Journal of Nursing Jocularity

Journal of Nursing Jocularity

Posts Tagged 'looking for humor'

Nurse Humor: Learning to See Funny!

A volunteer at a local hospital who sang songs and told jokes to entertain patients was leaving one day when he said to a patient, “I hope you get better.”

The patient replied, “I hope you get better too!”

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The ability to recognize humor in our surroundings makes it easier to navigate life’s many challenges. If you have diabetes, or have patients who do, you’ll find great tips on how to see the funny in your environment in What’s So Funny About Diabetes?: A Creative Approach to Coping with Your Disease

Posted in: Enjoying Humor

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Get A Life by Loretta LaRoche

Over the last thirty years, I have read hundreds of books about how to increase one’s potential through a myriad of processes. I spent six years in therapy examining my family of origin and how they might have impacted me. My intention was always to try to better myself so I could reach for the stars and “be all that I could be”.

I know many of you reading this have searched for that golden nugget of truth that could have the answer to your “stuckness”. Haven’t we been told by every major “self-help” guru that we have the capabilities to do ANYTHING we put our mind to?

I’m sure I’ve stood on the platform of good intentions trying to hawk a plethora of ways that could get you out of your rut and onto bigger and better things. Well, age and particularly maturity, have brought me to a certain consensus.

I don’t think that all of us are capable of doing everything we set our minds to.

In fact, I have come to the conclusion that it is a relief to know we can’t. I have the kind of personality that loves to get into something and become really good at it. Combine that with some of the “you can do it” mentality and you have a disaster in the waiting!

I started playing racquetball ten years ago and thought that in a short amount of time I would be able to ace the coach. After all, you just write a couple of affirmations, visualize yourself on the court, and bingo you’re a champ!

Oh, I practiced too.

But I was completely deluded! Anyone who is really good at anything not only has to put the time in, but they should also have some common sense about how they go about it.

Unfortunately magazines and television shows are always showcasing products and individuals that are supposed to bring you to extreme states. “Become the person you always dreamed you could be”! we hear over and over. How about “Just be okay”?

It is possible to live life joyfully and delightfully without having to do an Ironman triathlon, scale Mount Everest on your day off, or hang from the ceiling so you’ll be a few inches taller?

Believe me, I’m not trying to convince you to stop dreaming, seeking, or following your passions. The human condition thrives on hope. But hope never fails us, and hope is always possible. It is the tender side of striving to excess.

Emily Dickinson said it best,” Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul, and sings the tune, without the words, and never stops at all.”

Loretta LaRoche writes the Get A Life Column for the Patriot Ledger.

Posted in: Get A Life

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Images of the Perfect Nurse by Tammy Pursley, RN

nurse-and-child I started out like the others.  I entered nursing school with bright eyes and high ideals, naive to the ways of the real world of nursing.  I knew I was going to be different.  I would do all my charting immediately after giving care.  My patients would be turned every two hours, on the dot.  My meds would be given exactly on time.  I would be the perfect nurse.

Well, I’ve been a nurse for over two years, and the honeymoon is over.  In my disenchantment phase, I believed that the perfect nurse existed only in the minds of humorless, dictatorial nursing school instructors.

Of course, that is not true.  Because eveyone has a definition of the “perfect nurse”.  It just means different things to different people.  For example: (more…)

Posted in: Classic JNJ, Uncategorized

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The Very, Very Important Papers by Sam E. Yearn

I was cleaning the nurse’s break room one morning, but let’s be clear about this, it is not part of my job (Housekeepers Manual, Chapter 4 …. Section 2 … Paragraph 3 … sub section 6 (a) … part 3.456 … 3rd Edition). It was about 20 minutes after change of shift report and nursing staff had left for their bedside assignments. Each morning the oncoming shift receives report from the night shift’s BIC (Bi-otch-In-Charge). The room is typically left messy but today it was a disaster area I couldn’t ignore. (Do nurses live like this at home????) (more…)

Posted in: Enjoying Humor, PRN: Funny Stories, Uncategorized

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Health-Care-Associated Confusion by Bina Simon, RN

I don’t think I like this business of changing the name “nosocomial’ to “health-care-associated.” Yes, I get the point: to also include all health care settings, and not just hospitals, under one heading. But see, first of all, this new name is in plain old, you know, English! Health care consumers can even understand the term, which is supposedly the exact opposite goal of medical lingo. And worst of all doesn’t the term say outright, in that plain old understandable English, that basically we health care providers messed up?

You never hear patients, including your Aunt Helen whose gall bladder was removed last January, talking about their ‘nosocomial infections.’ They may know they ‘got an infection in the hospital,’ and maybe even realize it’s sort of related to the hospitalization itself. But that’s it. ‘Nosocomial infection’ is—oops I mean WAS– a term kind of shrouded in mystery. Thank goodness for that.

