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Kati Kleber, MSN RN
United States
Приєднався 21 вер 2013
Hello and welcome to my channel! My name is Kati Kleber and I'm the nurse educator of FreshRN.com. I've been a nurse since 2010, and have clinical experience in cardiac med-surg, stepdown, and neurocritical care. I've been a preceptor, charge nurse, mentor, and am now an educator, speaker, author, and podcaster! This channel is here to support students and new nurses as the transition to practice by giving you some inside info, tips, encouragement, and warmth as you enter this challenging but rewarding profession.
[NURSE TIP] Inserting feeding tubes
Here's a crucial tip for inserting feeding tubes as a new nurse.
Переглядів: 240
Відео
[NEW NURSE TIPS] Skin assessment tips for new nurses
Переглядів 387Місяць тому
[NEW NURSE TIPS] Skin assessment tips for new nurses
[NEW NURSE TIP] Empathy with boundaries
Переглядів 218Місяць тому
[NEW NURSE TIP] Empathy with boundaries
[NEURO NURSE] Assessment tips for neuro floor patients
Переглядів 204Місяць тому
[NEURO NURSE] Assessment tips for neuro floor patients
Checking Pupils During a Neuro Assessment
Переглядів 248Місяць тому
Checking Pupils During a Neuro Assessment
How to deal with patients refusing meds
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How to deal with patients refusing meds
[ICU NURSES] The profound impact of the ICU...
Переглядів 371Місяць тому
[ICU NURSES] The profound impact of the ICU...
New Nurses - You Don't Have to Be BFFs with All Your Coworkers
Переглядів 163Місяць тому
New Nurses - You Don't Have to Be BFFs with All Your Coworkers
[NEW NURSE TIPS] My in-the-room routine as a med surg nurse
Переглядів 394Місяць тому
[NEW NURSE TIPS] My in-the-room routine as a med surg nurse
Nurse story time ➡️ Your normal could mean the world to your patients
Переглядів 500Місяць тому
Nurse story time ➡️ Your normal could mean the world to your patients
Seeing your higher acuity patients... last?
Переглядів 209Місяць тому
Seeing your higher acuity patients... last?
See your highest acuity patient... last?
Переглядів 340Місяць тому
See your highest acuity patient... last?
Differences in Med-surg vs ICU assessments
Переглядів 317Місяць тому
Differences in Med-surg vs ICU assessments
[NEW NURSE TIPS] Beginning of shift time management
Переглядів 380Місяць тому
[NEW NURSE TIPS] Beginning of shift time management
Here's my head to toe routine in the med surg environment
Переглядів 537Місяць тому
Here's my head to toe routine in the med surg environment
Ultimate tip for dealing with bullies in clinicals
Переглядів 250Місяць тому
Ultimate tip for dealing with bullies in clinicals
[NEW NURSE TIPS] Time management for shift change admissions
Переглядів 377Місяць тому
[NEW NURSE TIPS] Time management for shift change admissions
[NEW NURSE CHAT] Fine Tuned Assessment Routines Come With Time
Переглядів 259Місяць тому
[NEW NURSE CHAT] Fine Tuned Assessment Routines Come With Time
Should you hide your emotions as a nurse?
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Should you hide your emotions as a nurse?
[NEW NURSE CLINICAL TIP] Is a coma considered brain dead?
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[NEW NURSE CLINICAL TIP] Is a coma considered brain dead?
[New Nurse Tips] When they keep scheduling you for more hours...
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[New Nurse Tips] When they keep scheduling you for more hours...
“Tell me about a challenging experience & what you learned from it” in a nursing interview
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“Tell me about a challenging experience & what you learned from it” in a nursing interview
Teaching a Patient the Importance of a Incentive Spirometer
Переглядів 1672 місяці тому
Teaching a Patient the Importance of a Incentive Spirometer
New Nurses: What to do During Down Time in Clinical
Переглядів 1462 місяці тому
New Nurses: What to do During Down Time in Clinical
Why is there so much gossip on nursing units?
Переглядів 5312 місяці тому
Why is there so much gossip on nursing units?
Thank you so much for this video, I have no doubt it will be life changing for many healthcare professions.
Zoinks!
My jaw dropped. This is such good advice. Thank you!
Subbed, you seem like a great person
Thank you kati. I am in a nursing school and often struggle with communicating with patients and their families at my clinical
So HOW do you make sure labs are normal, oxygen levels are appropriate, etc. so their body can focus on primary injury?
I agree . May God bless you
I'm a nurse and this is very important!!!!!
Can you do a video on med math. I think this is going to be my downfall. I thought Pharmacology would’ve been but nah, it’s going to be Med Math.
Hi Dear sister can send me a guideline for nursing work in hospitals. Thank you for your help.
Hi Dear sister can send me a guideline for nursing work in hospitals. Thank you for your help.
