The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 19, 1987- Page 5 From lab to le Nursing students life:" ,4 ---.infh..I lMarn their ,. world' MA t VJURY WU-N L I, tJ £> IG By LISA POLLAK Bobbie Jo Franzese, like all nur- sing school sophomores, takes a class called Basic Concepts in Nur- sing. On most days, she attends lec- tures, listens to seminars, reads books, and studies for exams. She worries about her grades. She pokes and prods and soothes away the imaginary ills of sneering plastic becomes a nurse. Franzese and her 90 sophomore classmates are perhaps not doing anything out-of-the-ordinary when they put on their blue uniforms and walk over to the University Hospital to care for patients once a week. After all, they are training to be nurses, and practical experience is arguably the best training for any job. Of course not, because for most students school is as different from "real life" as plastic dummies are from people. Last Wednesday for several hours Franzese became a nurse. Her day began at 7:30 a.m., on the neuro- logical ward, floor 4B. Franzese and five other students started by walk- ing from patient room to patient room, listening as the evening nurse briefed the morning nurse on patient conditions. This was to be Franzese's fourth "clinical experie- nce." It would be infinitely easier than her first time, she predicted. "At first I was so nervous. I had never even been in a hospital before. My first fears were that I was going to do something to hurt the patient," Franzcs remembered. "Now I now what to do, I know I'm not going to hurt them. I feel comfortable going into see my client alone." But the ward does not have what you'd call a comfortable atmosphere. These patients are ill and in pain. Many are recovering from surgery and don't have the clean, plastic appearances that the dummies do. The hospital is where nurses learn to be nurses - or that they don't want to be. "A lot of the first sight are shocks, that's for sure," Franzese admitted. "You can go to the classes and listen to the lectures and do great on the tests, but here in the hospital is where you decide that this is or this isn't for me. A lot of students do drop out of the nursing program, that's for sure. In my group none have dropped out. There's a couple, though, that started the clinical work and then began to think about other options. But no one has quit. It's funny though, because a lot of people think that nursing school is such an easy thing. But they pro- bably don't think about the things we have to do." The nurses discuss those "things" with faculty instructor Debbie Wierzinski before beginning their work. The nursing duties - giving the baths, changing the gowns making the beds, evaluating vital signs, and aiding in physical rehabilitation - have been practiced in simulation. But the men and women on the ward are of course heavier and sicker and grouchier than the dummies. "The magic word for today is pain and discomfort," Wierzinski an- nounces. She has selected for each student an appropriate patient so the students will learn "how different the pain needs of different people are. We will try to determine how to best help our patients handle pain, how we as nurses can learn how to make them comfortable." Franzese's patient is a 40-year-old male who has just undergone a lumbar lamenectomy - a fusing of his third and fourth vertebrae. He is confined to bed, barely able to move his head. But Franzese is comfor- table with her assignment, unlike one nervous student who is assigned to care for a 20-year-old' football player. "I'm worried about main- taining a professional relationship," she said. "He's so hot!" The student's discomfort is just one of the unexpected hurdles en- countered in the clinical experience. "At first it's really hard to know what to say to them," Franzese explains. "You feel awkward asking them the questions on your check- list; you're talking to them so personally, -you know. You have to be careful and watch how the patient is going to respond to you. They may feel sick or unfriendly, but as a nurse you must accommodate them. Once I establish a sense of trust, though, it's just like asking a friend how he is. You just try to be comfortable. You make sure they know you're the nurse - but not that you're assessing their condi tion." Franzese of course completes her tasks smoothly. Her patient does not think she seems young or inex- perienced. No he doesn't feel like a guinea pig; why should he? he asks. Franzece agrees. "Really I - allFof us - 'aren't doing anything out of the ordinary," she says. "Later today I'll be a student. Now I'm just a nurse doing his care for the day." The class is called Basic Concepts in Nursing. But for Franzese and her classmates, it's basic training for life. Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY dummies in a simulation laboratory. On most days she is a student, still learning to be a nurse. But several hours each week, the dummies come to life as patients whose ills are not imaginary. Basic Concepts in Nursing becomes just Nursing, and Bobbie Jo Franzese Gay rights group voices demands (Continued from Page 1) Nordby would only say, "I am not at liberty to discuss a change in the bylaws. Each LaGROC member gave Nordby the Affirmative Action of- fice's standard complaint form which includes a question about sexual ori- entation. Students asked Nordby what she does with those sheets, since the questionnaire asks about sexual orientation. -------m - m=- i the w1ndri n 1 20% OFFTALL DINNERS I * IN OUR DINiNG ROOMi This coupon not valid with any I other coupons or discounts. I Major credit cards accepted. I Offer expires 12-31-87 . (formerly Jo Jo's, Next to Vic Tanny) 625 HILTON BLVD. " 747.9500 But of the many University stu- dents who are also "in training" for someday-far-away jobs and careers, how many actually become profes- sionals on a weekly basis? 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