Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - (Page 45) 45 These are the overwhelming thoughts and feelings of most students as they begin to think about their first clinical experience. I knew my grades weren’t the best, but I was hoping that my technical skills could carry me through. I felt confident and willing to work hard on any task that my preceptors would put before me. But I also knew that my strong personality, if left unchecked, could get the best of me. My stomach worked itself into knots just thinking about the first day stepping into the hospital, not knowing where I was supposed to go, hoping my car could make the drive. I was overthinking and overanalyzing everything, including where I would park, if I would be allowed a locker to put my things, if like a fellow student’s first day, my first patient would die, etc. Not only did I have a new place to go, I also had new people to meet. During the first week of the program, instructors tell students to venture out of their comfort zone and try going to new places for clinical. Only 4 of the 14 students in Spokane can stay in town to attend clinical. When contemplating site opportunities, months prior I sent out an email to everyone I knew, asking if anyone had contacts in the Denver area. I had a few respond, but a friend stationed in Iraq finally mentioned family that lived in the Denver-metro area. After several emails to the family I would be living with for 3 weeks, I decided to make it official. Through this experience, I am now a part of a family I never knew. My 1990 Volkswagen Jetta and I headed east with a full tank of gas, a trusty map, tunes, and a suitcase packed. Twelve hundred miles, 2 days, 5 sodas, 3 packages of candy and one emergency oil change later, I arrived in Denver, Colorado. I had never traveled to Denver before, but driving through the most boring part of Wyoming to get there was worth my time and money. I learned a vast amount of information in the first 9 months of the program. However, it did not seem to stack up as much as the invaluable experience I gained from being a part of the staff at Providence St. Anthony Hospital– Central (SAC) in Denver. I was optimistic about my stay and the 120 hours I would complete in the 3week period. The staff was very welcoming and warm, despite their efforts to be “tough” on me as the new student. I was able to scrub approximately 42 cases during my stay and observed more than 65. I met some amazing nurses, physicians and technologists. Staff allowed me to participate in any cases I wished, including cardioversions, known interventions, patent foramen ovale (PFO) closures, standard right and left heart caths, implants, electrophysiology studies and ST-elevation myocardial infarctions (STEMIs) and it wasn’t just prepping the groin — an important, but thankless, task. The months of preparation, exams and often confusing concepts and lectures made sense as soon as I was able to put the information I learned to use and lay my hands on the equipment. All the technical jargon I had to remember and regurgitate on tests did not seem to sink in until I heard it used in the lab. Now along with English and Spanish, I am fluent in the “CathLabbian” language. While in Denver, a SimSuite training unit came to SAC. I administered medications, ran the catheters, cannulated, rotoblated and stented. I was put into the driver’s seat as the “doctor” (minus the extra years of education). Cannulating was much more difficult than I expected and made me appreciate the previous case I assisted when the physician seemingly took forever to cannulate the right coronary artery. I remember my inner monologue calling out, “What is taking so long?! It’s right there!” This training opened my eyes to the woes and joys of physicians’ tasks, giving me more appreciation for the skill and technique they employ every day. I even received a souvenir Taxus stent bouffant out of the experience, which I proudly donned the remainder of my time there. For my first hands-on experience in the cath lab, panning, manipulating movable core wires, keeping up with the experienced physician and calling out to the monitor was a little too much for me. My assigned preceptor helped by always keeping one hand on the table, whispering tips and tricks into my ear, and stepping in for the in-depth, beyond-myscope moments. Every staff member at SAC shares duties, including circulating, scrubbing, and monitoring. Therefore, physicians and staff tend to be more forgiving and patient, taking on the “everyone has to start somewhere” mentality that every hospital encountering students should have. In the short time I have been in the field, I have met some outstanding people and some bullies. After my awesome educational and upbeat experience at Denver, I have since gone elsewhere, thinking my experience would be the same; unfortunately, that has mostly not been the case. As a student, I am required to learn other technologists’ methods, but staff should be willing to let students know where there is needed improvement without belittling and sticking the student behind the trash can when they do not want to “deal” with you. Even Dr. Jarvik had to be a student before he developed the artificial heart. In all honesty, I have had dozens of great experiences for every bad one, but unfortunately it is the bad experiences that students tend to remember. Being a student should not be like boot camp. You do not need to tear us down to build us up. I try to learn from all the experience I have undergone and plan on being the type of technologist who is not suffocating with my students, but still there to give a helping hand when they are feeling alone and out of place, as we all have felt sometime in our careers. There is a happy medium between being the “mother” in the lab who holds your hand while putting a nasal cannula on and being an insensitive dictator who questions your competency. I urge staff to find that spot and remember what it is like to be a student when one shows up to learn from you. Being a student is tough, no question, but a good experience, a friendly smile and two willing parties can make a student blossom into a fellow tech. My 3 weeks at St. Anthony’s went by quickly and I wished I had more time. Not only did I have an eye-opening and educational experience, I made new friends and became a small part of one of Solucient’s Top 100 Cardiovascular Hospitals. I would be fortunate to have the opportunity to train at St. Anthony Hospital again and complete my degree. ■ Cassidy Lilienthal can be contacted at lilienthal@comcast.net Update: I look forward to writing more about my upcoming clinical experience, which will take place in April. And what is even more exciting is that St. Anthony’s has asked me to return! http://cardiacservicesinc.com http://cardiacservicesinc.