www.OTconnections.org
It's the new social networking site put together by AOTA! It's open to the public, although if you are an AOTA member, you can use your existing login! It took me a few days to explore but I'm very impressed, and it already has quite a few people signed up! It has message boards, blogs, galleries, groups, and more, all for OT-related things. I just finished reading a post by Molly, one of the editors of OT Practice, entitled "Houston, We Have No Problem", which made me laugh, regarding the upcoming AOTA conference. Seems like it will be a great site to keep on top of OT life, and I highly recommend anybody that is interested in OT, go join and check it out! :)
This blog chronicles my OT journey starting from 2006 in the beginning of OT school, through 9 months of fieldwork, to my first year as an OT working in rural Deep South in physical dysfunction, to my transition into an elementary school system district in California. I'm in my third year now and learning new things every day. My mind is constantly blown by the amazingness of OT!
Monday, November 24, 2008
La la la la
ok...I'm down to fourteen OT-related mails and I've only got a few left from October. That leaves a bunch of blogging + a ton of Facebooking left to do plus of course the last fourteen, but still...doing way better.
Today was a quiet day at work which is good since I didn't get a lot of sleep. I have quite a few "poo" stories to share from colostomy bags to fecal tubes, plus dealing with mental illness, stuff like that. But most importantly I want to talk about OTCONNECTIONS!!!!!!!!!!! Dum dum DUMMMMMMMMmm
Today was a quiet day at work which is good since I didn't get a lot of sleep. I have quite a few "poo" stories to share from colostomy bags to fecal tubes, plus dealing with mental illness, stuff like that. But most importantly I want to talk about OTCONNECTIONS!!!!!!!!!!! Dum dum DUMMMMMMMMmm
"OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY NAMED ONE OF NATION’S 150 BEST RECESSION-PROOF JOBS"
http://www.aota.org/News/Media/PR/2008Releases/OT_RecessionProof.aspx
AWESOME reasons to go into OT, beyond all the cool "helping people" part of it....recession-proof, best-paying, fastest-growing jobs....
This news release went out a while ago, I'm a little slow, but hey, the information is TIMELESS! OT is not hurting the way many other fields are right now in this economic downturn!
AWESOME reasons to go into OT, beyond all the cool "helping people" part of it....recession-proof, best-paying, fastest-growing jobs....
This news release went out a while ago, I'm a little slow, but hey, the information is TIMELESS! OT is not hurting the way many other fields are right now in this economic downturn!
funeral home
During an evaluation with an older lady who had a hip fracture:
Me: So ma'am, when you leave the hospital, where do you want to go next?
Her:Well a funeral home I imagine ::laughs::
Me: So ma'am, when you leave the hospital, where do you want to go next?
Her:Well a funeral home I imagine ::laughs::
Neuro-IFRAH
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=7enq0BnmCKHDchW_2fqJxrVQ_3d_3d
This is a very very brief/easy survey just asking about use of Neuro-IFRAH in your setting. My OT classmate Allison will be doing an in-service on it. Please take a minute to fill it out!
Thank you!
This is a very very brief/easy survey just asking about use of Neuro-IFRAH in your setting. My OT classmate Allison will be doing an in-service on it. Please take a minute to fill it out!
Thank you!
Thursday, November 20, 2008
End of week 8
OTCONNECTIONS..........post coming soon
Post also coming on day at rehab hospital.
For now, sleep.
Post also coming on day at rehab hospital.
For now, sleep.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Stick a fork in this blog, it's done for the night
K...38 emails related to OT to deal with still, but am slowly catching up!! Of course I need to catch up on reading OT blogs too, and all my OT Practice and AJOTs too! I'm behind on LIFE, OT and otherwise!!! Right now I'm reading the book Suite Francaise and I watched two episodes of Desperate Housewives tonight so when I say I'm behind on life it's pretty self-inflicted, but come on, ya gotta have your leisure (which in my opinion means doing stuff that has absolutely no productive value) to have your balance of occupations....
It's almost 1am so I guess I'm going to go to sleep now. Tomorrow should be a relatively normal and slowish day - a few knee patients, a few deconditioned and stroke patients, a co-tx or two....let's see how it goes! I'm going to try and go to the gym afterwards too since I slacked off big time today.
Thursday I will be taking a fieldtrip to the next-door inpt rehab hospital and spending the entire day there :) Should be cool to see how pts I remember from acute care, are doing, now that they are improving in a rehab hospital!
The grammar in this entire post is atrocious. I apologize. Well not really. Kinda.
It's almost 1am so I guess I'm going to go to sleep now. Tomorrow should be a relatively normal and slowish day - a few knee patients, a few deconditioned and stroke patients, a co-tx or two....let's see how it goes! I'm going to try and go to the gym afterwards too since I slacked off big time today.
Thursday I will be taking a fieldtrip to the next-door inpt rehab hospital and spending the entire day there :) Should be cool to see how pts I remember from acute care, are doing, now that they are improving in a rehab hospital!
The grammar in this entire post is atrocious. I apologize. Well not really. Kinda.
Questions, comments, etc...
So I'm finally finally going through my e-mail, and I have a lot of comments and/or emails from prospective students, current students, OTRs, COTAs, etc...I have taken away fully identifying information but am otherwise just copy/pasting some of them. For multiple reasons, including that I'm hoping some of y'all have advice for some of these people, and to show the diversity of people who e-mail/comment, and to encourage others to start their own blogs, because people really do seem to (usually) appreciate it and it's always fun to get "fan mail" so to speak lol. I haven't responded individually to any of the below comments/emails yet. To those that were comments and didn't leave identifying information - thanks for your kind words. Those of you who e-mailed, I'll be responding shortly.
Molly says:
Hi there. I'm a fellow MOT student at XX College in YY State. I stumbled upon your blog, which inspired me to create my own. I don't want to jump on your ideas...I just thought what you put up was so great. I gave you some recognition on my blog - http://otmama.blogspot.com/ - you can check out my homage to you! Anyway, thanks for the inspiration. I really enjoy your site!
=============
MTWBULGARIA says: It's been a long time since I was a student. It is good to see the freshness of your perspective. I've been practicing for 12 years and I'm learning to use the internet to enhance my practice and build a network. I'm and OT preparing to use my skills as a missionary. Some think it's great and some don't like the mix. Whatever your opinion, I invite you to checkout my blog: mtwbulgaria.blogspot.com
====
Pam says:I am an OT student still finishing school here in "STATE". I am in the process of learning how to do the initial evaluation including the scapular assessment (for neuro patients) as well as getting practice with transfers and facilitating anterior and posterior tilt of the pelvis. This stuff is kind of freaking me out because I don't think I am good at it at all. I am sure that in your situation you will be fine because you will have people to show you, as you are STILL a student and learning. Anyway, good luck and if u have any tips for me let me know. Thanks.
