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I worked as a nurse in a nursing home before

Posted By: Wannie on 2006-03-09
In Reply to: How Can you Ask this? - Yak-Yak

getting into transcription. I do not ever remember a case where medications were placed on the MAR (medication administration record) based on a transcribed report. Ours were based on handwritten orders from the transferring facility. There were times when phone calls had to be made in order to clarify or get an order for a correct dosage based on the handwritten orders. EVERYONE involved in patient care has to strive for excellence, from the doctor to the nursing assistant.


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same way in nursing - men in nursing make more on average than women in nursing and quickly
move into management. Just what we needed.
Working 11-7 shift as LPN in nursing home.
Would not want to go back there!!!!!!
My sister transcribes for a nursing home with about 5 doctors.
nm
Led Zeppelin is so old they're ready for a nursing home. And the grocery stores
s
my take is that she worked inhouse, not at home, and now wants to find out how to work at home. nm
x
I got up early, worked during naps, and worked when DH got home.

You have to be disciplined to make yourself work when baby is napping instead of maybe watching TV or doing housework, etc.   


I might also go the route of having a teen come into your home, or either trying a mother's morning out program at a local church/daycare.   I've been home since my youngest was born and he has never been in all-day daycare, but I did have him in a mother's morning out program 15 hours a week at a local church.   It didn't help a lot with my work schedule because I had an older son in school and was a room mom and tutored other kids, but that might be an option.  The only problem with the mother's morning out program is they are around other kids and tend to pick up every germ.  I finally took my DS out of the program because he stayed sick.  You were supposed to keep them off if they had green nasal discharge and I did, but no one else did.  Every time I got him well after 2 to 3 days back he would be sick again.  Other than that it was very good for him because he would not have had a chance to be around kids his age otherwise. 


Gack! Is nursing your idea or his? Nursing is highly demanding and long hours.

I'd check with a college counselor/advisor on programs they have for women over 30 to return to academia and enter new careers.  Then I'd ask to take some career tests to see what your interests are and what you'd be be suited for.  Also, there is scholarship money available for women over 30.  Ask about it.  


Since I've already raised my kids, I'd also like to state that jr. high and high school are the years our kids need us at home the most.  Those are the years they can get into the most trouble if left to themselves.  If he's already 9, why not just enter college part-time to finish in about 6 to 7 years?  But definitely go talk to a college counselor.


My mom worked outside of the home
because she had to. She raised 4 of us on her own with no help at all. I grew up just fine and learned a great set of values that people seem to lack in these times. My kids are being brought up the same too. You can be a working mother and still be a good mother. There are plenty of people who do it and do it well. The problem is when the mom does not participate at all in that child's life or doesn't have a dad who does either, especially when the kids are being given everything handed to them and not given any structure.
You must not have worked outside your home, ever
because you would not have to ask a question like this. If you worked in an office, do you think you would be allowed to have all these outside interruptions. No, not at all. No family, pets, hubby, etc., etc. It is a wonderful thing to be able to work from home and you should work, not do other things that are not part of your job description. I know lots of us work on production and we should not take advantage of a very good thing. Be a responsible worker. When I work I take the time only for a drink of water or a bathroom break, nothing else. I do no housework, no cooking, no playing with the animals because I take my work seriously.
My DH worked from home for about 2 years

I felt like a hermit when he went back to a conventional office job! 


I take it your husband isn't working at the present time?  Did I understand you correctly?  How the heck are you getting bills paid? My DH makes 3 times what I do so I couldn't imagine living on just my pay as an MT.  Just curious!


My EX worked for 10 weeks from home.....
the summer BEFORE I kicked him out.  Why you ask?  Because he was LIVING with a woman he met the previous time he was sent to that location.  I could never get him on the phone and he said it was because he was working nights and had the phone unplugged.  I eventually smelled the GIGANTIC rat and called him onto the carpet.  He eventually confessed.  Saying that he's worried about you driving is a handy little excuse, but I wouldn't necessarily buy it.
worked in a funeral home
I used to be a secretary in a funeral home and this is not uncommon at all.  Its been years ago, but I think a family would contact the funeral home and the funeral home would then get in touch with the cemetery and make the necessary arrangements with them.  I think as far as costs go it was just the opening and closing of the plot.  Like I said it has been well over 10 years that I worked there, but call the funeral home and they should be able to take it from there.  Hope this helped.
before I worked at home and for services

and when you physically *see* 3-year-old kids with leukemia or others kinds of cancer, it can very well break your heart but you see  how brave they are....in dealing with their illnesses.  I couldn't take it after about 5-6 years in both radiation oncology and then surgical oncology....


and started working for MT service right after my stint and then from home.  I absolutely love transcribing oncology even though it's sad, it is not as sad as physically seeing the patients in person.....


JMHO.....


