D
Dorin76
Guest
And replace a patients pacemaker? Forget every thing you thought you fear, everything you thought you knew. As your patient insisted you be in Operating room with his doctor, because, as he said, ”This man is a student. He will have to learn this. I want him in the OR to at least observe, but trust you to have him assist where he can help, at your discretion doctor. I trust him!”
Next thing you know, you are in surgical scrubs, doing your best to help the man with his chest open on operating table, while his beating heart is right there, and he trust you as his Student Nurse, with his life. And fear just goes. And you just do what you have been training for, reading off 8 different video monitor, his Heart Rate, Blood Pressure, Pulse Oximetery O2 saturation levels, EKG anomalies/changes in QRS electrical output of Sinoatrial node while assisting the doctor with what ever he asks of you to do.
The Ventricular node was successfully repaired and your patient no longer has Ventricular tachycardia and dysrhythmia. His heartbeat has been restored to normal, and you help prepare to suture him back up.
It does not get any more real than that.
Every stupid thing you ever did, accident you had, event in me life, some good, some bad, brought me to this point am at now. No regrets. I would not change a thing if I could, because it could mean I be in some other time line doing something completely different, and there is no place I rather be than here.
Next thing you know, you are in surgical scrubs, doing your best to help the man with his chest open on operating table, while his beating heart is right there, and he trust you as his Student Nurse, with his life. And fear just goes. And you just do what you have been training for, reading off 8 different video monitor, his Heart Rate, Blood Pressure, Pulse Oximetery O2 saturation levels, EKG anomalies/changes in QRS electrical output of Sinoatrial node while assisting the doctor with what ever he asks of you to do.
The Ventricular node was successfully repaired and your patient no longer has Ventricular tachycardia and dysrhythmia. His heartbeat has been restored to normal, and you help prepare to suture him back up.
It does not get any more real than that.
Every stupid thing you ever did, accident you had, event in me life, some good, some bad, brought me to this point am at now. No regrets. I would not change a thing if I could, because it could mean I be in some other time line doing something completely different, and there is no place I rather be than here.