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For those who have been struggling with staying se For those who have been struggling with staying serious about COVID, wearing a mask, limiting gatherings, then this is for you. I’ve seen this trending, and it’s to show awareness of how COVID has affected so many people. 
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I’ve talked to lots of my coworkers, and we can all agree that it’s hard for people to believe in something unless they have been affected by it. The goal of this post is to visually represent everyone that has been affected by this virus.
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Post the hearts that relate to you:
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❤️ Lost a loved one or friend to COVID.
🧡 Know someone who has lost a loved one or friend to COVID. 
💛 Have taken care of a patient with COVID.
💚 Have personally suffered from COVID. 
💙 Have a loved one or friend who has suffered from COVID.
💜 Have been an essential worker on the frontlines of this pandemic.
🤍 Have had a loved one, friend, or personally lost a job due to COVID. 
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Here’s mine: 🧡💛💙💜🤍
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What’s yours? Comment below and share, or repost to see how your followers have been impacted too. 💕
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#frontliners #frontliners #nurseonduty #crnaschool #srna #srnalife #anesthesiaschool #nurseanesthesia #nursingschoolprobs #wearfigs #awesomehumans #frontlineheroes #frontlines #frontlineworker #essentialworker #covidicu #nursesofig #nursesareheroes
Santa Klogs are comin’ to town 🎅🏼 Comment Santa Klogs are comin’ to town 🎅🏼

Comment if you’re working > 8 hours/day?

> 3 shifts a week?

> You’ve developed back problems from working bedside?

Haven’t worn Klogs in a few years and definitely forgot how comfortable they are. Perfect for these COVID days - wipeable, anti-microbial, non-slip. These shoes are great for all of you awesome healthcare providers working long hours and need the extra arch support for better posture. @zappos offers 365-day returns on these shoes and tons of other styles too 👟👠👢

Check out my latest blog post for the full review!

#sponsored #zappos #zapposxklogs #klogsfootwear #walkwithus @zappos @klogsfootwear
💙🚨CODE BLUE 🚨💙
Do you remember your H’s & T’s?

🚨A PEA Arrest stands for Pulseless Electrical Activity. If the patient is on a monitor, you can see electrical activity on their EKG. But, if you feel for a pulse they’re pulseless. This can sometimes last a couple of minutes before they flatline. 

🚨This is really important to catch early. If I know my patient is circling the drain and I’m expecting a code... my fingers are feeling for a pulse nonstop, even if I see a normal EKG on the monitor. You want to catch them in cardiac arrest ASAP for the best outcome, and start compressions the second you lose a pulse, not wait for the monitor to show you. 

🚨Even if you’re not in the ICU with a monitor, if your patient codes it is still so important to run through possible causes of the code. These are your H’s & T’s!

🚨Codes are chaos, we all know this. It’s so easy to let the adrenaline kick in and be the first to grab the meds or start compressions. OBVI this is important but don’t get too caught up in the process that you forget to assess what caused the code in the first place. You can do compressions on an acidotic patient all night long, and they’re not gonna come back unless you treat the cause of that acidosis (push an amp of bicarb, treat the K etc). 

🚨It’s extremely important for the code team to communicate. Be the one to shout out possible causes and run through them with others. All of the interventions listed in this diagram can be life saving ✨