==========
John says:
Im a first year OT student and have noticed a complete lack of marketing in OT as well as a lack of student understanding about OT in school. So I am interested in starting a blog and making videos about OT for my school etc. I just wanted to know how the blogs were working for you and if you had any helpful hints about where or how to set up a blog at a good site. Also if you had any helpful info about getting out info on OT and things of that nature.
ps. i read a good amount of your blog and i think it seems great. Especially for new and future ot students!
==========
Amy says:
Hey! This is really weird since I don't know you, but I found your blog from a google search and since you put your email address on there, I thought I'd email you with my big question. I am trying to find out how much science/anatomy I will need to know to be an OT. I am taking the prerequisite Anatomy and Physiology II right now and I am kind of freaking out. I can do fine in the class, but I don't really learn anything. Science just isn't my thing. So I am worried that OT might be too much science for me. What do you think? To actually practice, do you need to know all this stuff?
Thanks so much!!!! And sorry for the random email from a random person!
=====
Jeffrey says:
I came across your blog a while back when researching OT programs. I am applying for admission for Fall 2009 and am completely overwhelmed by the massive amount of information available on the web. I was wondering if you have any advice about how to organize this information and find out what I truly need to know about the differences between various programs. I am also wondering if you could provide insight about how competitive programs actually are. I never really thought about competitiveness until an individual in one of my classes asked me. I told her that I would find out (because she is thinking about applying for OT), but nobody else that I have asked seems to know. I appreciate your help! Keep blogging!
=====================
Annie says
Hey Karen! Annie (from STATE) here! Just want to say that I got my OT practice today and was so excited to see your article in there! I'm so proud of you! I am still reading your blog constantly, and thank you!
============
kk says:
Well, I love your blog. I've been a COTA for five years, I just returned to school this fall to pursue my Masters in OT. I ran across the blog one day when I was trying to convince myself that this was the right thing to do. If (when) I make it to OT school, I may take a page from your book - er - blog - and keep an online memoir myself.
Thanks for making us smile! You'll be a great OT.
================
Teresa says: I got my OT Practice and saw your article and thought to myself "Yaaay!". I am a first semester OT grad student at the University of XXXXX. I check in with your blog from time to time. Helps me see the light at the end of the tunnel and also reminds me that I'm not going crazy with my own OT thoughts. Thanks much for sharing your experience!
=======
Molly says:
Hi there. I'm a fellow MOT student at XX College in YY State. I stumbled upon your blog, which inspired me to create my own. I don't want to jump on your ideas...I just thought what you put up was so great. I gave you some recognition on my blog - http://otmama.blogspot.com/ - you can check out my homage to you! Anyway, thanks for the inspiration. I really enjoy your site!
=============
MTWBULGARIA says: It's been a long time since I was a student. It is good to see the freshness of your perspective. I've been practicing for 12 years and I'm learning to use the internet to enhance my practice and build a network. I'm and OT preparing to use my skills as a missionary. Some think it's great and some don't like the mix. Whatever your opinion, I invite you to checkout my blog: mtwbulgaria.blogspot.com
====
Pam says:I am an OT student still finishing school here in "STATE". I am in the process of learning how to do the initial evaluation including the scapular assessment (for neuro patients) as well as getting practice with transfers and facilitating anterior and posterior tilt of the pelvis. This stuff is kind of freaking me out because I don't think I am good at it at all. I am sure that in your situation you will be fine because you will have people to show you, as you are STILL a student and learning. Anyway, good luck and if u have any tips for me let me know. Thanks.
==========
John says:
Im a first year OT student and have noticed a complete lack of marketing in OT as well as a lack of student understanding about OT in school. So I am interested in starting a blog and making videos about OT for my school etc. I just wanted to know how the blogs were working for you and if you had any helpful hints about where or how to set up a blog at a good site. Also if you had any helpful info about getting out info on OT and things of that nature.
ps. i read a good amount of your blog and i think it seems great. Especially for new and future ot students!
==========
Amy says:
Hey! This is really weird since I don't know you, but I found your blog from a google search and since you put your email address on there, I thought I'd email you with my big question. I am trying to find out how much science/anatomy I will need to know to be an OT. I am taking the prerequisite Anatomy and Physiology II right now and I am kind of freaking out. I can do fine in the class, but I don't really learn anything. Science just isn't my thing. So I am worried that OT might be too much science for me. What do you think? To actually practice, do you need to know all this stuff?
Thanks so much!!!! And sorry for the random email from a random person!
=====
Jeffrey says:
I came across your blog a while back when researching OT programs. I am applying for admission for Fall 2009 and am completely overwhelmed by the massive amount of information available on the web. I was wondering if you have any advice about how to organize this information and find out what I truly need to know about the differences between various programs. I am also wondering if you could provide insight about how competitive programs actually are. I never really thought about competitiveness until an individual in one of my classes asked me. I told her that I would find out (because she is thinking about applying for OT), but nobody else that I have asked seems to know. I appreciate your help! Keep blogging!
=====================
Annie says
Hey Karen! Annie (from STATE) here! Just want to say that I got my OT practice today and was so excited to see your article in there! I'm so proud of you! I am still reading your blog constantly, and thank you!
============
kk says:
Well, I love your blog. I've been a COTA for five years, I just returned to school this fall to pursue my Masters in OT. I ran across the blog one day when I was trying to convince myself that this was the right thing to do. If (when) I make it to OT school, I may take a page from your book - er - blog - and keep an online memoir myself.
Thanks for making us smile! You'll be a great OT.
================
Teresa says: I got my OT Practice and saw your article and thought to myself "Yaaay!". I am a first semester OT grad student at the University of XXXXX. I check in with your blog from time to time. Helps me see the light at the end of the tunnel and also reminds me that I'm not going crazy with my own OT thoughts. Thanks much for sharing your experience!
=======
Random day....Week 8, Day 2....
Today was a low census day. In the morning I asked my supervisor...if I weren't here, would you call the PRN COTA? And she said yes. And I said, well please call her, because it's not fair for her to lose money because of a student. We can function as one - it would suck if she had to go work elsewhere because she couldn't get the hours she needed. She agreed - after all I'm only there another four weeks and this COTA is hopefully going to continue on much longer.
I have been co-treating with a particular PTA a lot the last day or so, especially today - she is very good and I like to follow her for low level clients because she helps me with the lowest-level skills like maneuvering out of bed. Today we got an ICU patient sitting on the edge of the bed, and she had me kneeling on his bed with pillows, holding up his back (to keep him supported) with my thighs pressed against the pillows which were pressed against his back. We also did some weight-shifting and weight-bearing things with her giving me some nifty neuro tricks she had learned from a PRN OT.
I also went with the COTA some for another low level client who needed two people to get her sitting on the edge of the bed, and I used the PTA's pillow trick I had just learned.
Trying to think of other interesting things - one of our patients passed away, sadly, and another two of our patients, I found in the charts, had been the cause of recent codes (where the hospital announces a code overhead). Both survived.
OOOOOOOOOH I know something weird - my fellow OT student Brooke's father is a PCP, and his name showed up in a chart today! I was like whoah!! Small world.
