Bring on(?) the noise!

Posted: July 22nd, 2009 | By Rebekah Child | one comment

A few years ago I was standing in line for Space Mountain at Disneyland and there was a kid there who was also standing in line with his friends—only unlike my chattery self who gets in faux trouble all the time for talking too much–he was listening to his music, completely ignoring his comrades. I thought that was so strange, not to participate in life – especially when you are at the HAPPIEST place on earth.

Fast forward now to the ED where I work. Maybe not always considered the happiest place on earth, but still, in general, a nice place to be. (I may be crazy, but I actually like my job…). The same anti-society series of thoughts came to me one day while I was making a quick and brisk walk through the treatment area and my auditory senses were graced with the continuous beeping of various pieces of equipment. A greatest hits CD of hospital sounds, varied, unique, and super annoying. I saw at least six nurses not busy (as evidenced by the cell phones, smart phones, PDAs in hand) and ignoring the beeping. However, when their iPhones or BlackBerries pinged, ponged, whistled, mooed or barked, they were immediately available to answer the call. Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE my iPhone and when I had a BBerry, I loved that too. They are fun and entertaining and a great way to get through life, however, just like train conductors shouldn’t be texting and talking on their cell phones while on duty, really neither should nurses.

What if the beeping was because someone was in v-tach or the IV pump was beeping because the patient’s line had infiltrated and now potassium was slowly sloughing off skin? Maybe patient call lights are a thing of the past…maybe beeping monitors and IV pumps are passé; maybe the future is simply giving your patient your cell phone number so when they want a glass of water or a warm blanket they could Twitter, text, IM or update their Facebook status to let their nurse know.

Rebekah Child

My name is Rebekah Child. I attended the University of Southern California for my bachelor's in nursing and decided to brave the academic waters and return for my master's in nursing education, graduating in 2003 from Mount St. Mary's. I have also taught nursing clinical and theory at numerous Southern California nursing schools and have been an emergency nurse since 2002. I am currently one of the clinical educators for an emergency department in Southern California and a student (again!) in the doctoral program at the University of California, Los Angeles. More

Comments (1)

  • I agree! I don’t use my PDA for personal use while on the clock. My Mother is ill, so I do check the # when a call comes in, if I get a second call right after (With no message L between the calls) I know it is an emergency of some type. Two calls in a row, I excuse myself as possible. Family and friends know I don’t answer when at work, unless it is an emergency.

Leave a Reply

ADVERTISEMENT

Scrubs Magazine

Our print magazine is available at scrubs stores nationwide. Peek inside the Fall 2010 issue, then get your copy!

Our "Weekly Best" in your inbox

Get our most popular stories, career advice, scrubs style tips and free gear giveaways!

Have you ever been in a hostile workplace situation? Or just a really frustrating one? Enough to make you open the emergency chute?

Rebekah Child

Rebekah Child

Student nurses are frazzled and panicking right now. You’ve been there. Got any advice for us?

Ani Burr

Ani Burr

Male nurses are almost not existent in the clinics. Other than the MDs, I am the only guy on the floor.

Rob Cameron

Rob Cameron

Is nursing considered a career or a trade? I am not just a skilled craftsman, I am an educated professional.

Sean Dent

Sean Dent

I love hearing about how the nurse practitioner is the “next best thing” in the medical profession. Is it?

Nicole Lehr

Nicole Lehr