#acls #codeblue #icunursing #futurecrna #nursingeducation #criticalcarenurse #nursingschoolprobs #srnalife #srnaproblems #srnatocrna
HOW TO REMEMBER DRUG CLASSES BY SUFFIX 💊 ⠀⠀ HOW TO REMEMBER DRUG CLASSES BY SUFFIX 💊
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🩸Anticoagulant: -arin
ex. heparin, warfarin
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🤧Antihistamine: -ine
ex. diphenhydramine (Benadryl), loratadine (Claritin)
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🤢Antiemetic: -azine
ex. promethazine (Phenergan)
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💥Antiulcer: -tidine
ex. famotidine (Pepcid), ranitidine (Zantac)
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✖️Proton Pump Inhibitors (✖️gastric acid): -prazole
ex. lansoprozole (Prevacid), omeprazole (Prilosec)
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🦠Antiviral: -vir
ex. acyclovir
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🧫 Antibiotics:
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Aminoglycoside: -mycin
ex. vancomycin
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Fluoroquinolones: -floxaxin
ex. ciprofloxacin
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Tetracyclines: -cycline
ex. doxycycline, tetracycline
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😞Antidepressants/Anti-anxiety
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Tricyclic: -triptyline
ex. amitiptyline (Elavil)
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SSRIs: -pram/-ine
ex. citalopram (Celexa), ecitalopram (Lexapro)
 fluoxetine (Prozac), sertraline (Zoloft)
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🗃 SAVE for reference & SHARE with your friends!
Feeling very thankful this year. 🦃 ⁣ I am tha Feeling very thankful this year. 🦃
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I am thankful for all of you here. Not only for following along my crazy journey, but for all you have done this year on the frontlines. We couldn’t have gotten through this year without eachother. Through the literal sweat, blood, and so many tears that were shed from COVID-19. 
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We needed eachother this year, and I am so grateful:
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For the people who physically worked together to manually prone so many
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For the respiratory therapists working tirelessly, changing vent settings and pulling ABGs nonstop.
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For the doctors who kept up on the evolution of an ever-changing virus, to make sure care was the most up to date.
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For the students who had to keep so mentally strong to adapt to a different way of learning, and still so eager so they too, can be on the frontlines 
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For those of you who had to hold the phone bedside, as family members said goodbye to their loved one for the last time over FaceTime. 
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And then having to go home and still be a support to your families. 
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Like everyone has said, this Thanksgiving is in fact different. While lots of us get to be incredibly thankful to be alive and celebrate our blessings, there are a lot of you wondering why a loved one has been taken from you this year, and this thanksgiving is really hard. 
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If you have lost someone special this year, drop their name below, so everyone who sees this post can pause and send you lots of positive energy for your difficult holiday 💘
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I wish you all a very happy Thanksgiving. Be safe, and keep on smiling the best you can 😌🍁
HOW TO BE THAT NURSE THAT EVERYONE WANTS REPORT FR HOW TO BE THAT NURSE THAT EVERYONE WANTS REPORT FROM 📋🩺👩🏻‍⚕️
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• Be PREPARED. Don’t be that nurse that’s scrambling in a panic when you see the next shift walking in - because YOU didn’t have time management. Obvi this is putting those crazy shifts aside, but if it’s a typical patient assignment, get your shift together (see what I did there 😜).
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•Your rooms better be spotless & ready for the next nurse. This includes:
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•Grabbing supplies for the day/nightshift nurse and put them in the room. 
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•If there’s a foley empty it, chart it right at end of your shift. While you’re giving report it will start on the hour, & you can tell them whatever’s in there now is theirs to chart for this hour. 
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•Making sure their medications are available. If needing to come from pharmacy, that can take time to request & receive.
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•If they’re on a critical drip (pressors, etc) have a backup bag in the room ready to hang. You’re about to get a major eye roll if the nurse you’re giving report to walks in to start their shift, the pressor bag runs dry, patient gets hypotensive, & there’s no backup bag in the room. Just, no. 
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•If they’re on sedation and you see it running low before report, grab the extra bottle of propofol etc. Again, eye roll comin’ for ya if you’re giving report and your patient starts waking up. You interrupt report to go in the room and up your sedation. Then your sedation runs dry, so you have to go get a new bottle/syringe, double-nurse verify it like no.
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• Wiping down the counters, clean up clutter. If there’s patient-specific hygiene products in there, go grab a wash basin & organize it all in one spot. If there’s wound dressing supplies stocked in there, again, put it in a separate basin. I can’t stand lined up clutter. 
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What do you guys do to prepare your room? I ran out of space 😅
WHAT SHOULD BE HELD FOR SURGERY? 😷 ⠀⠀⠀⠀ WHAT SHOULD BE HELD FOR SURGERY? 😷
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🩸Anticoagulants
-Plavix & Coumadin d/c 5-7 days before
-Low molecular weight heparin 💉 d/c 12 hrs before
-IV heparin d/c 6 hours before
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🧄 3 G’s
-Garlic, Ginkgo, & Ginseng ⬆️ bleeding risk. D/c a week before
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🍬 Oral hypoglycemics
-All you need is a long-acting hypoglycemic to cause life-threatening hypoglycemia in the OR, which can go unrecognized under anesthesia. These patients will be managed via insulin drip to be more carefully titrated & blood sugars checked every hour. 
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💧Diuretics 
-The patient will have already been NPO for some time, we don’t want to make them even more dehydrated for possible hemodynamic instability.
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DO NOT HOLD:
🫀 Beta Blockers
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-You’re probably thinking well, I wouldn’t want to give a BB before surgery, & drop their HR/BP. But for patients on a daily BB, it is especially important for them to take their medication to prevent possible MI or even acute heart failure in the OR. Why? 
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Their body’s beta receptors are “up-regulated.” 
AKA: their body is “used to” the drug being in their system regularly. When this happens longer term, their receptors are not as... receptive? 😉 This is the reason why people have to “up their dose” when they’ve been on the same med for awhile. So if you were to abruptly stop a beta blocker.. you wouldn’t be blocking those sympathetic beta receptors. You could have a HUGE “fight or flight” response. 👎🏼 That, combined with painful surgery and a tube in your throat, puts the pt at extreme risk for heart attack. These patients were already susceptible to MI at baseline...that’s why they were on a beta blocker 😬
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💊 Patients on opioids should continue to take them. By holding them for chronic users, think about how much harder pain mgmt will be post-op. ☹️
A simple explanation of the mechanics of breathing A simple explanation of the mechanics of breathing 🌬
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In a healthy person, our drive to breathe is based off of the amount of carbon dioxide in our blood. We have these lil things called chemoreceptors that sit in the carotid artery. 
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These chemoreceptors are basically takin’ ABGs nonstop, and constantly taking those samples of blood to titrate breathing to effect. 🩸
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An increase in carbon dioxide is sensed by the chemoreceptors, and they tell the body to take a breath. Remember that taking a breath in means exhaling a breath out. That breath out is exhaling the Co2 that came from gas exchange at the alveoli (swappin’ oxygen from the air for the “waste” in our body) that was building up. 🗑
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But why is Co2 “waste” and where does that even come from? Obvi we need oxygen to live but why is that? The body uses the oxygen we breathe in to actually break down the sugar(carbs) we eat. 🍞 Say whaaaat? Ya. Breaking down that sugar = energy that we need to basically exist. So. When that sugar is broken down by oxygen, Co2 is produced. 
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High levels of this waste product leads to a million different problems as you know. Some side effects include respiratory acidosis, tachycardia, dizziness, seizures, and loss of consciousness ☠️
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Phew! Now take a deep breath and let me know if this was helpful! 😃
I was told by my clinical instructor that I wouldn I was told by my clinical instructor that I wouldn’t make it in the ICU as a new grad. 

