Jaime FNP ™ 🩺🦦⚕ Profile picture
Jun 28, 2020 5 tweets 2 min read Read on X
My life for last 12 hours:

1. Watching patients I have known for years suffocate on high flow oxygen.

2. Notifying family that their loved one is gone.

3. Talking to #medicalExaminer after each death.

4. Feeling all hope slowly die inside of me...
5. Dealing with reporters driving through the parking lot and asking questions. Taking pictures.

6. Reassuring our staff we are doing everything we can for these patients.

#Covid19 #MedTwitter
7. Helping provide post-mortem care and making sure the staff don't infect themselves.

8. Placing patients in 2 body bags after they succumb to #coronavirus - the ME wants the patients placed in two.
9. Not being able to take a break or lunch because its chaos and people are scared after seeing so much death.

10. Getting home and being exhausted, only to sleep a few hours and go right back.

#NurseTwitter
11. Coming home & my husband wants to argue over stupid things, things that don’t matter, and my brain is just tired.

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More from @JaimeAPRN

Sep 23, 2020
People have asked why I have “flipped” from a advocate of FPA to a advocate of Physician led team care. Although I have explained it several times, I am going to do it ONE last time for everyone to read. Please read carefully. /1
I have always been an advocate of safe care. Patients come first, always. Their needs outweigh my needs. Always. It’s been that way since day one. Since I first called myself a nursing student. That has not changed and will not change. /2
I used to be an advocate for Full Practice authority. I believed that nurse practitioners were every bit as capable as caring for patients on the same level as a physician, providing the same care, and that we were simply being held back by physicians and legislators, /3
Read 16 tweets
Sep 16, 2020
Who defines the practice of NPs? You would think it would be other healthcare professionals. Instead it is legislation & money. When a NP states they "want to practice at the top of their scope" or "not have restrictions on their license to practice" that NP is sadly repeating /1
Rhetoric that lobbiestst use to change the scope of practice. Fact is, if the NP is following the rules set forth in their state they are practicing at the top of their education and utilizing all skills/scope that their boards approve them to use.

Please remember that.

/2
Next time you see a NP lobbying for increased scope, increased practice rights, etc.

There is a reason the original laws were put into place. The profession was created to work with a physician-- not on our own. /end

#MedTwitter #NursePractitioner
Read 4 tweets
Sep 6, 2020
A 🧵 ~
As #nursePractitioners we must take a stand and say enough is enough. #FPA will continue to ruin our profession in many ways. Here is one way: forcing unprepared NPs into FPA to be marketable in today’s job market. /1
Over the last 10-15 years Nurse Practitioner educational standards have become less rigorous. Online schools rely heavily on paper writing versus hands on clinical learning, yet the drive for FPA has continued at full speed. /2
Some will state that “their school was just fine, very rigorous, with high quality education that taught them to practice at the top of their education. What is the “top of our education” and why do we equate it with FPA? /3
Read 11 tweets
Sep 3, 2020
Today, I will ask my supervising physician what he thinks of independent practice for nurse practitioners. I will tell you his unfiltered response later today. Stay tuned!! #nursepractitioner #MedTwitter
Ok, here is the answer.
"I think it depends on the competency of the NP-but Primary Care isn't easy & shouldn't be thought of as easy. There needs to be a mandatory competency test prior to a NP working independently even after 20-years, just to make sure everyone is on /1
The same level. We have to be fair to our patients and provide high quality care across the board. Nurse Practitioners are usually more empathetic with patients, take time to connect with patients, and thus have happier patients - but the care needs to be equal. /2
Read 5 tweets
Aug 29, 2020
Why doesn’t @AANP_NEWS address the education issues going on with today’s NP schools? We know you are not the accreditation board, but you do advocate for FPA around the country. How can AANP in good faith continue to advocate for FPA when NP schools appear to be getting worse /1
As a major association for all nurse practitioners shouldn’t AANP be advocating to clean up our educational programs first, before seeking to allow new grads FPA? Wouldn’t it benefit the entire profession to refocus efforts on strengthening our standards? /2
As a FNP I am worried about our profession. As a preceptor I witnessed numerous ethical issues with students in relation to their studies, Multiple students taking tests together, cameras covered in lockdown browsers, test banks being shared - and /3
Read 7 tweets
Aug 24, 2020
I have been asked to clarify my tweet due to it possibly being misconstrued as total nonsupport of my profession, #NursePractitioners

So, I shall try.

First, here is the tweet I am going to attempt and clarify.

#MedTwitter
My tweet was meant to highlight my views on the failings of NP schools and training as is now in the U.S. I do not agree with diploma mill schools that offer 100% acceptance rates, force students to find their own preceptors often at hefty fees, and /2
Prep the NP student so much with practice boards, they have likely seen very similar questions by the time they take their test. Because for these schools, certification rates are how they measure success - not if their students get well rounded education. /3
Read 11 tweets

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