 


When I worked at home for a hospital
I had all of the benefits, but the hospital I worked at did not go by production.  They just basically paid per hour.  They did not expect a certain amount of work be done in a certain amount of time.  I had access to the software the hospital used.  This probably won't help you, but it has only been 2 years since I left the hospital.  I make way more with my own accounts.  If the benefits you are seeking have to do with retirement, then you may be better off setting up your own retirement account because if you are older, you will need to be vested before you even begin to think about a pension. 
I've worked in-house and at home ....
I find that even when you're in-house, with the nature of the job, there's no time for chit-chat.  When I worked in-house we had production minimums and there was incentive to earn if you produced, so who has time to talk?  I'm with you.  I'm happy being here in my comfy clothing without all that aggravation.  Let is snow, I don't have to drive in it!
That's exactly the reason I worked at home for 15 years.
Very annoying and petty.
I worked for a hospital at home for 4 years. sm
We had to work set hours. My advice is allow youself 1/2 hour for lunch, and at least two 15-minute break periods. Work 2 hours, take a break, work 2 hours, take a lunch break, etc. Otherwise, you may find yourself having back, shoulder and hand problems. Working 9 hours may seem like a drag, but not being able to work at all is even worse. Remember, if you were working on site, you would not only have to work 8-1/2 hours, but would have travel time on top of it. Just my experience.
I worked at home for the local hospital here.
It was fine. They paid hourly and provided equipment. We had plenty of work and had to stick to a set schedule. They do use a service or two for overflow, but it is strictly overflow. The hospital still has employees working at home. They don't ALL outsource. (And ironically, some hospitals are taking back their transcription and hiring in-house and at-home MTs!)
My kids were out of control before daycare, when they were home with me while I worked all day.
Are you against school too?  I guess you are going to homeschool...... 
I worked at Home Depot awhile back
for 3 years in the paint department. I have done them all and also taught the classes on Sundays. You might want to call your local Home Depot and ask when they have their paint classes. Lots of information, and they should let you try out the techniques as well.
I've worked at home for years and mothered sm
4 babies during that time. Buy a battery-operated swing and put it right beside your desk. I breastfed all of mine, too. They would swing and sleep, then when they woke up I'd take a break and nurse and then put the baby back in the swing. Get one that reclines and the baby will be very comfortable. That battery-operated swing allowed me to continue working. It was worth every penny I paid for it, and then some! Good luck and enjoy your little sweetie. She will grow up much too fast.
I surely lost out on that, worked from home for a hospital
for 2+ years and required to come in house for meetings and never, never paid for my gas nor my time down and just asked to make it up. After that we got outsourced to a company and guess what again? Meetings at their place and again no pay!! I bet others who see this probably have had the same thing happen to them. Your place exceptional.
And I disagree with that. I've worked home and in-house,
Everyone is different and some people don't rely on jobs to provide social interaction. When it comes to my job, I prefer being at home working independently without a lot of interruptions and enjoy the freedom of working from home. If I were stuck in an office with rigid hours, then I'd be resentful. Personally, I loathe being stuck in an office full of catty backstabbers and love the solitude of home. When I want to socialize, I call one of my friends.

You also have to be able to let QA remarks roll off your back a little, but that only works if you don't have the threat of being docked or terminated as a result of those QA remarks. Find an MTSO that doesn't hold those things over your head (yes, they do exist).

I do think the key IS where you work, but not home versus office - it's finding a company that values MTs, not sees them as mere production machines. They are few and far between, but they're out there. I lived through my share of bad apples in this biz before finding the good ones, so I speak from experience.
Actually, I was never a nurse.

However, I was a certified lifeguard (among other things) before I got into MT.  I do well enough at it that I quit my fulltime federal job to stay home with my kids.  They fly around the house while I type.


<img src=http://www.mopspace.com/flying%20monkey.jpg">


I was a nurse and became an MT...
without attending a formal MT school, however, I  had a mentor who was a small MTSO.  She gave me the tapes (the 80s) and I muddled my way through it.   But it was not office notes, it was hospital work.  Big big difference.  And, it took me 2 yrs to be up to snuff with all the accents, dictation styles, and vast range of hospital reports.  It was by no means a "snap." 
Does this look like Ask-A-Nurse? These are MTs here, and
lots of them aren't even good at that, let alone doing triage over the Internet for your son.
I have a nurse
that says "just put" before every sentence...I've considered typing "just put" LOL.

I also have another doctor that says "At the present time" every other sentence.

Oh and then there is one that likes to be cute and say 78-year-young patient

but the most annoying thing to me of all are the doctors that dictate half a report and then start over at some random spot for absolutely no reason but say everything differently so you have to retype the whole freaking report!

If they could hear the garbage we make into nice pretty finished documents they would definitely pay more! I guarantee they don't ever listen back and see what they are saying!

Oh one more...

the doc i'm typing right now leaves words out. "Attempted (to) contact Dr. SoandSo (he) could not (be) reached."

