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Hey girl, I have an opportunity to be a case manager for hospice patients but I am terrified i will not be able to control my emotional . How do you deal with the death of your patients?
@@KhidrAlexandria Hey! Congratulations! In hospice, you definitely need to have tough skin. I have had personal experience with family death and hospice. I’ve learned to deal with death because I came to understand that dying is part of life. After having multiple patients pass, I gain a sense of fulfillment knowing I was able to provide care to my patient and family at such an important transition in life.
Nursing is “fake it until you make it”. Especially if you choose to be always learning & trying new specialties. I applaud you being young & being an RN. It’s a job I couldn’t have done in my 20s. (I became an RN at 39)
Thank you so much for sharing your experience! I am a recent new grad and considering a hospice RN case manager position, which is a role my nursing school does not cover and prepare students for. I appreciate how honest, thorough, and caring you are speaking about hospice! Your video gave me helpful insight and slowly preparing myself, if I take on the role ☺️
So happy and proud of you!! I’ve been following you for a while and am so excited for you dude!! Woo woo 🙌🏼 I’m in my first term of Nursing Core at WCU and love it!!
I currently work in the icu and i took an interest in hospice after seeing a lot of dnr patients and all the withdrawals we need to do! I applied for a hospice position inpatient and I wasn’t sure if that was also “similar” to case management? My end goal is to work as a case manager! Thank you for your video
During my first month in the ICU we managed 2 withdrawals of care. It was life changing for me. I can see it's had a profound impact on you as well. Nursing is an amazing career field. Thanks for sharing your perspective.
Hey I graduate in May with my ADN and really want to get into hospice work. I am planning to start med surg to get experience. Or should it be ok just to start directly in hospice?
Hey! It depends on what you prefer! Hospice is a speciality and everything you do in hospice is the opposite of med surg. Hospice focuses on the decline on patient versus med surg focuses on the improvement of your patient. If you reallly want to do hospice, I’d say go straight for hospice! If you’re unsure, try med surg first and maybe do per diem for hospice
I was a case management/admissions nurse when I was an LPN…I didn’t like it …. especially as a salaried position, I was expected to be there for hours after my shift was supposed to end. Let’s keep it real… the morphine isn’t really making them comfortable.
Wow, thank you for sharing your experience as a case manager, definitely an important role ! I feel hospice is a comfortable way of explaining and treatment process for patients & family who are passing. In reality, many don’t know the actual focus hospice can bring to those who are close to dying. Question.. how did you learn the medical terminology 🥲🥲🥲. I am struggling doing this online class
If you guys enjoy these kinds of videos, don't forget to give it a thumbs up and don't forget to subscribe so you don't miss any new videos! Thank you guys for watching!
Hey girl, I have an opportunity to be a case manager for hospice patients but I am terrified i will not be able to control my emotional . How do you deal with the death of your patients?
@@KhidrAlexandria Hey! Congratulations! In hospice, you definitely need to have tough skin. I have had personal experience with family death and hospice. I’ve learned to deal with death because I came to understand that dying is part of life. After having multiple patients pass, I gain a sense of fulfillment knowing I was able to provide care to my patient and family at such an important transition in life.
Nursing is “fake it until you make it”. Especially if you choose to be always learning & trying new specialties. I applaud you being young & being an RN. It’s a job I couldn’t have done in my 20s. (I became an RN at 39)
Thank you so much for sharing your experience! I am a recent new grad and considering a hospice RN case manager position, which is a role my nursing school does not cover and prepare students for. I appreciate how honest, thorough, and caring you are speaking about hospice! Your video gave me helpful insight and slowly preparing myself, if I take on the role ☺️
I'm so glad to have across your channel. I am a new grad and will be going in to Hospice nursing.
So happy and proud of you!! I’ve been following you for a while and am so excited for you dude!! Woo woo 🙌🏼 I’m in my first term of Nursing Core at WCU and love it!!
Omggg thank you!! Yay! So happy you’re enjoying it. It’ll go by so fast!
I love you SO much. You have no idea how big of a help you are. Bless your heart sis💓
Did you get certified? How did you find a case manager job without a lot of experience? Thanks
Your transparency 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
I currently work in the icu and i took an interest in hospice after seeing a lot of dnr patients and all the withdrawals we need to do! I applied for a hospice position inpatient and I wasn’t sure if that was also “similar” to case management? My end goal is to work as a case manager! Thank you for your video
My last nursing role was RNCM - Hospice ❤️ You go!, Girl!
During my first month in the ICU we managed 2 withdrawals of care. It was life changing for me. I can see it's had a profound impact on you as well. Nursing is an amazing career field. Thanks for sharing your perspective.
Definitely life changing when facing it first hand for the first time.
Hey I graduate in May with my ADN and really want to get into hospice work. I am planning to start med surg to get experience. Or should it be ok just to start directly in hospice?
Hey! It depends on what you prefer! Hospice is a speciality and everything you do in hospice is the opposite of med surg. Hospice focuses on the decline on patient versus med surg focuses on the improvement of your patient. If you reallly want to do hospice, I’d say go straight for hospice! If you’re unsure, try med surg first and maybe do per diem for hospice
I was a case management/admissions nurse when I was an LPN…I didn’t like it …. especially as a salaried position, I was expected to be there for hours after my shift was supposed to end. Let’s keep it real… the morphine isn’t really making them comfortable.
Thank you so much with the morphine explanation and what Is happening on a patho level in end of life stages.
Wow, thank you for sharing your experience as a case manager, definitely an important role ! I feel hospice is a comfortable way of explaining and treatment process for patients & family who are passing. In reality, many don’t know the actual focus hospice can bring to those who are close to dying.
Question.. how did you learn the medical terminology 🥲🥲🥲. I am struggling doing this online class
Do you ever take your shoes off as a case manager?When going to peoples homes
Can you please share how you do your assessment?
You got this!
thank you!
😔
anyone who says hospice is killing the patient, i just wanna talk