I ended up getting hired before I graduated. I was one of 3, out of over 800 applicants. 

When I was applying to take the NCLEX, my ATT (approval to test) date was delayed due to my school submitting it late. I had landed my dream job, and I couldn’t start if I didn’t get my license in time. I emailed the assistant dean asking if there was anything I could do. She replied with, “maybe this job wasn’t meant for you.” 

Her and I had been bumping heads since I began the program. She didn’t like me. I challenged her, and I stood up to her when everyone else was too afraid to. My nursing program was one of a punitive environment - my teachers had their years of experience. Now it was our turn to be mentally broken down like they were as a new nurse. It was a breeding ground for future nurse bullies - I opposed it, and I opposed her. 

So I ended up being able to test in time (no help from her btw), I passed, and began my new grad ICU job. 

Years later, on the same unit, I saw her visiting her mom who had just had surgery. She saw me standing in the hallway. And I smiled at her, said nothing, and I walked away. 

Don’t EVER let anyone tell you that you can’t.
Never realized how Italian I was until someone rec Never realized how Italian I was until someone recorded my hand gestures 😂 teach with enthusiasm right? 🤓🇮🇹
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Sassy Anesthesia

Nursing

How to Write a Kickass Nursing Resume (for new grads)

February 10, 2017August 31, 2020

How to build a nursing resume
Wow, it’s FINALLY time for you to start applying to actual nursing jobs. The years full of early mornings, clinical write-ups, and mental breakdowns are coming to an end. Now, you need to show off all your hard work. For whatever reason, I have a weird obsession with editing resumes and resume-building. (If you’re interested in me reviewing your own resume and providing editing/feedback, check out my link at the bottom of this post!) I’ve edited a few senior nursing students’ resumes this week, and figured that now is a good time for this post, as lots of new-grad positions are opening up. For those of you who are already nurses, this post is specifically for the new grad nurse resume. Let’s get started.

  • Your header. First name, middle initial, and last name in bold.
  • Underneath, put your mailing address, city with state and zip code, and phone number.
  • Next, an objective. While this is not necessary, it does make your resume a little bit different from the others while making it personable. Put 2-3 sentences describing yourself and your skills, and finish with what your objective is. This is an example of what I put for mine:

OBJECTIVE: I am a dynamic leader and team builder, consistently motivating others. I have a unique combination of impeccable organizational, analytical, and communicative skills, in addition to a proven ability to work effectively, both independently and within a team. I am desiring a position as a new graduate RN in the ICU.