Holy shit
More of neuro nursing video plz🥰🙏🏾
100
Thx for the reminder
Great learning tip❤. Never even thought of that. Those X-rays horrible 😔, thanks for sharing.
Feeding tube in the brain 😵😵 That's terrifying.
MISSING: IMPORTANT - PROPER INFECTION CONTROL. Proper PPE ON/OFF and hand hygeine at patient bedside and disposal . MANY STEPS MISSING IS WHY THESE KNOWLEDGE KOLLEGE NURSING "grads" cause so much in-hospital infections with this kind of mickey mouse training.
I'm not even a nurse yet I'm I'm about to start my first summer class, but I in the past have tended to cry when under extreme pressure, I'm getting better though and I will always remember this!!
This video is a duplicate I believe. Missing the video about hematomas, seizures, and tumors.
I think this video title may be wrong and needs to be swapped with Part 3.
Thank you
This seems really important.
Thank you for sharing! Why monitor for serial bnp ?
More!
No greater reward than making such a difference for someone 🎉 Great work 😊
I'm touched and entertained at the same time🎉
You are so nice
@33:00 this part is so true and what sets real teachers appart. Teachers enjoy seeing all learn and its never a burden.
This was probably the best information I have found for people looking into the CNS role, amazing information
i start my residency next week and wow this made a huge difference with my anxiety already. Cannot wait to put these tips into use. Thank you! neuroscience nurse here!
LOL, your Def giving off BULLY VIBES and your trying to justify it!!
great reminder during clinicals!!
My sister was a nurse. She worked late hours. She had to retire early because of physical issues. I am proud if her.
I try to do this while I am in school. I do non-school-related stuff on my days off.
Thank you so much for this video! I’m still so stuck between the two- I have a bachelors in neuroscience and some CNA experience. Do you have any other experiences that would help me decide?
Thank you so much for such detailed information! I am a new grad starting in a few weeks on a Neuro Intermediate unit at a trauma 1 hospital. Super excited to learn and gain a strong base before getting onto the floor.
You are an amazing educator, Kati! Yes, it is tough, but we must remain humble and teachable. It is always about Safety First for our patients and ourselves. There is always so much to learn especially when new to RN profession.
I'm watching this because I have a friend who's early in nursing and I'm encouraging him to study now and not wait till he gets to school. Get yourself thinking about the body and how nurses think and talk. And I just find learning interesting. It's not nursing but one thing I remember was someone who assisted me when I took my sleep study . In a short time he encouraged me to breathe through the nose and said I could do it. It has been a life-changing that now I always breathe through the nose.
I always see the patient that’s gonna take the least amount of time first. (Unless there’s a situation in another room of course) so that I have more time to spend with patients that are meds heavy or that just need more attention. I can always go back to the patients I see first later but if they don’t need a lot of meds I can assess them quickly safely and give meds to all patients on time that way.
I am in nursing school and this is what I aim to do. This is a challenge for me as I can feel other's energy and what they are feeling. At home, I need peace and quiet and love to watch ASMR videos.
You’re mini you is so cute!! Great advice I appreciate your wisdom ❤
one of the most difficult jobs in the world
I've had a nurse mentor since day 1 of nursing school. It was a requirement of our program. I will continue with my mentor when I graduate as well❤
99/68 is not a low BP
Some co-workers are people with not feelings, are called psychopaths
do quick assessment first , yes and the hardest for last yes!
I worked in a nursing home and I administered medication. What I usually did when a resident refused was say ok, then come back in half an hour with a cup of tea and try again. Most of my refusers had dementia. Arguing and reasoning do not work and you can't force them. Other strategies included telling and not asking. They usually didn't understand the reality of their condition or that we were attempting to look after them. They didn't understand the necessity of medication either. It's very different if a patient is entirely mentally aware and can explain their refusal. For example, I refused tramadol after surgery to fix a broken ankle. I didn't feel like I was in that much pain and I didn't want to take such a strong medication. The nurse spoke to the doctor and I was prescribed a different painkiller instead. It wouldn't have been right to keep pushing the meds on me when I'd already said no for a perfectly valid reason.
Our nursing school required us to find a mentor for our program❤
This is great insight. Education is great. But some still won't listen. I educated while I worked on Step Down and it helped avoid many of these situations. Now I work in psych. Many patients are having fixed delusions, lack of insight, etc. I try to educate and nothing changes. It usually is only an order to treat/override that gets them to take their meds.
Yeah... My mother rationalizes her delusions and hallucinations as witchcraft and telepathy and firmly rejects the idea that there is anything amiss with her psychologically even when she is properly medicated, and she is stubborn as a very stupid mule, so any attempts at convincing her to take her meds is likely just going to make her more firm in her dedication to avoiding them. Also, word use when medical professionals talk to her can make a big difference. She complained to a doctor about the side effects one time, and he suggested trying to lower the dose. What she heard, was "quit the meds". Basically she's been on a rollercoaster of getting on and off those meds all of my life.