Hmm, what else. I don't even know. Oh, I helped a man with oral care the other day, he is a mouth breather in ICU so his mouth is dry and crusty with flaking mucous membranes, we did glycerin swabs in his mouth and skin was flaking out of his mouth, isn't that gross? But it felt good to him at least.
And I am told I should learn how to change a colostomy bag since it is an ADL for many.
And I have a good friend looking to give up her sweet young female cat, if anyone is interested....and apparently another friend with a cat and 4 kittens. Just sayin'
And....biggest news of all is that OTCONNECTIONS has launched today....I'll give that it's very own post tomorrow. Or maybe tonight.
Did I mention I still have way too many emails and Facebook msgs to respond to. I might try and get to that tonight. We shall see. For now I need to clean up a little and then take some ibuprofen because my head really hurts!!
I have been co-treating with a particular PTA a lot the last day or so, especially today - she is very good and I like to follow her for low level clients because she helps me with the lowest-level skills like maneuvering out of bed. Today we got an ICU patient sitting on the edge of the bed, and she had me kneeling on his bed with pillows, holding up his back (to keep him supported) with my thighs pressed against the pillows which were pressed against his back. We also did some weight-shifting and weight-bearing things with her giving me some nifty neuro tricks she had learned from a PRN OT.
I also went with the COTA some for another low level client who needed two people to get her sitting on the edge of the bed, and I used the PTA's pillow trick I had just learned.
Trying to think of other interesting things - one of our patients passed away, sadly, and another two of our patients, I found in the charts, had been the cause of recent codes (where the hospital announces a code overhead). Both survived.
OOOOOOOOOH I know something weird - my fellow OT student Brooke's father is a PCP, and his name showed up in a chart today! I was like whoah!! Small world.
Hmm, what else. I don't even know. Oh, I helped a man with oral care the other day, he is a mouth breather in ICU so his mouth is dry and crusty with flaking mucous membranes, we did glycerin swabs in his mouth and skin was flaking out of his mouth, isn't that gross? But it felt good to him at least.
And I am told I should learn how to change a colostomy bag since it is an ADL for many.
And I have a good friend looking to give up her sweet young female cat, if anyone is interested....and apparently another friend with a cat and 4 kittens. Just sayin'
And....biggest news of all is that OTCONNECTIONS has launched today....I'll give that it's very own post tomorrow. Or maybe tonight.
Did I mention I still have way too many emails and Facebook msgs to respond to. I might try and get to that tonight. We shall see. For now I need to clean up a little and then take some ibuprofen because my head really hurts!!
Totally not related to OT but yayayayaya
Yay!
My mom had cancer a few years ago and had her yearly scan today and it came back clean! Yay!!!!!!!!!
My mom had cancer a few years ago and had her yearly scan today and it came back clean! Yay!!!!!!!!!
Monday, November 17, 2008
sooo tired
Today I was at work from eight to four, went to the gym, went to meet Doug at a Mexican restaurant out east near the gym, went to Kerri/Brent's, and now it is only eight thirty but I am exhausted. Which isn't cool because technically I have a lot of OT-related things I should be doing. But all I want to do is sleeeep. So I'm going to shower and go to bed intensely early and I'm an old lady at heart, what can I say, yo.
My anxiety level/panic levels at work are subsiding...but I still don't like the feeling of not knowing what exactly to do!! Time, practice, experience, blah blah. I need to call my supervisor at this next fieldwork since it's six weeks out. Craziness.
Lester the Lion Kitty is noisily grooming himself, he is very ADL oriented.
One day soon I swear I'll deal with all my OT and Facebook OT stuff.
Gooood nighttt
My anxiety level/panic levels at work are subsiding...but I still don't like the feeling of not knowing what exactly to do!! Time, practice, experience, blah blah. I need to call my supervisor at this next fieldwork since it's six weeks out. Craziness.
Lester the Lion Kitty is noisily grooming himself, he is very ADL oriented.
One day soon I swear I'll deal with all my OT and Facebook OT stuff.
Gooood nighttt
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Victory in Vomit...proprioception in a video game
This came up on a google ad -actually a pretty interesting article on this video game that has utilized PROPRIOCEPTION within its game to make you feel like you're the one in the action - and can therefore cause you to feel nauseated - but in a "cool" way, if that's possible. Proprioception is a big sensory integration word and a big OT word, so it was cool to read this article, I think all y'all will find it interesting whether you like games or not. Just sayin'.
http://www.wired.com/gaming/gamingreviews/commentary/games/2008/11/gamesfrontiers_1117
"Victory in Vomit: The Sickening Secret of Mirror's Edge"
http://www.wired.com/gaming/gamingreviews/commentary/games/2008/11/gamesfrontiers_1117
"Victory in Vomit: The Sickening Secret of Mirror's Edge"
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Attack of the dogs. Then work. Then play. Then jack and jill went up a hill. Or something. I don't know.
Today was an odd day.
It started out disturbing - my landlord and his dog (who live in front of me) were attacked by a vicious pack of large dogs, on our street. They apparently belong to the man across the street who kept them penned and the dogs broke out. It happened around 730am and this pack of dogs were looking for action. Fortunately for me and my neighbor with two small children, we came out about 5 minutes after this happened, or it might have been us attacked. Unfortunately for my landlord and dog, they were knocked down and attacked and both hurt pretty severely with lots of bad bites/punctures. The police were called, canine control was called, landlord's friend took him to hospital, landlord's wife took dog to vet, etc. Dramatic. The friend kept me updated with text messages. Pretty scary.
Then I got to work and had my first really "big" day where I didn't have any evaluations or any ortho stuff - purely normal treatments of like deconditioning, stroke, etc. This is a big deal as I'm mostly comfortable with ortho and evals. I did a 3 unit (45 minute) session with a man with a stroke known for being surly to many but he is sweet to me and even laughs at my silly jokes and stuff. He has bad expressive aphasia but his receptive aphasia has lessened. We did some weight-bearing stuff, some visual scanning stuff, some grasp/release stuff, you name it.
Also had a session with another ornery man but he was willing to participate - he was deconditioned - we did some marching in place and stuff since he was hooked up to a chest tube, kinda dancey-like, and he joked we'd do the jitterbug tomorrow. My supervisor popped in to check on me during it and I was like "ooooh" and afterwards the wife came out while I was chatting with my supervisor in the hall and told her I did great. :)
ALSO had a session with a really really old lady in bed who was too tired to do much but we did theraband exercises using her bedrails - explained we'd get up and do some movement tomorrow but for today we'd just do a little strengthening of muscles which were important for helping her push up to stand, etc.
ALSO had a session with a lady who has dislocated her hip after hip surgery a lot, we talked about importance of hip precautions, she demonstrated a safe toilet transfer and how to put on underwear, etc etc.
Also there were two "codes" in the hospital.
Also I bought cookies at a bake sale and they were yum.
Also I forget what all else, I realize many of the activities described were not very occupation-based, but this is acute care so some of them weren't ready for occupation-based, and/or had hit too high a level of fatigue after PT came around! LOL.