But now? Good grief! It’s like we’re announcing that it’s our fault!! “Health-care- associated- pneumonia?” We may as well wear t-shirts proclaiming “I am carrying germs right into your lungs.” It’s telling the entire mankind that we, members of the most highly thought of and trusted professions in the world (at least until now), are the cause of these bugs.

I can already see the guy with the stuffy nose in bed 3052– who really only came in with intractable back pain but now has this uncomfortable nasal congestion that we all get every allergy season, now telling all his friends and neighbors and maybe even his lawyer that he has a “health-care-associated pneumonia.”

Boy am I glad I have my own malpractice insurance. I suggest you get your own.

Granted, I may have once or twice been the source of a nosocomial– I mean healthcare associated- infection or two myself. I really never told this to anyone before, but once we’re announcing this health-care- associated pneumonia bit, I may as well be the first to give my confession: I definitely recall only scrubbing my hands vigorously for only 14.2 seconds instead of JCAHO- required 15 in between taking the BP of the guy in E.D. Room 3 (c/o sprained arm r/o fx) and checking on the lady in bed 8 (c/o cephalgia).

Who’s next? Come on, it’s coming out in the open anyway. Let’s all let our hair down. (Although loose and/or long hair breeds germs and should really be kept short or pulled back away from the face.)

And now that the world will be hearing that “health-care-associated” infection bit, you can imagine what will be going on in hospitals health-care-associated sites now. Patients will be suspiciously studying every single health-care-associated staff member. Not just the nurses and MDs and CNA’s but now every housekeeper and mop, every dietary worker bringing trays and clearing them off, maybe even the volunteers bringing their mail. Can’t you see these patients tucking details in their heads as they mentally note, “Thaaaaaat’s what’s causing all this ‘health-care-associated pneumonia’ I hear about. That volunteer just delivered my get-well card–without gloves!!”

Actually, once we’re embarrassing ourselves and being completely honest with this confessional new term, let’s go all the way. That physician who doesn’t wash his hands between one patient and another– and you find it unsurprising that his patients get MRSA more than the rest of the unit….well, we could name the infection “Dr X- acquired MRSA,” but there’s always that libel and defamation of character suit. (Which is probably not covered under your malpractice insurance policy.) How about ‘poor-handwashing-technique-acquired infection?’

How about some other stuff we see– will they be named things like “Poor-suture-technique associated wound dehiscence?”

And what about us? How about ‘insufficient-betadine–pre-Foley-insertion -associated UTI?’ ‘Faulty -IV-technique-associated phlebitis?’ And something a few of my own patients might have suffered during my first six months out of nursing school: ‘Poor- injection -technique-associated ecchymosis?’

Then again, maybe it wasn’t my fault. Some of them- especially those geriatric ones- were really “insufficient -subcutaneous- tissue- associated ecchymosis.” That’s better. See, it’s not always the fault of the health-care- associated-providers, is it?

And waittttttttttttt a minute. Now that I think about it, lots of conditions are not our fault. Why do we have to be honest about our health care flaws, but the patients don’t have to be? Why can’t we ALL be honest here? Patients included?

For example, I think it’s time for a NEW classification of MIs. ‘STEMI,’ ‘Non Q,’ ‘Subendo,’ ‘anterior wall,’ blah blah– outdated. Let’s go for it: The guys who sit home for 3 days not believing it’s an MI: Denial-associated MI. The chain-smoker who eats at McDonald’s every day for lunch after breakfast at Burger King– is Unhealthy-lifestyle-acquired MI. And the poor folks who really take care of themselves but have MIs mostly because of family history: “No- fair- it’s- only-DNA-associated MI.” Insurance companies could have a FIELD day with this.

OK well, um,………So maybe this idea is NOT a good thing. Well, then….. how about making up a NEW term that would include all health-care-associated-settings, without publicly humiliating ourselves? Let’s think. Um, well….. maybe some acronym or something? Oh hey, I’ve got it! How about “NOSOCOMIAL?”

Now they’ll all be happy at JCAHO (Just Clean All HOspitals), and HCFA (Hospitals Cause Fevers and Ailments). Oops my mistake– I think the idea was the CDC ‘s(Caregivers Don’t Contaminate). Of course we still get to keep that nice mysterious hard-to-understand-and-even-spell ‘nosocomial’ term, and no one will know what it stands for, except us. You know, the guilty parties. Nurses/Nursing homes, Offices/Outpatient Settings, Other Caregivers Or MDs Infecting ALL.’ See, that’s more all-encompassing.

Posted in: Enjoying Humor, PRN: Funny Stories

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