*sigh*
how old is too old to become a nurse...sm
I have been contemplating my life and was thinking about going back to school to become a nurse, but I will be 48 this year and I was wondering at what point a person is getting too old to go into nursing due to the physical strains.  Just curious. 
Nurse....
In my bio class (prereq for nursing) there is a woman who is 50. I don't think you're ever too old. Another thing, not all nursing jobs are physically demanding. It just depends on where you choose work.
why not ask a nurse or two?
x
Registered Nurse or registered nurse
I think I am just tired.  The patient is a Registered Nurse.  Should that be capitalized?
School nurse
I was really stupid about them.  My child was complaining that something was in his head, and I actually took him to school nurse, she said he did not have them.  By the time I actually caught on, we had a terrible infestation, and I have been obsessed with them ever since.  Even going to the beauty shop, the hairdresser will pick up the same hairbrush she has used on everyone and use it on you.  I am hypersensitive to them after the infestation we had.  Probably not smart to treat beforehand, but gosh, we had a horrible time several years back, you could not even find that stuff (Nix) in the stores, they were sold out.
I did MT before becoming a nurse, return afterwards. sm
Hated nursing. It wasn't all that I thought it would be. I found I could make more being an MT and with a heckuva lot less stress and backbreaking labor.
First you think we're Ask-A-Nurse...
then you blame some of those who actually did try to help you. Hello? What an idiot. Truly.
With the help from a mother who is a nurse. nm
x
If MT got me 50k, I wouldn't need to be a nurse. lol sm
But I am about a quarter away from an AAS in HIM but am dropping and moving to nursing. I'll have to do all the science prereqs, which are the hardest, so it will still take me about 3 years too for a 4-yr degree.
CNA is not a nurse and should in no shape or

form be performing anything other than assisting patient with ADLS, doing vitals, etc.   I can't believe a reputable medical facility would allow her to perform such duties without proper education/certification and this needs to be brought to the attention of management.   If indeed this is true she is a major liability.  If the facility accepts Medicaid/Medicare they would lose their license, not to mention possible lawsuits. 


 


Oh and by the way, being a nurse in no way qualifies you to be and MT. SM
That was my point.
Nurse practitioner

Does anyone have a good website to find Nurse Practitioner addresses?


TIA


Stacy


Work as a nurse? Ugh, ugh, UGH! sm
You have to really be a "people person" to want to be a nurse, wipe old people's butts and clean bedpans and patient vomit. (AND have to deal with the doctors in PERSON.) I give total credit to anyone in that profession, but it's just not for me. And still, school-wise, there is a lot of remedial math, science and biology I'd have to take before I'd ever even be considered for nursing school. I guess that's the price I pay for being an English/Art major. I had MANY office jobs, plus a small business of my own, before I ever even went to night school to learn MT. I got so tired of dealing with callous, power-hungry management people, back-stabbing co-workers, reviews, meetings, politics, dress requirements, pantyhose, unmanageable hair, you-name-it. Working with words and voice-recordings was my cup of tea, and back in "The Day", we were valued (as human beings, not just extensions of machinery) by our employers. Sometimes "progress" isn't as good a thing over the long haul as it looks initially.
That is when you either call for a nurse to come in and
help explain, ask for another physician, or leave. There is no reason for a physician to be working in the U.S. and not be able to understand the citizens that he is trying to help. In that situation the manager or someone would be notified, whether I decided to stick around.
nurse anestis
Anyone know what a "nurse anestis" is?  Not sure that is the correct spelling . . . thanks!
Nurse anesthesiologist is
The one that stays with the patient's once the anesthesiologist puts them under..They for the most part monitor and advise if there is a problem...
My husband had a nurse tell him

she tips her hat to his wife doing MT.  She could not do it.  She thought she could, but when she sat down, she gave up in about 5 minutes.  She stated that she didn't know how I understood what the doctors are saying; they talk so fast.  Yes, we are highly underpaid for the skill set we have as MTs.  I also had a physician tell his resident students that he was mentoring that they should transcribe for about a year before they have finished medical school and they might just learn something.  LOL


I didn't go to school to be an MT. I was, however, a nurse before
turning transcriptionist. I got my first transcription job because I did know the terminology and could pass the typing test. Synthroid can be transcribed in mg form as long as the dosage is typed correctly (0.025 or whatever the dosage might be). If I am typing a verbatim report, that is how I type it, verbatim within the realm of the BOS. If the doctor decides to swap from system to system in a physical exam, then I type it as he dictates and if there is some major problem that makes absolutely no sense I do send it to QA. After all, that is what verbatim means. Transcribe exactly as dictated. I do agree that an education is wonderful. However, the job can be done and done well, I might add, if you have some form of medical background and take the time to learn to do the job correctly. Sorry for my rant, too. Also a sore subject with me.
Nurse, get that doctor a scooter! Right away!
nm
The older men want either someone to support them or a nurse or
z
Hmm. Every doc, nurse, attorney, accountant
I know is making WAY good money and none are working at McD's!!! LOL


Agree with this! Only become a nurse if YOU want to do it. It's a tough job. nm
s
Funny guy....scary nurse...nm
nm
In a dictation, the nurse overheard
the doc dictating and asked why he was talking so fast, that she was right there and couldn't understand him.  His reply, "They like it when you talk fast!"  Where in the world did he get that idea?!