This morning I had a session with my supervisor and it was good she was there to coach me through the bed mobility, I am still having a hard time with that, but learning a little more each day.
I didn't finish with all my patients until pretty late today....I got to go see a cool movie on Mummies at the Imax at Pink Palace with some friends, then OT Student Becca and I had dinner at a Japanese restaurant and hung there until 930pm, then I chatted with OT student Allison....and now I've prepped for tomorrow and I'm going to jump into bed with Lester the Lion Kitty who is having excessive respiratory issues right now, I may cave in and take him to vet soon.
Tomorrow will hopefully be less busy and maybe I'll even get to the gym who knows. Few other things in the works too. And I need to buy my plane tickets still!!! Oh well tomorrow is another day, lol.
It started out disturbing - my landlord and his dog (who live in front of me) were attacked by a vicious pack of large dogs, on our street. They apparently belong to the man across the street who kept them penned and the dogs broke out. It happened around 730am and this pack of dogs were looking for action. Fortunately for me and my neighbor with two small children, we came out about 5 minutes after this happened, or it might have been us attacked. Unfortunately for my landlord and dog, they were knocked down and attacked and both hurt pretty severely with lots of bad bites/punctures. The police were called, canine control was called, landlord's friend took him to hospital, landlord's wife took dog to vet, etc. Dramatic. The friend kept me updated with text messages. Pretty scary.
Then I got to work and had my first really "big" day where I didn't have any evaluations or any ortho stuff - purely normal treatments of like deconditioning, stroke, etc. This is a big deal as I'm mostly comfortable with ortho and evals. I did a 3 unit (45 minute) session with a man with a stroke known for being surly to many but he is sweet to me and even laughs at my silly jokes and stuff. He has bad expressive aphasia but his receptive aphasia has lessened. We did some weight-bearing stuff, some visual scanning stuff, some grasp/release stuff, you name it.
Also had a session with another ornery man but he was willing to participate - he was deconditioned - we did some marching in place and stuff since he was hooked up to a chest tube, kinda dancey-like, and he joked we'd do the jitterbug tomorrow. My supervisor popped in to check on me during it and I was like "ooooh" and afterwards the wife came out while I was chatting with my supervisor in the hall and told her I did great. :)
ALSO had a session with a really really old lady in bed who was too tired to do much but we did theraband exercises using her bedrails - explained we'd get up and do some movement tomorrow but for today we'd just do a little strengthening of muscles which were important for helping her push up to stand, etc.
ALSO had a session with a lady who has dislocated her hip after hip surgery a lot, we talked about importance of hip precautions, she demonstrated a safe toilet transfer and how to put on underwear, etc etc.
Also there were two "codes" in the hospital.
Also I bought cookies at a bake sale and they were yum.
Also I forget what all else, I realize many of the activities described were not very occupation-based, but this is acute care so some of them weren't ready for occupation-based, and/or had hit too high a level of fatigue after PT came around! LOL.
This morning I had a session with my supervisor and it was good she was there to coach me through the bed mobility, I am still having a hard time with that, but learning a little more each day.
I didn't finish with all my patients until pretty late today....I got to go see a cool movie on Mummies at the Imax at Pink Palace with some friends, then OT Student Becca and I had dinner at a Japanese restaurant and hung there until 930pm, then I chatted with OT student Allison....and now I've prepped for tomorrow and I'm going to jump into bed with Lester the Lion Kitty who is having excessive respiratory issues right now, I may cave in and take him to vet soon.
Tomorrow will hopefully be less busy and maybe I'll even get to the gym who knows. Few other things in the works too. And I need to buy my plane tickets still!!! Oh well tomorrow is another day, lol.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Poo and compassion, uniquely combined
Today involved a combination of poo and compassion.
I did several quick ortho evals, then went in to do a therapy session with an older lady who just had a hip surgery the day before, and also had COPD so she was on oxygen at all times. The physical therapist and I went in together to get her out of bed and into the chair, except she needed to use the restroom. The PT helped her use the rolling walker to get to the bathroom in her room, which has a bedside commode over it, meaning it was higher/had rails. She was untethered from her oxygen for this. The PT then left to give her some privacy and I stayed in the room as I was going to finish treatment with her. Unfortunately she was having difficulty completing her bowel movement and was in a lot of pain. I contacted nursing, nursing did what they could do without a doctor's order, and in the meantime, to make a long story short, the old lady was becoming increasingly short of breath, agitated, dizzy, and in a lot of pain - and still sitting on the commode. The nurse was doing a fabulous job but this lady needed to be back in bed with oxygen back on, asap. The PT was paged and he wheeled the hospital bed all the way to the bathroom door - the nurse and PT and I all kind of helped her transfer - she was somewhat, understandingly, feeling panicked at this time. We got the room back in order (ie oxygen back on, IVs plugged back in, etc), and the nurses prepared to do fecal unimpaction - ie, literally use their lubricated gloved fingers to scoop the hardened stool from inside her bottom. We rolled her onto her side which pained her greatly considering her recent joint surgery, not to mention the trauma she has just been going through. While I technically had nothing to do with the actual unimpaction, I was kind of an extra pair of hands helping with little things like communication, moving things around, etc - and the session had started with me thinking "Ok, in a minute this will be resolved and we can do our therapy" and eventually of course I realized that wouldn't be the case. While the lady was on her side, I sat next to her facing her and stroking her shoulders and hands, as the nurses did their thing behind her. It was one of those things where its productivity versus compassion and compassion wins. All in all I spent about 45 minutes in the room with her and 30 minutes of it was non-billable - but it was one of those times where "therapeutic use of self" and compassion and patient-therapist rappoire was more important than billing units. Now if I had like sixty patients waiting on me that would have been a different story, but my student schedule is such that I could spend that time with her. It was definitely a learning experience on many levels, and I know the lady appreciated having someone sit with her for the sole purpose of comfort. I went back and checked on her in the afternoon and she was feeling "100% better" and thanked me.
In the afternoon I had a quick session with a patient who had a CVA - stroke - with R. sided neglect. I asked his nurse if I could see him and she was like you can try, he says no a lot. That hadn't been my experience with him though in the last few days. I went in and he was lying in bed instead of sitting on the couch like normal, he looked sad. I sat down next to him and talked to him a little. He is aphasic but can get basic points across, and understands pretty well. He was able to communicate that he was feeling rather sad, and also that his arm was improving. I sat next to him and stroked his right arm for a while, just for some sensory input, as we chatted. I didn't want to push him and be cheery and be like let's get up and move! because I knew this patient well enough to know it would agitate him/potentially cause him to become combative, which he has become before. He allowed me to do some passive range of motion exercises with his arm - like shoulder flexion, shoulder abduction, elbow flexion, etc -and then after we had done a PROM a few times I would have him show me his ability to do the motion himself - I had to facilitate the movement because his control isn't very good - but it's improving.