Sure, this may seem a little cocky. Doesn’t matter. Your resume is not the place to be humble. It is your chance to brag and show off. This objective clearly shows confidence while demonstrating your assets. I mean what manager wouldn’t want to talk more with someone who wrote that.

  • Below this, put your education. Clarify that you’re a current senior with your projected graduation month and year. Put the type of program you’re in (ex. BSN), and your school, the city, and state. Put your GPA. If you received any academic or sports scholarships, include that you’re a _____ scholarship recipient. If you were on the Dean’s List, put what years. If you were in a nursing honor society put that here. If you plan to graduate with Honors, put it down.
  • Certifications. Put your current certifications here. BLS/CPR. If you’re looking into a step-down unit, ICU, or emergency department, get ACLS certified your senior year. If you’re thinking about working in pediatrics, get your PALS before you apply. This is going to make you stand out against other applicants that didn’t do this. Also, if you’re in a BSN program, most programs automatically qualify you for your PHN certification post-graduation, due to your community health rotation. Under certifications, I also put: “Completed PHN Certificate requirements of 90 hours in community health nursing.”
  • Clinical Experience. This is where you list out all your clinicals: what hospital they were at, how many hours completed, what type of unit, and dates. If you completed extra clinicals/preceptorships/externships, put them here as well.

Desk with laptop

    • Leadership. Here’s another opportunity to make your resume stand out from the others. And this involves you doing more than just showing up to class and doing your homework. This is where you really need to get out there and sign up for everything possible to build your resume. For example, I was the president of our pinning committee. This shows leadership. I additionally was on the board for our student nurses association. More leadership. I mentored student nurses below me, and went to nursing student conferences out of town. It’s easy to join clubs at school. Employers want to see that you’re passionate about your interests, and these don’t even have to be nursing related. Join a political, cultural, or artistic club on campus. They want to see if you’re going to be a leader and be involved on your unit once hired.
    • Work Experience. List all your prior work experience, even if not nursing related. This shows you have work ethic and time management, if you held a job throughout nursing school.
    • Volunteer & Community Service. List these out with the location, year, and a brief description underneath each of the events. Sign up for a medical missions trip, volunteer for the homeless in your community, see if you can volunteer for some of the hospitals in your area. If you have any connections, see if you can shadow a nurse or doctor. Be a volunteer at a run that supports a good cause. See if you can participate in a flu shot clinic. Fundraise for a foundation in need. Just google search for volunteer opportunities in your area. There’s always plenty of options. You should have quite a few of these listed.
  • Professional Organizations. This is another section not everyone includes but I think is important. List out the professional organizations you belong to, or join at least one related to the specialty you want to go into. For example, I wanted to work in the ICU. So I joined the American Association of Critical Care Nurses (AACN). Each specialty has their own professional organization, AND usually has a discounted student membership price. So what does membership get you? You’ll get emails and sometimes journal articles that keep you updated on the latest nursing practice in that specialty. What does that mean to employers? This shows that you genuinely care about that specialty and are up to date with current practice. Additionally, most of the managers that will interview you probably love that organization, considering they work in the specialty that you joined. They’ll love that you both are members and can give you something to talk about. Another plus is that you can bring this up in your interview, which I’ll discuss in another post on the nursing interview. But saying you’re a member of a professional nursing organization shows your devotion to the field and an appreciation of nursing research. If you don’t know what specialty you’re going for, you can join the American Nurses Association, or another more generic organization.
  • That’s it! Your resume should be kept under two pages, and be as simple as possible. Don’t use fluff words, be straight to the point. There’s been studies that show that employers take an average of 15 seconds max to review a resume. So make yours easy to read, emphasize your successes, and participate in extracurriculars that make you stand out! The hard work that went into my resume got me interviews and a job offer at my dream hospital before I graduated, with no personal connections. It’s possible, and you can do it too.

Questions for me?  Comment below!

Want me to review and edit your own personal resume? Join CRNA Prep Academy and we can get started!

