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IV starts in nursing school

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When you were in nursing school and you were taught IV insertion, were you allowed to start them on each other? In our nursing program, it was absolutely forbidden . . . something to do with liability and blood exposure.

IMHO, we would be better prepared to start IV's on patients if we were allowed to practice on each other because the plastic arm sucks!! Plus, you would learn firsthand that IV insertion can hurt!
We are not taught IV starts at all

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uh no. We had to learn, yes. But I was not about to allow someone to start an IV in me for practice. I know how much it hurts, no matter how good the nurse is at starting IVs.We didn't learni n school but were taught in the hospital where we ended up working. We had - and this was almost 30 years ago - very realistic models on which to practice and we weren't allowed to do it on a patient for the first time until we had it down pat on the model.

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We were required to start one on each other before practicing on patients.

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Quote from TerpGal02We are not taught IV starts at all

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We had to take a CEU course and had to have 5 sticks on live people "classmates" before we were considerd "certified".. I took it while in nursing school so it helped... although I did not have a single start in clinical in my first year... I am thinking I will get some in the next batch of clinicals once they start for my RN-BSN portion.

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Quote from clemmm78uh no. We had to learn, yes. But I was not about to allow someone to start an IV in me for practice. I know how much it hurts, no matter how good the nurse is at starting IVs.We didn't learni n school but were taught in the hospital where we ended up working. We had - and this was almost 30 years ago - very realistic models on which to practice and we weren't allowed to do it on a patient for the first time until we had it down pat on the model.

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We learned to start IV's in LPN school and had to start one on another student.

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No IVs in nursing school because of insurance and state practice regulations. We give a course using an artificial arm then the novice needs to be observed X5. Do not let your peers practice on you! I discourage you from letting your peers practice on you. A puncture site leaves you open to infection. Follow your institutions policy.

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We started IV's on each other. Each student was (and still is as I understand) required to sign a waiver before the "event".

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When we've had a new grad RN in the unit, I've often volunteered my arm for them to practice an IV start (note, I said, arm . . . no back of hand, please . . . not for a newbie). However, some of the recent new grads have been . . . how do I say it . . . "sub-optimal" . . . they were unsuccessful and my veins are visible and well-anchored, I'm getting more hesitant about volunteering . . .

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We didn't practice on eachother. I've had plenty of IV's and have been an awful stick....I didn't need the experience of a classmate jabbing me over and over again to know it's painful. We learned on the fancy bleeding arm, and then started them on patients during clinical.

Comment:
Quote from TerpGal02We are not taught IV starts at all
Author: jone  3-06-2015, 16:58   Views: 826   
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