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You are here: Home / Archives for Health Fitness and Beauty / Nursing

Retirement communities and coping with loneliness as one ages

August 9, 2007 by Tricia

Do you ever think about what might happen to you as you age? No, I don’t mean wrinkles, achy joints and so on. I mean, do you wonder if you’ll be able to continue living on your own in a house, apartment or condo or do you wonder if you’ll end up in a nursing home?

As a nurse, the prospect of ending up in a nursing home is not appealing. Yes there are good ones out there, but my feeling is if I can’t really move around – even in a wheelchair or something – then I really don’t want to be in the position of having others care for me.

I guess it’s because I know the level of care involved for a person that’s bed ridden, and how in some places that care is not quite up to par.

Now, retirement communities are a different story. If I was able to move about, cook for myself and I was generally enjoying life living in a retirement community might not be all that bad.

Many retirement communities are set up so that people are living in apartment or townhouse like dwellings – similar to if they were living on their own. The only major difference is that everyone who’s living in the retirement community is around the same age as you are, and there might be on site nursing care or a doctor that comes around once a week or once a month to check on the residents.

A nurse might even come in daily to help with taking medications and so on, but otherwise the residents live on their own.

Many retirement communities are also set up with a pool and perhaps a communal area where crafts or other community related activities take place so that residents can socialize with one another. I think that’s great since loneliness is often the number one complaint of the elderly. You’d think it would be declining health but it’s loneliness.

I’m actually not surprised at that fact. As I watched my parents age they were saddened as they lost friends they’d grown up with and known most of their lives, lost their own parents and siblings, and eventually when my mother lost my father there was no denying that loneliness was going to be a huge factor that we, as her children, would have to combat.

I’m all for those who are growing older or who are elderly living on their own if they are able to cope or living with relatives, but if they don’t have enough people in their lives to keep them from falling into depression due to loneliness or if their loved ones aren’t able to visit as often as necessary to be sure that the person is coping I think the next best thing is a retirement community.

What do you think?





Filed Under: Family, Health Fitness and Beauty, Home and Lifestyle, Nursing Tagged With: aging, caregivers, children, coping, coping on own, crohns, doctor, elderly, friends, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, home, house, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, living on own, loneliness, medication, mother, nurse, Nursing, nursing homes, pain, retirement communities, retirement community, retirement homes

Just thinking about the pain docs I used to work for …

June 12, 2007 by Tricia

When I first started my nursing career I worked with a number of doctors and nurses in a pain clinic. We did nerve block treatments locally and under general anesthesia to relieve peoples chronic pain. It really worked for some of the patients, while for others it only worked until the numbing medications that we used wore off.

Anyway … we had a very strange assortment of doctors. Most were anesthesiologists and had worked in major hospitals in the past but for some reason they now worked in this pain clinic for the most part on a full time basis. I always wondered why there were there since at the time, and I guess currently, we had a major shortage of anesthesiologists in the hospitals.

I often wondered if they’d done something wrong in the hospitals where they had worked before and got fired? Well, I didn’t wonder if that were true for all of them, but some … yeah .. they didn’t really even belong in the pain clinic.

I got thinking about these doctors because I saw this online ad for Dr. Larry Shapiro. It’s for hair transplants in Florida. One of the doctors I worked with was a Dr. Shapiro but as far as I know he never did hair transplants! However, the founder and owner of the clinic did do hair transplants for some time. Can you see how I ended up thinking about the doctors I used to work with at the clinic?

I wonder what happened to them?

I worked there for almost 10 years and I loved my job but it was a horrible place to work. The manager was a true bitch. She took turns picking on different nurses each day of the week. I’m sure it made her day if she could make us cry. Yeah that’s how bad she was. So I don’t have fond memories of the place, even though I really really liked my job.

Did you ever work in a place where one person caused you and perhaps several of your co-workers grief every day?

Filed Under: Chronic Pain, Health Fitness and Beauty, Nursing Tagged With: anesthetists, career, Chronic Pain, crohns, doctor, florida, general, hair transplants, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hospital, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, medication, nurse, Nursing, online, online ad, pain, pain clinic, shapiro, strange

Chris fell down and went boom

May 31, 2007 by Tricia

I’m usually the one in this household that has weird accidents.

Remember last March when I fell flat on my face and tore open my chin right to the bone and wrenched my jaw, or last July when I tripped on a weird curb and tore a ligament in my knee?

This morning Chris was leaving for work and he was fixing his lunch bag as he got to the end of our walkway. At the same time a female jogger was going by and she was looking at her runners watch to see what her pulse was and how many kilometers she’d run.

Well, as you can imagine, the jogger crashed into Chris as he turned from our walkway onto the sidewalk and he fell to the ground. On the way down his right shin hit the short wrought iron fencing that we have around our garden bed that is beside the walkway. The pointy top of the wrought iron fence, a Fleur de Lis, poked into the middle of his shin.

He apparently had a good dent and tear in his leg as a result! I was still in bed at the time and didn’t see the damage.

The jogger stopped and was quite apologetic for knocking him over. She said to him “You’d better go to the hospital!”, and Chris showed her his employee I.D. that was hanging from his neck and said “Well, I was on my way.”.

Chris came back in the house and cleaned up his wound, and then hobbled off to the hospital which is luckily only a few blocks from our home. Instead of reporting to the O.R. Recovery area where he works he went into the Emergency department and got stitches.

He’s been told to stay off work today and tomorrow. The ER doc that cared for him knows him quite well, and knows Chris is a hard worker who’s always on his feet. So he enforced the two days off rule with a note for the occupational health department.