After work today I went to the gym, went to my friend Kerri's to check on their cat (her husband's grandmother died so they were away for funeral, very sad), then met up at a Mexican restaurant for an OT meet-up. OT student Jason, Mary, Minda, Brooke, Virginia, Me, were there...plus Virginia's husband, Brooke's boyfriend, Minda's two roommates...so a big crowd. Very fun. Then I went to Walgreens to get my FIVE DOLLAR GENERIC DRUGS BABY! and then came home to my crazy cat....something is now wrong with his ears, he is like flicking at them buzzing around and it's really weird. I'm keeping an eye on him.
I have so much more to share but it's 11pm so I want to go to bed. I have like FORTY OT-related e-mails, many of them personal, that I'd like to respond to and/or post on this blog...ONE DAY I'll catch up. ONE DAY. Getting my AOTF scholarship done was a big deal, I did some banking tonight related to the financial issues of the break-in, and tomorrow night after work my goal will be going to the gym, going to Bingo, meeting a friend for dinner, and buying my San Diego tickets home for Christmas.
Maybe this weekend my goal will be to complete thank you notes from my birthday, catch up on gmail, aol mail, facebook mail, and blog entries. Yeah right. But I can dream.
I did several quick ortho evals, then went in to do a therapy session with an older lady who just had a hip surgery the day before, and also had COPD so she was on oxygen at all times. The physical therapist and I went in together to get her out of bed and into the chair, except she needed to use the restroom. The PT helped her use the rolling walker to get to the bathroom in her room, which has a bedside commode over it, meaning it was higher/had rails. She was untethered from her oxygen for this. The PT then left to give her some privacy and I stayed in the room as I was going to finish treatment with her. Unfortunately she was having difficulty completing her bowel movement and was in a lot of pain. I contacted nursing, nursing did what they could do without a doctor's order, and in the meantime, to make a long story short, the old lady was becoming increasingly short of breath, agitated, dizzy, and in a lot of pain - and still sitting on the commode. The nurse was doing a fabulous job but this lady needed to be back in bed with oxygen back on, asap. The PT was paged and he wheeled the hospital bed all the way to the bathroom door - the nurse and PT and I all kind of helped her transfer - she was somewhat, understandingly, feeling panicked at this time. We got the room back in order (ie oxygen back on, IVs plugged back in, etc), and the nurses prepared to do fecal unimpaction - ie, literally use their lubricated gloved fingers to scoop the hardened stool from inside her bottom. We rolled her onto her side which pained her greatly considering her recent joint surgery, not to mention the trauma she has just been going through. While I technically had nothing to do with the actual unimpaction, I was kind of an extra pair of hands helping with little things like communication, moving things around, etc - and the session had started with me thinking "Ok, in a minute this will be resolved and we can do our therapy" and eventually of course I realized that wouldn't be the case. While the lady was on her side, I sat next to her facing her and stroking her shoulders and hands, as the nurses did their thing behind her. It was one of those things where its productivity versus compassion and compassion wins. All in all I spent about 45 minutes in the room with her and 30 minutes of it was non-billable - but it was one of those times where "therapeutic use of self" and compassion and patient-therapist rappoire was more important than billing units. Now if I had like sixty patients waiting on me that would have been a different story, but my student schedule is such that I could spend that time with her. It was definitely a learning experience on many levels, and I know the lady appreciated having someone sit with her for the sole purpose of comfort. I went back and checked on her in the afternoon and she was feeling "100% better" and thanked me.
In the afternoon I had a quick session with a patient who had a CVA - stroke - with R. sided neglect. I asked his nurse if I could see him and she was like you can try, he says no a lot. That hadn't been my experience with him though in the last few days. I went in and he was lying in bed instead of sitting on the couch like normal, he looked sad. I sat down next to him and talked to him a little. He is aphasic but can get basic points across, and understands pretty well. He was able to communicate that he was feeling rather sad, and also that his arm was improving. I sat next to him and stroked his right arm for a while, just for some sensory input, as we chatted. I didn't want to push him and be cheery and be like let's get up and move! because I knew this patient well enough to know it would agitate him/potentially cause him to become combative, which he has become before. He allowed me to do some passive range of motion exercises with his arm - like shoulder flexion, shoulder abduction, elbow flexion, etc -and then after we had done a PROM a few times I would have him show me his ability to do the motion himself - I had to facilitate the movement because his control isn't very good - but it's improving.
After work today I went to the gym, went to my friend Kerri's to check on their cat (her husband's grandmother died so they were away for funeral, very sad), then met up at a Mexican restaurant for an OT meet-up. OT student Jason, Mary, Minda, Brooke, Virginia, Me, were there...plus Virginia's husband, Brooke's boyfriend, Minda's two roommates...so a big crowd. Very fun. Then I went to Walgreens to get my FIVE DOLLAR GENERIC DRUGS BABY! and then came home to my crazy cat....something is now wrong with his ears, he is like flicking at them buzzing around and it's really weird. I'm keeping an eye on him.
I have so much more to share but it's 11pm so I want to go to bed. I have like FORTY OT-related e-mails, many of them personal, that I'd like to respond to and/or post on this blog...ONE DAY I'll catch up. ONE DAY. Getting my AOTF scholarship done was a big deal, I did some banking tonight related to the financial issues of the break-in, and tomorrow night after work my goal will be going to the gym, going to Bingo, meeting a friend for dinner, and buying my San Diego tickets home for Christmas.
Maybe this weekend my goal will be to complete thank you notes from my birthday, catch up on gmail, aol mail, facebook mail, and blog entries. Yeah right. But I can dream.
Monday, November 10, 2008
Hemianopsia...later.
I've been kinda quiet on the blog. A lot going on in my head though. I have bilateral cerebralobloggoneglect due to an acute infarction of my frontal lobe.
My normal supervisor is out of town so I have a very different PRN supervisor for 3 days - tomorrow is day 3 - been interesting having a different style - haven't seen anything too crazy lately except an awesome case of hemianopsia - more on that later - ohhh the visual tracking - - going to bed. Oh and I submitted my AOTF scholarship application tonight. Dear AOTA High Peeps, Please Bless Me With Your Financial Goodliness. Thank You and Good Night
Tomorrow goals: Do some evals, treatments by myself with different supervisor observing. Buy my San Diego Ticket. Deal with my Financial Stuff from Car Break-In. Catch up on Gmail and Facebook. Go to the gym. Not all in that order.
