Are We Misremembering or Is It Easier to Get into Flight Nursing Now?

Spoiler: It’s not just you.

I remember when getting into flight nursing felt like chasing a unicorn while carrying a 12-lead and an arterial line setup. It was the elite club of critical care, the badge of honor you earned after years in the trenches, a hundred code browns, and more night shifts than the moon. You needed ICU cred, trauma street smarts, the ability to start an IV in the dark (with turbulence), and preferably a personality that didn’t crack under pressure, or in the co-pilot’s seat.

Now? Blink twice and someone’s in a flight suit with just the minimum required experience and a freshly laminated NRP card.

What. Is. Happening.

Okay, let’s talk about the pandemic-shaped elephant in the room. COVID didn’t just shake the snow globe, it shattered the whole thing. Healthcare was gutted, burned out, stretched thin, and then duct-taped together again. Experienced nurses left in droves, either because they couldn’t take another shift in PPE or they realized their lives were worth more than their paychecks (wild concept, right?). And just like that, the flight industry, already a small, specialized corner of nursing, was desperate.

Enter: lowered barriers. Don’t get me wrong, some of the newer folks coming in are absolutely incredible. Passionate, smart, adaptable. But the truth is, the bench just isn’t as deep anymore. So programs that once required five years of ICU, a resume written in Latin, and a letter of recommendation from the ghost of Florence Nightingale are now hiring with, well, let’s just say a little more flexibility.

Orientation programs got longer. Clinical ride time got shorter. Preceptors are working overtime trying to build experience that normally takes years because it has to happen now. And while this isn’t about blaming individuals (again, a lot of these nurses are stepping up big time), it’s worth asking: what does this mean for safety, patient outcomes, and the long-term health of the flight community?

Honestly? It’s a mixed bag.

On one hand, the door being slightly more open is awesome for motivated nurses who’ve dreamed of flying but didn’t want to wait a decade and sacrifice a goat under a full moon to get there. On the other hand, there’s something a little nerve-wracking about seeing the steep learning curve of flight medicine get compressed into a crash course, literally and figuratively.

Flight nursing isn’t just sexy uniforms and skyline selfies. It’s knowing how to titrate pressors, dose the sedation, all while troubleshooting a failing vent at 3,000 feet. It’s recognizing when your patient’s going south and there’s no code team to back you up, just you, your partner, and whatever fits in that aircraft. And let’s be real, there’s a difference between being “trainable” and being ready for a patient actively trying to die on you mid-air.

So yes, it’s easier to get in right now, but that doesn’t mean it’s easier to stay. Flight nursing still demands the same resilience, critical thinking, and ability to function with one eye on your patient and the other on your altimeter. The pressure is just distributed differently now, and it’s often falling on the backs of experienced preceptors and med crew trying to bridge the gap.

In the end, the skies may be a little more crowded with new faces, but if we nurture them, teach them right, and don’t skip the hard conversations, maybe this next generation will carry the torch with just as much grit and grace.

And if not? Well, I’ll be the one in the corner muttering about “back in my day” while re-taping an IV mid-flight.

Six Sentiments for Season Six: Nurses Week 2020

Heeeeeeey Nurseeeeeee!

In honor of Nurses Week 2020 and what will be my sixth year of nursing, I wanted to make a post with the six observations I have about who I am as a nurse and pieces of wisdom I wanted to share.

