I was just wondering what exactly MICU is....I am an LVN student right now. I will definately go on to get my RN. I've heard that ICU is a great place not only to work but to learn as well..
Just a couple thoughts on ICU vs. "floor" nursing.
1. Thoroughness with the pt. in caring, charting, reporting, and all around knowledge of the pt and their condition
2. More monitors and frequent monitoring. Different equipment and set up. All equipment is readily available in the room.
3. Interdisciplinary teams at your disposal.
4. Medical ICU takes overflow of CICU, SICU, CVICU. Train wrecks include bed 1 with COPD exacerbation and DKA and bed 2 with gunshot wounds with every hocus-pocus med drip available to keep him alive. And oh yeah, there is someone outside the hospital to visit him and finish him off.
5. ICU RN to leave the unit to attend to a code on the medical-surgical floors; but usually for no more than 30 minutes
6. Nursing diagnosis are actually used
I was just wondering what exactly MICU is....I am an LVN student right now. I will definately go on to get my RN. I've heard that ICU is a great place not only to work but to learn as well..
Ashley
How now, Cow?! I give ya credit for the ICU bit. I work LTC, and try to spend time with every resident...or at least the ones who are pretty decent. We have one or two (maybe three) who are NOT happy campers....
"Cat"
I admire those that do Floor Nursing with how well they manage their time with patient assignments up & down the hall. I've done the Tele Flr, OR, and ICU. This past summer I did an intense 14 week critical care nursing course via the Army Medical Department at Madigan Army Medical Center. Now, my military nursing specialty designation is critical care nursing and I would have it no other way.
Cary James Barrett, RN, BSN
Hey Moo,
I think the list you made when you did your ICU observation is very accurate in summary form. I'd like to elaborate a little on the nurse's role especially when it comes to the patient assessment. In order to utilize those component parts well ie; monitors, interdisciplinary team players, etc., the nurse's assessment must always be constant. It is our job to catch those subtle changes and react to them in order to ensure the patient is progressing toward wellness. This is where those protocols streamline the proceess and the ICU nurse is in the middle orchestrating the process. I think this dovetails into your question about nurse/patient ratio. Generally the ICU ratio is 1:2 but realistically should reflect acuity and not census. I've taken 3 and even 4 patients in the unit but these are patients whose acuity has been downgraded to tele or floor status and are awaiting transfer. At other times, I've had a single patient who's a cardiac trainwreck on IABP, drips, ventilator and waiting for or is just out of a CABG. To summarize my own position while concurring, I think, with your hypothesis, I would be hard pressed to work the floor again because it really isn't my kind of nursing that happens out there. I believe it is assembly line "cursory" care; vitals, meds, printed education material, bye. I've worked the floor and it was like that or worse. In the unit, it can be crazy there too, but it's more gratifying than the floors-for me, anyway. Keep up the search.
R