Since he hit his leg hard and the wound was deep I wouldn’t be surprised if he ends up with a bruised shin bone as well as bruised tissue around the wound. So I’m back to being a nurse today, reminding him to elevate his leg and giving him ice-packs to put on his boo-boo.

I just hope that no one else has fallen into the our wrought iron fence in the past. We aren’t aware of anyone hurting themselves in front of our house. Perhaps we should re-think our choice in garden bed fencing and get something with a smoother top edge.

Filed Under: Health Fitness and Beauty, Home and Lifestyle, Life with Chris, Nursing Tagged With: accident, bumped into by jogger, chin, crohns, damaged shin, dented shin, elevate leg, Emergency, emergency department, employee, ER, face, fall, Fleur de Lis, garden bed, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hospital, house, hurting, IBD, icepack, in bed, Inflammatory bowel disease, injured, injury, jaw, jogger, nurse, Nursing, off work, pain, shin, stitches, two days off, walkway

Air ambulances services – fly your loved one home

May 18, 2007 by Tricia

As a nurse I know a lot about the health care field and the various services that are available to people through hospitals, medical clinics and the many services that are offered to those who are sick at home or who become sick while on vacation in another country.

Are you aware that air ambulance services exist? I don’t mean emergency rescue air ambulances – such as ones used to transport a car accident victim to a trauma hospital a few miles away from the source of the accident. No, I mean air ambulances that, for example, can transport a person who’s fallen ill in another Country or in another State, back to their city for medical care close to their families.

Just like keeping emergency phone numbers by the phone, you should bookmark the Airambulance.net website. You never know when you might need their services! In fact, the airambulance.net website is the central hub of information about air ambulance services in the United States.

Earlier I discussed that one might need this kind of service if they were on vacation and fell seriously ill in a place far from home – the other side of the Country or even in another Country. Air Ambulance services are used quite often to transport people out of Countries or from one area of the Country or State to another for all kinds of reasons.

If you lived in a remote area that didn’t have specialized medical services and you needed to go to a hospital in another part of the State or Country for treatments or for an operation that could save your life you would probably end up using an Air Ambulance service to get you there.

I know several nurses and paramedics that have worked for a variety of Air Ambulance services. These medical professionals are often the top in their field – extremely knowledgeable about emergency medical treatments, and highly professional as they deliver these services to those who are sick and seriously ill.

Air Ambulance services specialize in transporting patients who need basic to critical care on board air ambulances with state of the art medical equipment. Each aircraft used for the Air Ambulance service has life support equipment on board. As well as highly trained flight nurses and flight paramedics.

Filed Under: Health Fitness and Beauty, Nursing, Services Tagged With: air ambulance, Arizona, basic care, california, charter, company, critical care, crohns, domestic, Emergency, flight, flight nurse, flight paramedic, florida, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hospital, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, international, life support equipment, medical, medical equipment, medical services, New York, nurse, pain, paramedic, serious illness, service, Services, special medical treatment, texas, trained staff

Chris was noticed by hospital bigwigs

May 17, 2007 by Tricia

Chris had a long long day at work yesterday. He didn’t sleep well that night, and then he got up early for his 7:30 a.m. shift at the hospital. He was only supposed to work until 3:30 p.m., but one of the guys that he works with put his back out early in the morning and Chris ended up working twice as hard through the day, and worked until 7:30 p.m. to cover part of the other guys shift as well.

Needless to say he was pretty tired when he got home last night. He’d been supposed to work another 7:30 a.m. shift this morning, but since he’d put in such long hours yesterday he was told that he could come in sometime around 9 a.m. instead. He works in the OR recovery room and I guess they didn’t expect their first patient to arrive until about 8:30 a.m. so that worked out great for Chris. Of course, since he was so tired from his almost sleepless night the night before and his long work hours he slept very well last night. Hopefully he doesn’t have to work overtime today too.

The only problem was that he thought it was Friday when he got up this morning. Don’t you just hate that when you get confused about what day it is?

As Chris was leaving for work this morning he told me that he was the topic of discussion at a big hospital meeting earlier in the week. Apparently many of the doctors – heads of departments, as well as Nursing department heads and other people high in management had a meeting. I don’t know what the meeting was about, but Chris was told by his manager and some other nurses that had attended the meeting that he was discussed for about 20 minutes!

Apparently they were discussing how good he is with patients and how he can easily build a rapport with patients and their friends and relatives, setting them at ease easily. Maybe they are going to use the “Chris Model” to inspire other hospital employees to be more compassionate towards patients and visitors?

I’m so proud of him! His kind nature has always stood out to people, but now it seems that he might be getting some official recognition for it.

Chris and I are a lot alike in that we are both really nice people. Yeah, I know you’ll just have to take my word for it that I am a kind person. LOL I haven’t been able to work in the ER for close to a year and a half due to my illness, but I too always stood out and got some recognition for my kindness to patients, families and co-workers too.

We’re hoping to attend the Blog World Expo, and P0stieCon convention in Las Vegas in November. If any of you are attending, or live in the Las Vegas area maybe we’ll get to meet you. If we do meet you’ll be able to judge for yourselves if Chris and I really are as nice as I say we are. LOL

Filed Under: Employment, Health Fitness and Beauty, Home and Lifestyle, Life with Chris, Nursing Tagged With: blog, Blog World expo, blogging convention, Chris, compasionate, crohns, doctor, employee, ER, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hospital, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, kind person, long hours, nature, no sleep, nurse, Nursing, pain, recognized, work overtime

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