My normal supervisor is out of town so I have a very different PRN supervisor for 3 days - tomorrow is day 3 - been interesting having a different style - haven't seen anything too crazy lately except an awesome case of hemianopsia - more on that later - ohhh the visual tracking - - going to bed. Oh and I submitted my AOTF scholarship application tonight. Dear AOTA High Peeps, Please Bless Me With Your Financial Goodliness. Thank You and Good Night
Tomorrow goals: Do some evals, treatments by myself with different supervisor observing. Buy my San Diego Ticket. Deal with my Financial Stuff from Car Break-In. Catch up on Gmail and Facebook. Go to the gym. Not all in that order.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Donning/doffing socks: miracles
Today I did a session with a pleasant older man who had just had a knee replacement surgery, two days prior. His knee had been bothering him for quite some time, so it had been a long time since he had been able to do things like put on his own socks. I showed him to long-sit on the side of the bed with his surgical leg, his non-surgical leg hanging off the bed. By externally rotating his surgical leg slightly and bending it, he was able to don/doff his own sock, for the first time, in many months. He commented that he didn't think he was going to be able to do it, and his family members present were all happy for him. It really made me happy! It was a big moment for me for this physical dysfunction rotation that I am struggling so much with - showing somebody how to do something in a new way that allows the person to feel a sense of accomplishment - wow. Very cool.
SO many other things I want to share - had my midterm today - got some feedback good and bad - did some interesting courtesy consults and had a lot of paperwork - but as always, I end up too tired. I'm always exhausted!
Today I went straight home from fieldwork, passed out for a while, met my friend Sarah for dinner, prepped for tomorrow, and now I want to go to bed instead of write!!
I got my OT Practice today and my article is in it - the one weird thing is that in the mini bio it says my blog is the otinpublicschools blog, which it obviously isn't. I'm not sure how that got put in there. And the very last line acknowledging Merrolee Penman for all her help, was cut off - it starts to thank her but ends abruptly. The editor told me it was fixed in the website version.
Other than that, I'm pleased with the editing/formatting etc...yay, that makes my third thing in OT Practice...
Ok, this weekend I need to finish up the essay portion of the AOTF scholarship, deal with all the financial stuff of the new checking and banking and credit card stuff I've gotten, have some social stuff, etc etc.
GOOD NIGHT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
SO many other things I want to share - had my midterm today - got some feedback good and bad - did some interesting courtesy consults and had a lot of paperwork - but as always, I end up too tired. I'm always exhausted!
Today I went straight home from fieldwork, passed out for a while, met my friend Sarah for dinner, prepped for tomorrow, and now I want to go to bed instead of write!!
I got my OT Practice today and my article is in it - the one weird thing is that in the mini bio it says my blog is the otinpublicschools blog, which it obviously isn't. I'm not sure how that got put in there. And the very last line acknowledging Merrolee Penman for all her help, was cut off - it starts to thank her but ends abruptly. The editor told me it was fixed in the website version.
Other than that, I'm pleased with the editing/formatting etc...yay, that makes my third thing in OT Practice...
Ok, this weekend I need to finish up the essay portion of the AOTF scholarship, deal with all the financial stuff of the new checking and banking and credit card stuff I've gotten, have some social stuff, etc etc.
GOOD NIGHT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Good night finally
I just officially counted because clearly I have nothing better to do in life, like, for example, get ready for work tomorrow -- 31 of the remaining 41 mails are about OT! The other ten relate to finances and other things in relation to the car break-in and all the stuff stolen!
Apparently the November 3rd OT Practice has started arriving in mailboxes - a friend texted me tonight about it - so look in it for my article on online social community! I haven't seen it yet but hopefully it's gorgeous and informative and all that.
GOOD NIGHT!!!!!!!!!
PS: Note to self - tomorrow write about today's patient load - icu eval, pancreatitis eval, ortho evals, tx sessions, unit coord compliment, being bossy, inservice, having own pager, writing lots of note, tomorrow is midterm discusssion
PS2: I haven't done a blog blizzard in a long time so no fussing at me. I probably have one to two more blizzards to go in next week before I'm caught up.
Apparently the November 3rd OT Practice has started arriving in mailboxes - a friend texted me tonight about it - so look in it for my article on online social community! I haven't seen it yet but hopefully it's gorgeous and informative and all that.
GOOD NIGHT!!!!!!!!!
PS: Note to self - tomorrow write about today's patient load - icu eval, pancreatitis eval, ortho evals, tx sessions, unit coord compliment, being bossy, inservice, having own pager, writing lots of note, tomorrow is midterm discusssion
PS2: I haven't done a blog blizzard in a long time so no fussing at me. I probably have one to two more blizzards to go in next week before I'm caught up.
Fellow OT student...
Ok I've gone from over 150+ mails today to less than 45...and about 35 of the remaining ones are also OT related, but since I've just blizzarded the blog, I'm going to stop for the night. I did want to post one last email though, name/state removed as always. I think it's nice to see the perspective of other nationwide OT students.
"Hi Karen -- from a fellow OT student from XX -- how are you doing? Hanging in there? Just wanted to share that I know the feeling of "oh my gosh I know nothing and feel stupid". I just finished my very last rotation for field work -- ped's this time -- and even in week 10 would feel so stupid when my NDT handling skills sucked compared to the PT (who had 8 zillion years of experience....but still.), and my supervisor (who had 14 yrs experience). So, even in week 10 it was still hard! LOL. Easier than week 3 or 4 though in some ways.
In any case, now I am starting a whole NEW journey -- studying for the OTR exam. GULP. And revising my resume -- my tiny little resume that screams: NEW GRAD, WHO ONLY KNOWS A LITTLE BIT ABOUT A LOTTA STUFF... but it's a good journey!
Anyway, I will be looking for jobs everywhere I can, as soon as I pass that exam, which I take mid-November! I tell myself: Keep reminding yourself of what you DO know!!
Hang in there, how much more school do you have left? It's ALL worth it!
OT LOVE!
Jane Doe.
Jane Doe.
Living in a nursing home as a younger disabled man
Ouch! A friend sent this article to me - about a severely disabled man living in a nursing home - and his experience. Nursing homes are hard places to live in, and also hard places to work in - I know some are better than others, but still, scary. The article comments are also interesting.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081105.wfacts05/BNStory/lifeMain/home/
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081105.wfacts05/BNStory/lifeMain/home/
Hands Away
Apparently the video disappeared the last time I posted this. Let's try again. A beautiful video of children with Down Syndrome, dancing.
shout-out to an anonymous commenter
Good luck Tess!! I love the AHHHH!!! ahahahahahaa....have fun.
"hey I just read your blog I'm an OTS too! I can totally hear you on the ACL! I am currently preping a one hour presentation that myself and 2 of my classmates have to deliver in class next weekend!AHHHHHHH! Good luck in your studies you'll be done before you know it!
~Tess"
"hey I just read your blog I'm an OTS too! I can totally hear you on the ACL! I am currently preping a one hour presentation that myself and 2 of my classmates have to deliver in class next weekend!AHHHHHHH! Good luck in your studies you'll be done before you know it!
~Tess"
ACLS new version???
Augh! New stuff for the ACLS as well? Augh! I better get practicing, I hear on my next rotation in geriatric psych, I'll be doing a lot of ACLS stuff.