  1. I came into this profession shiny and new with clean, pressed edges and resounding hope. While I still believe in the goodness of people, my cotton is a bit wrinkled now from the disregard shown by humanity. It’s intact still, not threadbare and laid waste from years of abuse quite yet. You can see the change notably from six years ago. Sometimes something really good happens that irons out the wrinkles and makes the cotton look renewed though. Sometimes when a small tear happens, a kind soul will come along a patch it up. In our profession, we can’t expect our cloth to stay immaculate–we should expect it to become a bit dirty and a bit worn. But we need to allow ourselves to let it be repaired and refreshed. Our work is meaningful.
  2. Protect your “helpers.” Value them. Now when I say “helpers” I don’t mean that these people are there to serve YOU (The Nurse)–you are all there for the common goal of bettering a patient. These individuals help in making your jobs easier though. So value them. Protect their interests. Are your respiratory therapists lobbying for better equipment? Join them. They know their specialty and there is probably a reason. Is another nurse abusing her patient care technician? Step up. Be a leader by advocating for that person. Is the department paramedic pushing for more privileges their license allows them to do? Speak up! These are our team mates. Rally to their sides.
  3. Pass on what you learn. It is so easy to find information and hoard it but its better for a department when you disseminate it. In this pandemic, I early on volunteered to moderate a Facebook Group Covid-19 Healthcare Professionals (click for link) which at the time (early March?) had like 300 people. The idea was to have a place for professionals to share information and develop a community. It quickly grew to over 84,000 people (at time of writing). Ideas flew like crazy from how to prevent skin breakdown from face masks to setting up vents and pumps outside negative pressure rooms. But the idea was this: knowledge sharing. Teach what you know to others–precept new team mates and if more experienced or older staff ask for help with something, teach without judgement. Do all acts for the betterment of the whole.
  4. Nursing will disappoint you. A lot. Frequently. Management will promise you the world only to give you scraps whether on purpose or not. Toad, Four Year Degree in Bladder HoldingPatients will burn you despite you breaking your back for them. The pay will never equal the work some days. Lunches won’t come some days and your bladder will harden to that comparable to those weird frogs that hibernate for years in Australia (I pulled out that metaphor from somewhere…don’t @ me).
  5. You don’t always get what you want (to quote the Rolling Stones). In fact–get used to it. I had a lot of “no’s” told to me in six years. Career paths I thought I wanted that went to other people. It hurt, guys. Baaaaaaaad. But the funny thing about “no” is sometimes it’s just a primer for “because here’s this instead! TA-FRIIIIGGGGIINNN-DAAA!” And it really is better. I didn’t always trust that I was told no for a reason. I felt like that no was my own resounding failure when in reality it was just because I was a better fit elsewhere. That job I thought was perfect? It took a wiser nurse sitting me down and telling me I wouldn’t be happy doing it. I didn’t believe her for a while and I was bitter at her assumption–how could she possibly know what I wanted? But she was right. I should’ve listened instead of being angry. Because my dream job offer came half a year later. Even if you don’t get that dream offer like I did right away, keep at it. Something I always tell new nurses or nurses trying to strive for something is this: Never accept “no”–rephrase it as “not right now.” By accepting that no and letting the door slam in your face, you’re missing possibilities of three more doors opening just down the road to even better opportunities.
  6. While nursing has given me the most painful memories and caused me some of the worst heartaches–it has given me so much more. It has given me purpose. Friendships. Meaning. It has saved my life when I felt it didn’t mean anything. Days I didn’t want to get out of bed–I knew I was needed by my coworkers and patients. Somedays that made the difference for me just knowing that the work I did with my two little hands caused change gives my career meaning. I’m proud of what I do and I couldn’t imagine doing anything else even on my worst days… find meaning in your work. This will help you power through the ugliest parts of our job.

 

So this week… this whole month… this whole year… hold your heads up high, Nurses.

We have faced insurmountable odds in some parts of the world and in those not necessarily being inundated by viral illness but rather facing unemployment from low-census or budget-cuts. The world sees us and while they may not necessarily empathize with our plights and administration may still gift us pizza parties (not you night shift–you get half eaten stale donuts because “tradition”) instead of safe staffing and all the things we really need…we’ll still keep showing up and providing top-notch care.

Happy Nurses Week!

 

 

Give Me The Resilient Failure– Why ‘Gram Doesn’t Show The Whole Picture

Who has seen my Instagram? (It is right hereeeeeee SHAMELESS PLUGGGGG)

From the outside looking in, my life looks pretty damn charmed. Right?! Solid marriage with a great husband, cute dogs (and I guess an ok cat), beautiful home, amazing/successful career, world traveler, up and coming social media savant (as I’ve been told), and getting my fitness into shape after a life of feeling like an ugly duckling.

