Nursing Podcast by NURSING.com (NRSNG) (NCLEX® Prep for Nurses and Nursing Students)
Nursing Podcast by NURSING.com (NRSNG) (NCLEX® Prep for Nurses and Nursing Students)
Jon Haws RN: Nursing Podcast Host, Critical Care Nurse, Nursing School Men
Helping Nursing Students Succeed. Period. Free Nursing School and NCLEX Cheat Sheets at nursing.com/freebies Welcome to the NURSING.com Show from NURSING.com . . . #1 Nursing Podcast and the leader in nursing student education. New motivational episodes 2-3 times per week covering: Struggling Students - common questions and concerns from students. Tips and Nurse Life - how to succeed as a nursing student and nurse. Interviews - discussion with through leaders, entrepreneurs, and authors. Anatomy and Physiology and Nursing Care for various disease processes. Follow us on social media @nursing.com_ on Instagram or @nursing.comofficial on Facebook From the leading nursing education website (NURSING.com) comes the top nursing podcast. With pharmacology episodes, test taking tips, student struggles, interviews (with leading nurse advocates like Kati Kleber, Nurse Bass, Nurse Nacole, and more), NCLEX review, we cover the information that nurses need to know to accelerate their career and become incredible RNs. Jon Haws RN, the host has worked as a critical care registered nurse in a Level I Trauma hospital in Dallas, TX. Jon is the creator of NURSING.com. Visit the site and check out the books on Amazon.com We discuss current trends in the ICU, anatomy, physiology, nursing care, and much more. Our goal is to change nursing education forever by making it more accessible, cutting the fluff, and teaching students how to think like nurses through modern technology. For full disclaimer information visit: nursing.com NCLEX®, NCLEX-RN® are registered trademarks of the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, INC.
I'm not smart enough to be a nurse . . . yet
Ever notice why some students embrace challenges, while others shy away? Mindsets. Your mindset might just change how you approach your goals in nursing school…   A fixed mindset: abilities are set. A growth mindset: abilities develop. When challenges appear, your mindsets matter.   In nursing school, challenges are constant. A student with a fixed mindset avoids challenges. One with a growth mindset thrives when challenges arise.   Having a growth mindset is the secret sauce for success.  Putting effort into a fixed mindset is useless.  It's time to shift your thinking.   When considering success and failure, success in a fixed mindset is about validation, but in a growth mindset, it's about learning. Failure isn't a setback; it's an opportunity for growth.   As a nursing student, adopt a growth mindset: see challenges as learning opportunities, embrace mistakes, and persist. Grow your knowledge and expand your growth mindset with NURSING.com.  
Mar 5
4 min
Keeping Up With The Carditises- Heart Inflammation
For more Carditis and the heart just visit NURSING.com/heart.   Did you know that the average human heart beats 100,000 times a day, pumping 2,000 gallons of blood? Now, imagine if this vital pump was under threat from, pericarditis, myocarditis, or endocarditis and couldn’t pump effectively. In this episode we will look at the importance of understanding carditis and an easy way that I used in nursing school to remember the area affected by each type; then, run through a quick scenario at the end to apply what we have learned.
Mar 5
10 min
INSULIN . . . Life Saver or Life Taker | Understanding How Insulin Works
Does insulin save lives, or does it take lives? Bodies that don’t produce enough insulin shut down, but if too much insulin is in the system it can be just as disastrous. As nurses, we are often tasked with administering insulin to our patients. When done incorrectly it can be life-threatening.  For years I was a member of the code team, and count WHEN I was a new nurse I remember trying to keep track of the patients and insulin action times and the dosage times and everything else . . . I felt like I was drowning trying to keep it all straight in my head - I was both stressed and scared at the same time THAT’S WHEN I copied all the insulin peak and onset times down in my notebook. THIS HELPED me feel more relaxed and avoid my patient coding! If you want to see my notes they are at NURSING.com/cheatsheets. Honestly, I still use the cheatsheet today! What we cover in this episode:  what is insulin understanding how insulin works what does insulin do types of insulin onset, peak, duration of insulin
Feb 27
6 min
Nursing Prioritization and ABCs | How I Almost Killed My Patient
I almost killed my patient. In the days after my scary event I spent hours and hours thinking through what I had done.   I knew my ABCs, I had prioritized everything I was supposed to, how could things have gone so horribly wrong…   See our full lesson on Prioritization at NURSING.com.   And I realized that I had overlooked a very important part of my ABCs.   It wasn’t the A - airway, the B - breathing, or the C - circulation  What was left, what did I miss? What I violated was Safety.  That small little “s” at the end of my ABCs - Safety    And I learned 3 Crucial Take-Aways  ABCs are Priorities not Checklists!  Don't be complacent about the s for Safety Ask for help as soon as possible   See our full lesson on Prioritization at NURSING.com.        
Feb 20
11 min
"i don't know . . ."
Them: "How can we help?" Me: "I don't know . . ." This is a conversation I've had countless times over the last year.  If only I had some sort of ailment that could be SEEN and FIXED . . . why can't it be a broken arm?  A simple cast would "fix" the problem in just a matter of weeks.  With mental health, you read the books, you do the checklists, you take the meds, you attend counseling . . . but at any moment . . . around any corner . . . there it is - ready to crush your hope and happiness.  Each time you start a new medication you feel hopeful . . . "this time it will work" And each time a new medication doesn't help, you feel a bit more hopeless . . . "maybe I am beyond repair" They say mental health is a battle.  It is.  And for many of us it is a lifelong battle.   And worse still, it is a silent battle - no one can SEE what you are going through.  And the worst part is that you begin to convince yourself that it has to be silent - that you shouldn't share your struggle - that perhaps you are "beyond repair" - that others will judge.  
