in return.

So in answer to the question what does it mean to be a nurse, it is about being a human being and to remember that the most important part of being a nurse is to be prepared to give your time.....

When God Created Nurses

When the Lord made Nurses He was into his sixth day of overtime.

An angel appeared and said, "You're doing a lot of fiddling around on this one." And the Lord said, "Have you read the specs on this order? A nurse has to be able to help an injured person, breathe life into a dying person, and give comfort to a family that has lost their only child and not wrinkle their uniform. They have to be able to lift 3 times their own weight, work 12 to 16 hours straight without missing a detail, console a grieving mother as they are doing CPR on a baby they know will never breathe again. They have to be in top mental condition at all times, running on too-little sleep, black coffee and half-eaten meals. And they have to have six pairs of hands.

The angel shook her head slowly and said, "Six pairs of hands...no way!" "It's not the hands that are causing me problems," said the Lord, "It's the two pairs of eyes a nurse has to have." "That's on the standard model?" asked the angel. The Lord nodded.

"One pair that does quick glances while making note of any physical changes, And another pair of eyes that can look reassuringly at a bleeding patient and say, "You'll be all right ma'am" when they know it isn't so."

"Lord," said the angel, touching his sleeve, "rest and work on this tomorrow." "I can't," said the Lord, "I already have a model that can talk to a 250 pound grieving family member whose child has been hit by a drunk driver...who, by the way, is laying in the next room uninjured, and feed a family of five on a nurse's paycheck."

The angel circled the model of the nurse very slowly, "Can it think?" she asked. "You bet," said the Lord. "It can tell you the symptoms of 100 illnesses; recite drug calculations in its sleep; intubate, defibrillate, medicate, and continue CPR nonstop until help arrives...and still it keeps its sense of humor. This nurse also has phenomenal personal control. They can deal with a multi-victim trauma, coax a frightened elderly person to unlock their door, comfort a murder victim's family, and then read in the daily paper how nurses are insensitive and uncaring and are only doing a job." Finally, the angel bent over and ran her finger across the cheek of the nurse.

"There's a leak," she pronounced. "I told you that you were trying to put too much into this model." "That's not a leak," said the Lord, "It's a tear." "What's the tear for?" asked the angel. "It's for bottled-up emotions, for patients they've tried in vain to save, for commitment to the hope that they will make a difference in a person's chance to survive, for life." "You're a genius," said the angel.

The Lord looked somber. "I didn't put it there," He said.