"Hello, I was very excited to see you video demonstrating the administration of the Allen Cognitive Level Screen. In November, 2007, a newly revised and updated version was published by the ACLS and LACLS Committee. It is called the Manual for the ACLS-5 and LACLS-5. To learn more about this 5th version, go to www.allencognitivelevelscreen.org. You can order a copy of this most recent version from www.dementiacarespecialists.com or from www.ssww.com. "
"Hello, I was very excited to see you video demonstrating the administration of the Allen Cognitive Level Screen. In November, 2007, a newly revised and updated version was published by the ACLS and LACLS Committee. It is called the Manual for the ACLS-5 and LACLS-5. To learn more about this 5th version, go to www.allencognitivelevelscreen.org. You can order a copy of this most recent version from www.dementiacarespecialists.com or from www.ssww.com. "
pushing patients, fibromyalgia
Two cool articles from Advance magazine...
Fending off Fibromyalgia
http://rehabilitation-director.advanceweb.com/Article/Fending-off-Fibromyalgia-2.aspx
Pushing Patients
http://rehabilitation-director.advanceweb.com/Article/Pushing-Patients.aspx
Fending off Fibromyalgia
http://rehabilitation-director.advanceweb.com/Article/Fending-off-Fibromyalgia-2.aspx
Pushing Patients
http://rehabilitation-director.advanceweb.com/Article/Pushing-Patients.aspx
My life as Miss OTPF is over...devastation
There is an OTPF-II now!!! A revised Framework!! I learned the first OTPF and I'm in danger of losing my crown if I don't know the OTPF-II backwards and forwards!! Maybe at Conclave they can have a Miss OTPF II pageant. LOL.
I believe I heard that the Nov/Dec AJOT will have the OTPF II in it...guess I'll have to read up on it. I do know it includes rest/sleep in it. That's all I know so far. So I'm going to support the OTPF II by going to sleep soon.
I believe I heard that the Nov/Dec AJOT will have the OTPF II in it...guess I'll have to read up on it. I do know it includes rest/sleep in it. That's all I know so far. So I'm going to support the OTPF II by going to sleep soon.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
sooo sleeeeepy
I'm sleepy. Going to bed soon. My cat Lester is angry at me for the dental oral rinse I inflicted upon him. I'm sorry Lester.
Today I did several evaluations by myself, and one of them I did with my supervisor watching, it was kind of a special situation where a woman with a hip replacement ended up in ICU due to some complications. She said I did a good job but that I need to elaborate even more on the three main hip precautions of no crossing legs, no internal rotation, and no bending past 90. I explained them all a tiny bit, but not as in much detail as I should have.
We had seven evals today - and only ONE treatment, which the COTA did, and then she went back to some of the evals and treated a few of them.
The pain scale is so interesting - someone writhing in pain will rate it a 5, another person smiling and talking will rate it a 7. Very "personal".
I'm a little more nervous about tomorrow's schedule - I am feeling pretty ok about ortho evals and more or less normal evals, but we have a lot of treatments tomorrow. I'm not so comfortable with treatment! A bunch of ortho treatments - so things like lower body dressing, getting in and out of bed, etc. Sounds so basic. But I get messed up easily!!
Oh well. My mood/attitude continues to improve and hopefully tomorrow will be a good day. :)
And PS, I'm still way behind on e-mail, and I am still dealing with police report/insurance stuff/getting new cards/checks etc...and today I ended up working out and then going to a friend's so I got home late and now I'm too sleepy to do anything.
Tomorrow my plan is to work, go to the gym, then come home and be productive!!! And not do anything else!!!
Today I did several evaluations by myself, and one of them I did with my supervisor watching, it was kind of a special situation where a woman with a hip replacement ended up in ICU due to some complications. She said I did a good job but that I need to elaborate even more on the three main hip precautions of no crossing legs, no internal rotation, and no bending past 90. I explained them all a tiny bit, but not as in much detail as I should have.
We had seven evals today - and only ONE treatment, which the COTA did, and then she went back to some of the evals and treated a few of them.
The pain scale is so interesting - someone writhing in pain will rate it a 5, another person smiling and talking will rate it a 7. Very "personal".
I'm a little more nervous about tomorrow's schedule - I am feeling pretty ok about ortho evals and more or less normal evals, but we have a lot of treatments tomorrow. I'm not so comfortable with treatment! A bunch of ortho treatments - so things like lower body dressing, getting in and out of bed, etc. Sounds so basic. But I get messed up easily!!
Oh well. My mood/attitude continues to improve and hopefully tomorrow will be a good day. :)
And PS, I'm still way behind on e-mail, and I am still dealing with police report/insurance stuff/getting new cards/checks etc...and today I ended up working out and then going to a friend's so I got home late and now I'm too sleepy to do anything.
Tomorrow my plan is to work, go to the gym, then come home and be productive!!! And not do anything else!!!
Monday, November 3, 2008
Things you never expected...
One of the things I never thought I'd be doing...
Sometimes we put gait belts on patients, just to do some ambulation around the room, for safety reasons. The belt goes around the waist. Well, for some of our older ladies, their bosoms go all the way down to their waist. Since it would be uncomfortable to tighten a belt around their breasts, we have to obviously make sure we have not done so. We attempt by feel but sometimes with the loose hospital gown, loose skin, lines and such, that it is impossible to be sure. So sometimes I have to literally put my hand down an older woman's gown and pick up her breasts so that we can be certain the gait belt doesn't get cinched on them. Typically the type of lady we have to do this on, has some sort of dementia and is not fully cognizant of what is going on - but I still feel a little bad doing it. Of course we do it respectfully, but still. And it's definitely one of those things you don't learn about in OT school! "Hey guys, one day you might be sticking your hand down a patient's gown and lifting up breasts!"
I'm getting better at doing stroke evaluations....I did one today and didn't need as much help as I sometimes do...we had a slow day OT wise and so I spent the afternoon with a PTA who is really good. She zipped from patient to patient. Our last patient was a man with Parkinson's and he started having a bowel movement while he was up, it was quite a chore to deal with his gowns and the Posey vest (restraint) he was wearing, plus all his lines, plus maneuvering him, onto the bedside commode. Some of the feces were on his bed and on the floor. Of course I got to help deal with all that. Just a fact of life though. It seems/sounds gross and you think ew! I'll never get used to watching people pee or poop or show their privates! But you get so used to it. A lady recently was so embarassed she could not hold her urine and I assured her we think nothing of it, we see it all, every day.
Tomorrow will be a busier day - there were seven ortho surgeries today so tomorrow we'll have a bunch of hip and knee evaluations in the total joint unit. I like those evals - pretty quick and easy.
Today I hardly panicked at all - I think I'm slowly becoming more comfortable with bed mobility and everything, and I think my medications are getting regulated so that I'm not freaking out all the time. So things are looking up.
After work today I went to the gym and then went to OTS Kerri's house for a while, because I was waiting to pick up a FedEx package out east, with my new financial documents from the car break-in. She was telling me she got to make an ulnar gutter splint today (she is on a hands rotation). Pretty cool. She made yummy fish tacos for dinner and then her husband made hot chocolate. :) Then I drove to Fedex only to discover they had in fact left the documents at my house - why they decided to leave them today when they just left tags the other few days, and why they decided to just prop it up against the locked fence in plain view, is beyond me. Oh well.
