I have been neglecting this blog as of late so I thought I would update seeing as I always pester Marc to update his and I have had a request to keep it going - which was nice

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Anyway my situation has changed slightly and I am now working full time as a Pharmacovigilance Assistant so I am not working as many HCA shifts as I did previously - however I am still working occasionally to save money for my tuition fees.
I recently worked on a neuro rehab ward and it was a great shift. This was like no other ward I have worked on before. Very few patients and loads of enthusiastic nurses!! Now there were some very sad cases on this ward mainly RTA's and stroke victims with a chance at recovery. It is difficult to see human beings in this situation and it really gives you some perspective. Now I am not exaggerating when I say that the nurses on this ward were enthusiastic one in particular, a male charge nurse could re-define the term 'doing it by the book' much to the annoyance of his team. I have to admit that when I heard about this via the usual route of bitching before he arrived on the ward I thought I would also get annoyed with this way of working...however I was wrong and it was actually a refreshing change. Now don't get me wrong nurses do a very tough and excellent job but there are alot of corners cut which (don't get me wrong again) are sometimes necessary but often put the patient and the carer in a potentially dangerous situation. I am specifically talking about the incorrect use of hoists or the lack of slide sheets and other care aids which are designed to help the patient and the carer. This particular charge nurse made full and correct use of all these and it did actually help....alot!!! So these patients got full and fantastic care, the ward was clean, the staff were happy and it was a genuinely great shift which in amongst all the chaos and negativity which constantly surrounds the NHS and more recently MTAS makes me realise why I am going back to university for 4 years.
If I could advise other HCA's I would tell you to work obscure shifts on random wards or departments for three reasons 1 - it gives you a break from the norm and whilst every patient is different the HCA position soon becomes quite repetitive, 2 - it puts you out of your comfort zone and can be a great challenge and 3. you might stumble across something you really like!
BUT there is a flip side to every coin and here is my story.
I once worked a shift in the diabetes centre - still in the hospital it is a clinic for diabetes sufferers. Different clinics are run throughout the week and I would be working in the foot clinic. Not bad I thought something different. Anyway I turned up to the centre with no clue of what I was supposed to be doing only to be greeted with a community nurse and a student physiotherapist who also had no idea. We sat in the waiting area and pondered what we would be doing. 45 minutes later the staff turn up and with no introduction tell me that it will be 'extremely busy' and that I 'need to work fast - or there will be trouble' (I swear this is what the opening line was) so after repeatedly asking I am shown what to do. Here is how it went, patient walks into consultation/treatment room, I open sterile pack, I make sure saline packs are warm, I leave room, procedure happens, I put used sterile pack into bin spray down bed etc and its on to the next patient. Now I know busy and no doubt will have it re-defined as a junior doc but this was not busy it was just boring and could of been done by the receptionist who sat on her arse all day!!!! S0 after 4 straight hours I asked the podiatrist if I could observe the procedures - cue stage left the most cocky podiatrist I have ever met!! Without even looking at me he told me to and I quote 'step into his office' and 'see where the magic happens'. I enter the room where an elderly patients foot is on full display complete with a outgrowing bone!! Just then the student physio and comm nurse open the door and also ask to observe to which the podiatrist says again without looking 'I suppose so, it is hard to ignore a genius' - In a comical sense it would be funny, it would put the patient at ease but he is completely serious!! So we all watch the 'genius' reshape this patients bone and before I begin my menial duties I jokingly ask the podiatrist if he felt the pressure because of his audience to which he replied 'what pressure! - you see I have never panicked and everyone at uni looked up to me' I learn not to comment anymore. So the day goes on with me doing my job in silence - no break - no cup of tea or even water and then a patient arrives a little early so we begin to talk.
Patient 'How long have you been a podiatrist?'
Me 'Oh no I am not a podiatrist I am a HCA'
Patient 'What is that then'
Me 'Breif explination'
Patient 'Funny job for a man isn't it..are you one of those'
Me (ignoring the last comment) 'I intend to become a doctor'
Just then the podiatrist walks in and asks me why I want to be a doctor because AND I QUOTE 'it is such a dead end job and very unskilled unlike podiatry' in response I say well maybe I will consider podiatry which the podiatrist laughs at and says 'you are not cut out for it, because it is harder to learn than medicine'. I leave the room and finish the shift gutted at the fact that I will never become a podiatrist

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I still see this guy walking around the hospital and occasionally he speaks but only when he is (final quote) 'not thinking about difficult procedures...unlike doctors who have it so easy'!
Next time I am gonna ask for his autograph.
