experience –
Is it safe?Rating: (votes: 0) I just want to be safe in practice and it is clear at my job that I am the ONLY one who cares if I am safe. You would have to check policy, but I don't think is is the best idea for a pregnant nurse to take care of chemo patients, however it might depend on when the dose was given, etc. At our hospital we had to be chemo certified to work with those patients, so I never ran into that issue with my pregnancy. I would perhaps talk to the manager of your oncology units and find out for sure. Comment:
Wow, on my ward we don't even assign patients on cytotoxic precautions d/t an oral methotrexate dose within 2 weeks ago to a pregnant nurse! Granted, we don't usually have more than one or two such patients at a time, and we don't do IV chemo at all, but still. I wouldn't be happy about it.
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Why don't you ask your OB? Seems like the best course of action. If he/she tells you no, then ask for a doctor's note and carry it with you at all times.
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Nurses can be pregnant without knowing it. That is why universal precautions are so important.
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We don't have our pregnant nurses give chemo, but they can take care of patients who have gotten it as long they are gowned and double gloved when handling body fluids. We wouldn't give them a patient who wasn't able to control their body fluids.
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