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16 Comments on How to Write a Kickass Nursing Resume (for new grads)

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16 comments on “How to Write a Kickass Nursing Resume (for new grads)”

  1. Snyra Gee Campollo
    May 2, 2019 at 6:40 pm

    Hi Marissa,
    I found your website when I was googling up how to write a nursing resume. Your posts was really helpful and I didn’t know I could add Professional Organizations that I am a member of. I have a few questions that I hope you could answer for me. My situation is a little different since I actually graduated nursing school in 2015, however, I was not able to pass my NLCEX until this year because of life in general.
    I am a little confuse of what is acceptable of how many pages is my nursing resume and if I should include a lot of the things that I was involved in college. I know I will be including a lot of the things I am currently involved in but I don’t know the cut off of what to leave and take out for my college involvement. I also have questions about references. Should I also include that as well? I do work as a caregiver now so can I include references from my clients as well as my professional reference?
    Hope my comment is not so confusing and hope that I hear from you soon. Thank you again for sharing your knowledge, your posts really helps me get started.

    Reply
    • Anonymous
      May 4, 2019 at 2:04 am

      Page-wise, I would keep it under two. I certainly think more than 1 is okay, especially if you have a lot of great stuff. I think for you, I would definitely include things from nursing school if they pertain to nursing and add value to your resume. Typically I would leave references out, since they will ask for them in a separate part of the application. Thank you for reaching out and good luck!!!

      Reply
  2. Michelle cacayuran
    November 14, 2018 at 11:09 am

    Hey Marissa!
    So my classmates and I have conflicting information on how long our resumes should be. Some say one page and some others say two. How many pages do you think would be appropriate for a nursing student with health care background? Thanks!!!

    Reply
    • lipstickandlifesaving
      November 15, 2018 at 11:51 am

      Hi Michelle! I think two is totally fine as long as the info pertains to nursing school. For example, don’t fill it with all the volunteer stuff you did in high school. Keep it to college and see where you’re at 🙂

      Reply
  3. MonicaM
    January 21, 2018 at 8:26 pm

    Would it be possible for you to show a template of a resume ?

    Reply
    • lipstickandlifesaving
      February 4, 2018 at 7:32 pm

      I’ll take a look at my nursing school resume and try and post it soon! Thanks for reading 🙂

      Reply
      • James
        August 18, 2020 at 9:59 pm

        Hi marissa! Thank you so much for this amazing post. This is so helpful! I was wondering if you could share this too, it would be a great help!

        Reply
  4. Abby
    December 25, 2017 at 8:14 pm

    Can you put the link for the PHN Certification again? I cannot find it. Great information in this as well, graduating in May and am starting the job search!

    Reply
    • lipstickandlifesaving
      December 25, 2017 at 8:47 pm

      Hi there! Here is the link I used for California. http://www.rn.ca.gov/pdfs/applicants/phn-app.pdf
      Congrats on graduating so soon! Good luck in the job search! 🙂

      Reply
  5. Hannah
    August 14, 2017 at 9:01 am

    Hey Marissa! Thanks for the helpful advice. I am a nursing student at SDSU also working at Sharp Memorial as a nursing assistant and just read your article posted on SharpNet! I was wondering if you could give me more information about how to obtain PHN certification after graduation in December or direct me to where I can find the requirements for it. Will the 90 hours of my community health course meet this?

    Reply
    • lipstickandlifesaving
      August 14, 2017 at 11:58 pm

      Hey Hannah! Thanks so much for reading! Yes, if you’re getting your BSN, the 90 hours of community does count. So once you take nclex and get your RN, you can use the form below to submit your PHN application. You’ll have to request from SDSU your official transcripts to send to the BRN, and then pay the $150 fee (tax deductible). Let me know if you have any other questions! 🙂

      Reply
  6. Youknowyoureanursingstudentif
    June 15, 2017 at 3:23 pm

    Thank you for this information. Great ideas that I will be putting into action.

    Reply
  7. berkleeleary
    February 28, 2017 at 1:40 pm

    Thanks for this post! I have a couple people who I’m going to share this with, particularly my sister who is working in the healthcare field and wants to be a PA!

    Reply
    • Marissa
      February 28, 2017 at 1:45 pm

      Thank you so so much! 🙂

      Reply
  8. Dianashealthyliving
    February 27, 2017 at 11:44 pm

    This is great advice for any profession

    Reply
    • Marissa
      February 27, 2017 at 11:45 pm

      Thank you!! 🙂

      Reply

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author

Hi, I'm Marissa.