Social media has a way of allowing us to create the picturesque dreamscape of a life–complete with vibrant filters and floating hearts as our followers flick their thumbs over the images in the “like” gesture as they move on to the next glamour shot. People sit in the quiet of their living rooms, pondering how mediocre their own lives, spouses, or careers are in comparison to these online personalities of their friends’ or families’ or favorite influencers’ and wonder how they went so wrong. But they forget that the internet is a series of smoke and mirrors; often the whole truth is veiled behind thin half truths or outright lies.

Too often, we lack the entire story. We miss out on the means and simply see the ends.

As a result, our own triumphs seem shadowed by those of others because we see only their “good things” and never the bad. However, it’s really the survival of the bad that defines who are when we get to our “good thing.”

So I’m here to tell you this. No person, no matter how picture perfect they may seem is perfect and honestly, I’d rather the person who has been through hell and back over the person who has never struggled a day in their life to take care of me. Give me the single parent, the child of drug addicted parents or even the survivor of drug addiction, the veteran who has seen war and death, the medical student who struggled through school because of finances, the nursing student who might’ve failed out once before getting his life straight… I want the person who has known what is like to have failed.

I am positive many of my readers have heard the analogy about broken bones… well we know that there is a modicum of truth to the saying. After a bone is broken, the area the bone is broken grows back stronger. Now, we won’t debate the actual physiology in this statement but we’ll use it for this illusion.

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When you go through hardship, one of two things can happen…

  • You succumb to the failure.
  • You accept it, learn from it, grow from it, move forward.

So when the bone breaks, you can either reset it and allow it to heal and grow back stronger or you can leave it mangled and useless. The choice is yours.

People who choose to heal are those people I prefer as my colleagues because they have a great deal of traits consistent with emotional resiliency. These people are forged in fire. Like steel, they are strengthened by the flames.

What is resiliency, though? It is the rubber band of our constitution. It is our capability to bounce back. By definition, it is our ability to mentally or emotionally cope with a crisis or return to our pre-crisis state quickly. It is our ability to mitigate the negative effects of external stressors on our internal psyche. For some, this may be a native skill while others had to adapt over time when exposed to crisis. Further, it is important to note, the definition of crisis isn’t static–crisis to one person can be an entirely different meaning to another. It simply means that it creates great potential for suffering for an individual and because of the dynamic natural of humanity, the spectrum of what constitutes a crisis is broad. What matters, is how does the crisis affect a person and how to they cope with it. Overcoming the crisis dictates their resilience.

Think of a time you had a problem. One that caused you great emotional turmoil. How did it make you feel? I’m sure the first thing you felt was your heart rate go up. You could feel the flutter in your chest. Maybe your stomach felt strange. A sweat on the back of your neck. Your respirations may have increased. Stereotypical fight or flight mode. The surge of the epinephrine as the sympathetic nervous system activated. Your brain racing.

And then as the crisis settled, the tiredness. The concerns. The replaying of the scenario. The planning. The promises to yourself. The criticism of your actions. The blaming of yourself or others. The regrets. Maybe instead the pride in your work or your team mates. Or maybe simply…nothing at all.

More time passed. The feelings abated. Each feeling you went through felt a little less intense. You remembered the take-aways but the FEELINGS associated with the event were less sharp.

Resilience. You got through it. You survived whatever that thing was.

 

What Do I Know About Survival?: A Series of Unfortunate Events

For me, it was a series of years where I wanted to quit. My childhood wasn’t necessarily hard but at times it wasn’t easy. My parents loved me, there was no question about that but at times it did not always seem like they were ready for me. My father struggled with his own demons throughout my life while my mom, still young and developing her own career, had me unexpectedly. Their relationship was tumultuous at times given the circumstances but ultimately, they seemed to figure it all out. They saw the best in people, despite their sometimes questionable backgrounds–it is a trait I carry on myself, one that sometimes gets me burned in the end.

As a teenager, I was sexually assaulted over the course of a few year relationship and struggled heavily with my own issues with depression and anxiety. I fought constantly with my parents, as teenagers do. It is a joke I like to make that I was often grounded more than I wasn’t simply because I bucked against my dad a lot. Even in my teenage years though, I had a great work ethic often working at minimum 2 jobs from the time I was 15, sometimes 3 or 4 depending if a previous employer needed under the table work or a babysitter.