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 Central Baptist Hospital Contrast Media Use in High-Risk Patients An Ergonomic Survey of Cath Lab Repetitive Stress Injuries Contents Clinical Editor’s Corner Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, a.k.a., Transient Left Ventricular Apical Ballooning Syndrome: An Acute Coronary Syndrome Imposter Searching for the Key to D2B STEMI Intervention News STEMI Interventions: Commentary The Massachusetts Stent Study The Value of Educating Staff Ask the Clinical Instructor: A Q&A Column for Those New to the Cath Lab SICP* Chapter Updates The Society of Invasive Cardiovascular Professionals Holds an RCIS Review Course at New Cardiovascular Horizons 18:20 To Denver — One Student’s First Clinical Experience CEU Education Center Meetings Calendar What Do You Think? Clinical & Industry News Classifieds The Ten-Minute Interview with…Heather Vardon, RN Advertisers Index Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - An Ergonomic Survey of Cath Lab Repetitive Stress Injuries (Page 1) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - An Ergonomic Survey of Cath Lab Repetitive Stress Injuries (Page 2) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 4) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 5) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 6) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 7) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 8) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 9) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 10) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 11) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 12) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 13) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 14) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 15) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 16) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 17) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 18) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 19) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 20) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 21) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 22) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical Editor’s Corner (Page 23) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, a.k.a., Transient Left Ventricular Apical Ballooning Syndrome: An Acute Coronary Syndrome Imposter (Page 24) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, a.k.a., Transient Left Ventricular Apical Ballooning Syndrome: An Acute Coronary Syndrome Imposter (Page 25) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, a.k.a., Transient Left Ventricular Apical Ballooning Syndrome: An Acute Coronary Syndrome Imposter (Page 26) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, a.k.a., Transient Left Ventricular Apical Ballooning Syndrome: An Acute Coronary Syndrome Imposter (Page 27) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Intervention News (Page 28) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Intervention News (Page 29) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Intervention News (Page 30) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Interventions: Commentary (Page 31) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Interventions: Commentary (Page 32) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Interventions: Commentary (Page 33) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Interventions: Commentary (Page 34) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - STEMI Interventions: Commentary (Page 35) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 36) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 37) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 38) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 39) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Ask the Clinical Instructor: A Q&A Column for Those New to the Cath Lab (Page 40) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Ask the Clinical Instructor: A Q&A Column for Those New to the Cath Lab (Page 41) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - SICP* Chapter Updates (Page 42) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - The Society of Invasive Cardiovascular Professionals Holds an RCIS Review Course at New Cardiovascular Horizons (Page 43) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - 18:20 To Denver — One Student’s First Clinical Experience (Page 44) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - 18:20 To Denver — One Student’s First Clinical Experience (Page 45) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Meetings Calendar (Page 46) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Meetings Calendar (Page 47) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - What Do You Think? (Page 48) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - What Do You Think? (Page 49) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 50) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 51) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 52) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 53) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 54) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 55) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 56) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Clinical & Industry News (Page 57) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 58) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 59) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 60) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 61) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 62) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 63) Cath Lab Digest - January 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 64)
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