Guest guest Posted February 21, 2004 Report Share Posted February 21, 2004 Ann, you have a lot of great med-surg experience that will come in very handy. I worked ortho-neuro ICU before I switched to OB. Find yourself a great OB resource book (I like Oxhorn's Human Labor and Birth..it was my bible,) and just be receptive to learning and have fun. ARe you starting in L & D or postpartum? Laurie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2004 Report Share Posted February 21, 2004 Laurie, Thank you for your rapid reply! I didn't expect to see anything for a couple of days. I will be starting in L & D. I will definitely get a good resource book. Thank you for giving me the name of the book that you use/used. I am sure I will be on this site quite often. I just hope I don't ask you all too many questions! Thanks, Ann Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2004 Report Share Posted February 21, 2004 >I have been told that OB is very >difficult to learn and that >it will take a great deal of time >to become comfortable Labor and delivery seems to be something that people love or hate. I think part of it is that you never know what is going to happen next. Some people are more comfortable with this than others. I have also heard people say they want to work L & D because it is a "happy place". It is not always a happy place, it fact it is often downright sad. Then of course, you always have at least two patients to care for, one of which you can't see and have to depend on your fingertips and your interpretation of chicken scratch on a machine print-out to determine the well being of the unseen patient. You are responsible for the brain cells of at least three people all the time (the mom, the baby, and yours). Multiply that by 2-3 patients per nurse, sometimes add a doctor, or multiple gestations and that is your basic patient load. If your hospital has a high percentage of patients getting epidurals, you also have to be strong. At our hospital the vast majority of our patients are essentially paraplegics due to epidural use. At a moments notice, you may have to flip that 350 pound woman all over the bed and then unhook everything and push mom, bed, and IV at a dead run to the OR for an emergency C/S (hopefully there are about 4-5 other people helping you by the time the dead run part comes.) Then there's the docs, but I'm sure those are basically the same as in other fields. Oh yes, throw in the politics of medical care, both national and those of your local hospital, and that is basically what labor and delivery is. All that said, I can't imagine doing anything else. I think I was born to care for laboring patients. In fact, my "specialty" is perinatal loss (talk about a glutton for punishment). Labor and delivery involves any emotion you can think of. You become a part of the intimate history of a family. Sometimes that history is sweet, tender, and lovely. Sometimes it is very ugly (and the ugly is not always the "dead baby" part). One of the most touching, loving, and peaceful "passings" I ever witnessed was the death of a baby with a lethal anomaly who was surrounded by the love of his family. He was tenderly held, kissed and passed from the arms of one family member to another, until he eventually passed into the arms of God. It is a roller coaster ride. Some people love it, some people hate it, and there is usually no middle ground. All I can say is give it a try, you just may be one of those roller coaster people. Good Luck, Deb "The fingerprint of God is often a paw print." Chernak McElroy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2004 Report Share Posted February 22, 2004 -Hi I'm new to this group. I found it while setting up a yahoogroup for staff communication for our L & D. Which by the way works great! I have been an L & D nurse at a large hospital for 15 years and I just wanted to add to Deb's acurate take on L & D. I have only worked at the one hospital and would like to hear if everyone have similar situations. 1)Give yourself time! When I first started someone told me not to give up until about a year went by. Then if I still couldn't do it maybe it was time to move on. Don't be hard on yourself it takes about that much time. 2)Always ask questions! If your L & D is like ours we don't like people coming in thinking they have all the answers. But we do have respect for someone who will say I need help! We have a great gang with lots of experience and we still rely on each other! 3)Don't be meek or wear you feelings on your sleeve.I think most L & D nurses have pretty strong out spoken personalities.We have to get things done fast and we don't beat around the bush. We talk straight and it comes across as being hard sometimes. I hope you enjoy L & D it is hard but very rewarding. At our hospital most of us have been there a long time! We work hard together and trust each other!In an emergency we get things done with a minimum of time and fuss. We fight and we make up! It's like a wonderful group of sisters! Have fun in your new job! -- In OBnurses , " Deb " <mahjafo@c...> wrote: > >I have been told that OB is very >difficult to learn and that > >it will take a great deal of time >to become comfortable > > Labor and delivery seems to be something that people love or hate. I think part of it is that you never know what is going to happen next. Some people are more comfortable with this than others. I have also heard people say they want to work L & D because it is a " happy place " . It is not always a happy place, it fact it is often downright sad. Then of course, you always have at least two patients to care for, one of which you can't see and have to depend on your fingertips and your interpretation of chicken scratch on a machine print-out to determine the well being of the unseen patient. You are responsible for the brain cells of at least three people all the time (the mom, the baby, and yours). Multiply that by 2-3 patients per nurse, sometimes add a doctor, or multiple gestations and that is your basic patient load. If your hospital has a high percentage of patients getting epidurals, you also have to be strong. At our hospital the vast majority of our patients are essentially paraplegics due to epidural use. At a moments notice, you may have to flip that 350 pound woman all over the bed and then unhook everything and push mom, bed, and IV at a dead run to the OR for an emergency C/S (hopefully there are about 4-5 other people helping you by the time the dead run part comes.) > Then there's the docs, but I'm sure those are basically the same as in other fields. Oh yes, throw in the politics of medical care, both national and those of your local hospital, and that is basically what labor and delivery is. > All that said, I can't imagine doing anything else. I think I was born to care for laboring patients. In fact, my " specialty " is perinatal loss (talk about a glutton for punishment). Labor and delivery involves any emotion you can think of. You become a part of the intimate history of a family. Sometimes that history is sweet, tender, and lovely. Sometimes it is very ugly (and the ugly is not always the " dead baby " part). One of the most touching, loving, and peaceful " passings " I ever witnessed was the death of a baby with a lethal anomaly who was surrounded by the love of his family. He was tenderly held, kissed and passed from the arms of one family member to another, until he eventually passed into the arms of God. > It is a roller coaster ride. Some people love it, some people hate it, and there is usually no middle ground. > All I can say is give it a try, you just may be one of those roller coaster people. > Good Luck, > Deb > " The fingerprint of God is often a paw print. " > Chernak McElroy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.