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Do nurses use their wristwatch in real life nursing?Rating: (votes: 0) Do real life nurses use their watches alot for stuff like that? Thanks. For drips? Maybe in some areas where you don't use pumps? I haven't used my watch for drips in ages, but I use it to tell basic time, lol, and also for pulse/RR taking. Comment:
What would you use instead? Really - not every room has a clock on the wall in a place you can easily see it.
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Yes, every day.
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Constantly.
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I use mine every single shift I work- resp rate, apical pulse and the one I do over and over and over again- IVP meds that require slow pushes of anywhere from 1- 5 minutes (lots of iv narcotics, benadryl, phenergan, zofran, etc).
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I used my wrist watch every single day when I worked in a hospital -- as others have said, not for drip rates, since all of our IV fluids and meds were given through a pump, but for heart and breathing rates, or on the rare occasions when I pushed an IV med to make sure I was pushing it slowly enough. Every room had a clock with a second hand, but you couldn't always position yourself to see the clock and the patient too. It was debilitating on those rare days when I forgot to put on my watch before I left home.On some units you won't be allowed to wear a watch though. I did my nursing school preceptorship in NICU, and there, for infection control reasons, you're not allowed to wear anything below the elbow -- the NICU had even more clocks on the wall than most other units though, so usually you could position yourself to see the clock when necessary.
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Quote from northmississippiIn class so far, we have used a watch for vitals and IV drip per minute counting.Do real life nurses use their watches alot for stuff like that? Thanks.
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Before it died, yes, I used it every day. I still think it's more convenient to have a wrist-watch for such things as not all rooms have clocks and not all rooms with clocks have functioning clocks. We do have timers on our thermometers and on our monitors ["case" time which we use primarily to time seizures] but I prefer a watch.
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I use my watch every day. Mostly for resps or AP. I also refer to it when I'd like to know the time.
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Whenever you administer digoxin, their pulse is checked prior to giving the drug. Many people are on digoxin where I work. Yes, every day.
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This helps me pick out the watch I want to buy for nursing, its a citizen bm8180 and it had big dail with numbers, a red minute hand, and 24 time as well. A fellow student nurse showed me his and its perfect for nursing. Citizen Eco-Drive Mens Railroad Approved Watch - White Dial - Stainless Steel BM8180-54A if you want to see it. It's a "railroad watch" also.
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All the time: for respiration rates, heart rates, meds that need to be pushed slow, and documenting times.
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