Feb 15
10 min
My first day as a "REAL" nurse
My first job out of nursing school was in the Neuro ICU at a very large hospital in downtown Dallas.     In this particular hospital, new ICU nurses complete a 13 week internship partnered with an experienced nurse (called a preceptor).  My preceptors name was Vanessa, she was the typical ICU nurse type - a hardcore, type A nurse.   She trained me well . . . but . . . those 13 weeks came to an end and it was time for me to be all on my own - no safety net to fall back on, no babysitter to make sure I did everything by the book - it was just ME.    To be honest . . . I was terrified.   I wish I'd had a tool like NURSING.com   You CAN do this   Happy Nursing!   -Jon
Feb 13
8 min
4 words saved her life . . .
Just 4 words saved her life . . .    “You CAN do this”   In 2018 as a nursing student, Heather found herself in a very dark and lonely place.  But those 4 words brought her out of that darkness and gave her hope.    I was there with Heather when a nursing student asked her, “Will I make it through this?”   ========   Here is her response:   “You WILL make it through.    When I got back from Iraq in 2008, I suffered from PTSD.    And when I first found NURSING.com, I didn't think I was going to make it through. I felt like a failure, not only in nursing school, but in my life. My marriage was trash. I felt like a failure as a parent because I felt like I wasn't present. I had just failed med surg by 0.2%.   I was ready to kill myself. I was done.    But hearing Jon and everybody else say that you can do it, it is going to be okay, and you will make it through, saved my life.    NURSING.com saved my life in more ways than one. And I'm here and I graduated, you CAN do this.” #NursingSchoolMotivation #MotivationForNursingStudents #NursingSchoolJourney #InspiringNursingStudents #NursingSchoolLife #StayMotivatedNurse #NursingSchoolInspiration
Feb 6
11 min
I failed the NCLEX 3 times, but then . . .
[After graduating from nursing school with a 3.8 GPA, Ashley failed the NCLEX 3 times.  This is her story.] Learn more about NURSING.com: https://nursing.com   First one was a knife to my chest.   I was miserable. I really honestly thought this was my calling for so long. Nursing is what I wanted to do. For four years, I had worked so hard and I was unsure, should I change my career? Should I do something else?    The first time I failed, I decided I would run 10 miles, and I cried the whole time.  I remember, thinking, I want to die. I just don't understand. I thought I knew so much, and for some reason I failed and the rest of my class was successful. Why am I going through this?   Taking the NCLEX was so stressful and all that pressure with people around you constantly leaving, and I am a very slow test taker.    I had to really take a week and really ask myself, is this worth it?  I did all this work, what went wrong?  Is something wrong with me?  Am I not smart?  What am I going to do?    You feel that your classmates will make fun of you or that they question if you're going to be a good nurse and you start to create all these webs and negativity and it just storms.   Patience, positivity, prayer, and perseverance.  As a nursing student, you are your hardest critic.  Sometimes we're perfectionists and we put a lot of pressure on ourselves.    So I would say strive for progress, but not perfection.    I think of my experience as being in a boat in a really rough storm.  To be a skilled sailor you can’t have calm waters.  You need the storm. And so whatever purpose it was for me to fail the NCLEX three times, it really has blessed me and I feel like a better woman. I can't believe I'm saying that, but really I do. I feel like it strengthened me.  
Feb 6
19 min
We Need More Nurses Who Care . . .
Working as a nurse in the ICU, I cared for many patients who are burned into my mind and heart forever.  I would like to share with you the stories of two patients that I will remember forever and whom shaped my life and nursing career forever.  People NEVER forget their nurses.  The rest of their hospital stay will be a blur, but their NURSES will be in their minds forever.  It's okay to CARE as a nurse. We went into this profession because we want to ease human suffering. We need more nurses who CARE. Thank you for choosing this profession. I started NURSING.com to reduce your stress in nursing school, so you can focus on the patients. Happy Nursing! -Jon 
Jan 30
5 min
What is your "WHY"? (and my personal stories)
During my first semester of nursing school my son was born and he had a couple issues that required him to stay in the hospital during his first couple weeks of life.   My wife and I were sleeping at the hospital. I would go to nursing school and then come back and be with him. But there was one night where we were extremely tired, and so we went down to the hospital cafeteria to get some food.   And when we came back a few minutes later after eating his nurse, her name was Tracy (I still remember her name 12 years later) was sitting there giving him a bath and cuddling him and keeping him warm.   And it was very clear with the way that she was taking care of him and working with him, that she cared very deeply about him, about his exact needs in that moment. And it was in that moment that I truly realized that everyone is going to have that one nurse that they remember forever. Here I am 12 years later, and I still remember her. I remember that moment. I remember the sense of walking in there and that comfort that I had, knowing that she was there with my son taking care of him.   You guys, this journey is not easy. And I know that maybe you haven't yet, but there's going to be a time in your career, whether that's in nursing school or whether it's as a nurse, that you're going to hit some kind of proverbial wall. You're going to feel like you can't keep going forward. But I want you guys to think about that.   Why? Think about those moments that you've had that have helped you see why you're doing this. And if you need to write that down, put it as a screensaver on your phone. Send yourself an email every now and then with your why. We need you. We need nurses who care. We need you to stay in the career field. We need you to work in the career field. You guys can do this. I know that there's moments when it all seems impossible, but you can do this and I know that you can do this, so stick with it.   Remember your why. Go out and be your best self today.   💙 Happy Nursing!   -Jon
Jan 24
6 min
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