I think that I'm going to go to bed. I also think tomorrow my plan is to go to work, go to the gym, then come home and try to catch up on OT e-mails and not do anything socially - I'm frazzled at how behind I am and want to get caught up.
I wish I had been better about blogging each day about what I got to experience - I haven't been good about it this rotation - but have had some interesting experiences so need to work on that.
Ok...goals for tomorrow...as always...
Speak louder, speak clearer
HAVE CONFIDENCE IN MYSELF! I CAN DO THIS!
Catch up on OT e-mails and blog about my experiences of the day.
Sometimes we put gait belts on patients, just to do some ambulation around the room, for safety reasons. The belt goes around the waist. Well, for some of our older ladies, their bosoms go all the way down to their waist. Since it would be uncomfortable to tighten a belt around their breasts, we have to obviously make sure we have not done so. We attempt by feel but sometimes with the loose hospital gown, loose skin, lines and such, that it is impossible to be sure. So sometimes I have to literally put my hand down an older woman's gown and pick up her breasts so that we can be certain the gait belt doesn't get cinched on them. Typically the type of lady we have to do this on, has some sort of dementia and is not fully cognizant of what is going on - but I still feel a little bad doing it. Of course we do it respectfully, but still. And it's definitely one of those things you don't learn about in OT school! "Hey guys, one day you might be sticking your hand down a patient's gown and lifting up breasts!"
I'm getting better at doing stroke evaluations....I did one today and didn't need as much help as I sometimes do...we had a slow day OT wise and so I spent the afternoon with a PTA who is really good. She zipped from patient to patient. Our last patient was a man with Parkinson's and he started having a bowel movement while he was up, it was quite a chore to deal with his gowns and the Posey vest (restraint) he was wearing, plus all his lines, plus maneuvering him, onto the bedside commode. Some of the feces were on his bed and on the floor. Of course I got to help deal with all that. Just a fact of life though. It seems/sounds gross and you think ew! I'll never get used to watching people pee or poop or show their privates! But you get so used to it. A lady recently was so embarassed she could not hold her urine and I assured her we think nothing of it, we see it all, every day.
Tomorrow will be a busier day - there were seven ortho surgeries today so tomorrow we'll have a bunch of hip and knee evaluations in the total joint unit. I like those evals - pretty quick and easy.
Today I hardly panicked at all - I think I'm slowly becoming more comfortable with bed mobility and everything, and I think my medications are getting regulated so that I'm not freaking out all the time. So things are looking up.
After work today I went to the gym and then went to OTS Kerri's house for a while, because I was waiting to pick up a FedEx package out east, with my new financial documents from the car break-in. She was telling me she got to make an ulnar gutter splint today (she is on a hands rotation). Pretty cool. She made yummy fish tacos for dinner and then her husband made hot chocolate. :) Then I drove to Fedex only to discover they had in fact left the documents at my house - why they decided to leave them today when they just left tags the other few days, and why they decided to just prop it up against the locked fence in plain view, is beyond me. Oh well.
I think that I'm going to go to bed. I also think tomorrow my plan is to go to work, go to the gym, then come home and try to catch up on OT e-mails and not do anything socially - I'm frazzled at how behind I am and want to get caught up.
I wish I had been better about blogging each day about what I got to experience - I haven't been good about it this rotation - but have had some interesting experiences so need to work on that.
Ok...goals for tomorrow...as always...
Speak louder, speak clearer
HAVE CONFIDENCE IN MYSELF! I CAN DO THIS!
Catch up on OT e-mails and blog about my experiences of the day.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
ooh sorry my OT peeps
I just quickly skimmed the 126 mails I still need to go through from the last month and my heart is partially breaking because I have quite a few earnest/sweet e-mails from fellow OT students that I have not responded to yet. It's been a rough month! I always EVENTUALLY respond, it just sometimes takes a ridiculously long time - but it doesn't leave my inbox until I've replied.
This upcoming week is midterm week for this rotation - the start of week 6 out of 12. I think I'm behind on some objectives but ahead in others, so maybe it will all wash out in the end. Basically the students answer some questions and then fill out a form with the supervisor. Hopefully this will be a good week. Just got back from Nashville a few hours ago.
My goals for this week:
To work out at least 3x for my physical but mostly MENTAL sanity
To HAVE CONFIDENCE IN MYSELF AND KNOW THAT I CAN DO IT
Note to self:
I CAN DO THIS
I CAN DO THIS
I CAN DO THIS
I CAN DO THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Oh and PS: The November 3rd issue of OT Practice that comes out this week, should have my article on online social community in it. Of course it's probably ALREADY obsolete since it was written several months ago. Oooh. Speaking of which, it might mean people come to this blog, so I should like, I dunno, do some thought-provoking reflective pieces this week. Instead of my now typical "AUGH" posts. Ok
New goal:
WRITE A GOOD OT-RELATED POST
lol
This upcoming week is midterm week for this rotation - the start of week 6 out of 12. I think I'm behind on some objectives but ahead in others, so maybe it will all wash out in the end. Basically the students answer some questions and then fill out a form with the supervisor. Hopefully this will be a good week. Just got back from Nashville a few hours ago.
My goals for this week:
To work out at least 3x for my physical but mostly MENTAL sanity
To HAVE CONFIDENCE IN MYSELF AND KNOW THAT I CAN DO IT
Note to self:
I CAN DO THIS
I CAN DO THIS
I CAN DO THIS
I CAN DO THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Oh and PS: The November 3rd issue of OT Practice that comes out this week, should have my article on online social community in it. Of course it's probably ALREADY obsolete since it was written several months ago. Oooh. Speaking of which, it might mean people come to this blog, so I should like, I dunno, do some thought-provoking reflective pieces this week. Instead of my now typical "AUGH" posts. Ok
New goal:
WRITE A GOOD OT-RELATED POST
lol
Saturday, November 1, 2008
woot
I am in Nashville for the weekend. Last night I watched a friend Arnie have his debut performance with Two-Bit Eddie at a VFW (veterans of foreign war). They played 8 to midnight and they were great. I think I was the youngest one there by about a thousand years, but everybody was in great costume. There was a few old ladies SHAKING IT UP on the dance floor, although really their shaking was more like quivering...barely moving. Hilarious. And an old man taking it down to the floor....getting back up was a little precarious, a woman next to me who knew I was in OT school whispered "that man may need your services in a minute" lol.
I've gotten several really nice e-mails from OT students nationwide lately and I really appreciate it. I am on a strange laptop this weekend and oh no battery of laptop is low so im gonna hurry this up - basically just saying ill start responding soon. And that I am starting to feeel better.
Have a great weekend y'all
I've gotten several really nice e-mails from OT students nationwide lately and I really appreciate it. I am on a strange laptop this weekend and oh no battery of laptop is low so im gonna hurry this up - basically just saying ill start responding soon. And that I am starting to feeel better.
Have a great weekend y'all
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