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Am I expecting to much from my nurse??Rating: (votes: 0) ![]() ![]() Sounds like a long day. If this is really the way it is........I would say it is an unrealistic expectation to expect anyone to care for 12 people alone. I am of the belief it is everyone's responsibility to answer call lights.......that's just how I roll. NO one is too high or to low on the totem pole to answer call lights....it's everyones responsibility to assist the patient to meet their needs. Comment:
It all depends on how many patients the nurses have. If you have the unreasonable number of 12, I can only imagine that the nurses have a hard to manage load as well.
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The nurses have the same number of patients.
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Wow, that sounds pretty rough! Are the nurses also running around as much as you are? I'm sure they have a lot to do in the morning before lunch too, prep patients for surgery, admissions, assessments, charting, med pass. It can get pretty hectic for them as well.With that said, I think it is pretty ridiculous that they can't bring the patient ice water/coffee or whatever or even help toilet a patient on their way in to the room. It is everyone's job to help answer call lights, not just the aides. I think it is ridiculous when a patient asks for a nurse to do something "that can be done by the aide", for example get them ice water, and the nurse spends 10 minutes looking for the aide to let them know; all they had to do is get it themselves and it would have taken 1 minute! I help my aide clean all my complete care patients at night; but then agian, day shift is a whole nother beast compared to nights. I get my patients whatever they ask for when they want it; the aides sometimes get so busy. The only time I don't help right away is if I am super swamped with my own tasks or have something else that is a much higher priority to go check on. Maybe the nurses you work with are extremely busy...or extremely lazy.
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Quote from wishinguponastarCNAThe nurses have the same number of patients.
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I agree with the above post, that it is everyones job to answers the call lights, but if you have 12 patients how many do the nurses have?I work in a SNF and the aides have 9-12 residents with a lot of hoyers and they are heavy assingments, however the nurses have 30 patients to take care of. Before I became a nurse and was a CNA, I thought too the nurses should help out more, but as nurses there is so much you have to do. I would look into your states BON to see if what the staffing ratios are, and start asking for more aides on the floor. Bring it up as a saftey issue. If there were more aides on the floor then there may be less falls.
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Quote from TeleMeMoreWow, that sounds pretty rough! Are the nurses also running around as much as you are? I'm sure they have a lot to do in the morning before lunch too, prep patients for surgery, admissions, assessments, charting, med pass. It can get pretty hectic for them as well.With that said, I think it is pretty ridiculous that they can't bring the patient ice water/coffee or whatever or even help toilet a patient on their way in to the room. It is everyone's job to help answer call lights, not just the aides. I think it is ridiculous when a patient asks for a nurse to do something "that can be done by the aide", for example get them ice water, and the nurse spends 10 minutes looking for the aide to let them know; all they had to do is get it themselves and it would have taken 1 minute! I help my aide clean all my complete care patients at night; but then agian, day shift is a whole nother beast compared to nights. I get my patients whatever they ask for when they want it; the aides sometimes get so busy. The only time I don't help right away is if I am super swamped with my own tasks or have something else that is a much higher priority to go check on. Maybe the nurses you work with are extremely busy...or extremely lazy.
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No, It is not too much to ask. We are all in this together, or are supposed to be anyway. I don't know the answer to how to get people to help. It isn't any wonder why people get so burned out.
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Where do YOU work? 5-star? I thought I was at a n excellent place as well..until I worked there for awhile....substandard care and people showing up just to get paid. Whatever happened to this "caring" profession....Caring?
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Quote from wishinguponastarCNAWe don't prep for surgery, the patients we get have already have surgery and they now require rehab to recover from the surgery. I also forgot to mention admissions and discharges in my list of duties! lol. As well as charting.As a nursing student about to graduate I completely understand that nurses have a lot to do such as treatments, orders, med pass, ect. But as you mentioned I really feel that the nurses are taking advantage of the CNA's. I work in an excellent facility, 5 star for sure! And the aides truely work their tails off, all shifts. The nurses work hard too, but you always see nurses sitting or standing around talking before you see aides doing it at our place. If I don't have any support from the UM, do I just have to suck it up??
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the bottom line is, your expectations are a moot point, if policy isn't changed and/or enforced.duties and expectations will have to be clearly delineated, in order to get all on the same page.and unless the don is willing to hire more aides, change policy, or support you, it seems there is little that can be done.the workload sounds unrealistic, but without knowing exactly what the nurses are doing/not doing, i cannot accurately comment if your expectations are too much.leslie
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Nurses where you work have 12 patients? And they have any kind of time to stand around and chat? The most I've ever had at one time was 8 for a whole shift and I was nonstop running room to room giving meds, documenting, doing wound care and loads of other tasks without even taking my lunch or sitting down. There was no time to chat about anything not work related. Typically I have had 6-7 patients and the Nurse Assistants would have 8-12. I always helped my aides when they needed me, and often they didn't have to ask. I knew who my heavy/needy patients were and I would offer to join the aides when they were going to see them or I would just show up when they were in those rooms. TEAMWORK is the only way to get the job done safely and right. Those patients are my responsibility as the RN and I want them to be comfortable and well cared for.
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