I'm a first year SRNA. Here you can find some education & motivation, along with a touch of sass to keep you sane in a difficult but rewarding career path. Thank you for stopping by!
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For those who have been struggling with staying se For those who have been struggling with staying serious about COVID, wearing a mask, limiting gatherings, then this is for you. I’ve seen this trending, and it’s to show awareness of how COVID has affected so many people. 
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I’ve talked to lots of my coworkers, and we can all agree that it’s hard for people to believe in something unless they have been affected by it. The goal of this post is to visually represent everyone that has been affected by this virus.
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Post the hearts that relate to you:
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❤️ Lost a loved one or friend to COVID.
🧡 Know someone who has lost a loved one or friend to COVID. 
💛 Have taken care of a patient with COVID.
💚 Have personally suffered from COVID. 
💙 Have a loved one or friend who has suffered from COVID.
💜 Have been an essential worker on the frontlines of this pandemic.
🤍 Have had a loved one, friend, or personally lost a job due to COVID. 
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Here’s mine: 🧡💛💙💜🤍
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What’s yours? Comment below and share, or repost to see how your followers have been impacted too. 💕
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#frontliners #frontliners #nurseonduty #crnaschool #srna #srnalife #anesthesiaschool #nurseanesthesia #nursingschoolprobs #wearfigs #awesomehumans #frontlineheroes #frontlines #frontlineworker #essentialworker #covidicu #nursesofig #nursesareheroes
Santa Klogs are comin’ to town 🎅🏼 Comment Santa Klogs are comin’ to town 🎅🏼

Comment if you’re working > 8 hours/day?

> 3 shifts a week?

> You’ve developed back problems from working bedside?

Haven’t worn Klogs in a few years and definitely forgot how comfortable they are. Perfect for these COVID days - wipeable, anti-microbial, non-slip. These shoes are great for all of you awesome healthcare providers working long hours and need the extra arch support for better posture. @zappos offers 365-day returns on these shoes and tons of other styles too 👟👠👢

Check out my latest blog post for the full review!

#sponsored #zappos #zapposxklogs #klogsfootwear #walkwithus @zappos @klogsfootwear
💙🚨CODE BLUE 🚨💙
Do you remember your H’s & T’s?

🚨A PEA Arrest stands for Pulseless Electrical Activity. If the patient is on a monitor, you can see electrical activity on their EKG. But, if you feel for a pulse they’re pulseless. This can sometimes last a couple of minutes before they flatline. 

🚨This is really important to catch early. If I know my patient is circling the drain and I’m expecting a code... my fingers are feeling for a pulse nonstop, even if I see a normal EKG on the monitor. You want to catch them in cardiac arrest ASAP for the best outcome, and start compressions the second you lose a pulse, not wait for the monitor to show you. 

🚨Even if you’re not in the ICU with a monitor, if your patient codes it is still so important to run through possible causes of the code. These are your H’s & T’s!

🚨Codes are chaos, we all know this. It’s so easy to let the adrenaline kick in and be the first to grab the meds or start compressions. OBVI this is important but don’t get too caught up in the process that you forget to assess what caused the code in the first place. You can do compressions on an acidotic patient all night long, and they’re not gonna come back unless you treat the cause of that acidosis (push an amp of bicarb, treat the K etc). 

🚨It’s extremely important for the code team to communicate. Be the one to shout out possible causes and run through them with others. All of the interventions listed in this diagram can be life saving ✨

#acls #codeblue #icunursing #futurecrna #nursingeducation #criticalcarenurse #nursingschoolprobs #srnalife #srnaproblems #srnatocrna
HOW TO REMEMBER DRUG CLASSES BY SUFFIX 💊 ⠀⠀ HOW TO REMEMBER DRUG CLASSES BY SUFFIX 💊
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🩸Anticoagulant: -arin
ex. heparin, warfarin
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🤧Antihistamine: -ine
ex. diphenhydramine (Benadryl), loratadine (Claritin)
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🤢Antiemetic: -azine
ex. promethazine (Phenergan)
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💥Antiulcer: -tidine
ex. famotidine (Pepcid), ranitidine (Zantac)
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✖️Proton Pump Inhibitors (✖️gastric acid): -prazole
ex. lansoprozole (Prevacid), omeprazole (Prilosec)
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🦠Antiviral: -vir
ex. acyclovir
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🧫 Antibiotics:
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Aminoglycoside: -mycin
ex. vancomycin
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Fluoroquinolones: -floxaxin
ex. ciprofloxacin
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Tetracyclines: -cycline
ex. doxycycline, tetracycline
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😞Antidepressants/Anti-anxiety
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Tricyclic: -triptyline
ex. amitiptyline (Elavil)
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SSRIs: -pram/-ine
ex. citalopram (Celexa), ecitalopram (Lexapro)
 fluoxetine (Prozac), sertraline (Zoloft)
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🗃 SAVE for reference & SHARE with your friends!
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