Towards my later teenage years, I went through a devastating breakup with the first real love of my life and needed something to take my mind off that. So I decided to enroll in EMT class. I had an interest in medicine and figured it would be a great way to start off a career. Well… I didn’t focus and failed about a handful of weeks in. I was humiliated. I asked the instructor to audit the course for the rest of the semester despite the fact I wouldn’t be able to test with my class mates and although it wasn’t typical, he allowed me to. I re-enrolled the next semester and had one of the highest cumulative averages. And this was the entire foundation for my flight career later in life.

Getting to college, I thought I was in for a fresh start. I got to Philadelphia to a fancy (and expensive) private Catholic university where I was starting as a pre-med major with 20+ credits my first semester. I was excited to pledge a sorority, play rugby, and make new friends. But soon that changed. My boyfriend back home guilted me about going away to school “for a piece of paper”. My friends got me into heavy drinking and drugs. My depression started to rear its ugly head again until I completely stopped leaving my room, going to class, and even eating. None of my professors even noticed my absence. It wasn’t until my suicide note was discovered the day I had planned to hang myself in my dorm room that I was noticed. It was almost 2 weeks I had been missing from classes.

I was taken to the Dean’s office by security. I was delirious from not eating or drinking for days, messy from not showering for days. I was being grilled questions I couldn’t answer. I just wanted to sleep. I was driven to a hospital and taken into an emergency room where there were white walls, lots of windows into patient rooms, and patients were yelling. I was put into a room with only a bed, bolted to the floor. A physician’s assistant came in to speak with me–when I asked for my mom, she ignored me and asked me about my period. When I told her I didn’t know when my last one was (because I had no idea what day it was and because my birth control was messed up), my response was “you’re 18, how do you not know when your last period was? Stop being obtuse!” And she walked out.

It was cold, I wasn’t given a blanket. The older man in the room next to me kept staring at me through the glass. I was alone. I was being involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility but luckily I was given the option to voluntarily ask for help, which I did. I spent over a week getting treatment and while I never would want to do it again, it saved my life, and I am so thankful it did.

I returned to school in the spring with another 20 credits but all in all, my freshman year of college, of the 40+ credits I took, I passed 4 of them. It was a humiliating and expensive experience. But it was a lesson. It was a growing pain. A broken bone.

The next school year, I transferred to a technical college in Central Pennsylvania and lived at a firehouse. In exchange for running ambulance calls at night, I received free room and board. I ditched the unsupportive, going nowhere boyfriend and met my now husband. I started coursework in a paramedic program and my grades were  getting better. Not quite great yet, but I passed everything. I was much happier. I changed majors again to nursing the next year.

Then in 2010, the night before a major anatomy and physiology exam, I wrecked my car. I had just dropped my boyfriend off to pick up his vehicle at the mechanic and was driving home on the highway. We had finished a fire company meeting; I was tired and wanted to get to sleep for my exam in the morning. I will never know the events leading up to the crash because I had lost the memories of days prior to the event, but my car went off the roadway, rolled 6-7 times, and came to a rest down a steep embankment on its roof. From the highway, the car was completely invisible.

My boyfriend had made it home and saw I wasn’t home yet despite leaving a few minutes before him. He received a phone call from me, my voice panicked stating “I don’t know where I am and there is blood in my ear.” Of course, I didn’t call 9-1-1, I called him. He told me to hang up and call 9-1-1. He called 9-1-1 to tell them where he thought I could be and I also called. Units went up and down the highway looking for me for a while. I was found by a fire police unit as I was walking down the road, bloody. I was repetitive–stating the same things over and over.

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I was admitted for a brain injury for a few days with a minor basilar skull fracture. To this day, I still don’t remember the days before the accident or about 10 days after. All I remember is vaguely seeing the grass and sky in my windshield as I rolled, loud metal noises, and screaming and pressing my horn into the hillside. Needless to say, I got a D that anatomy exam–it was bone and muscles and I had forgotten a week worth of material.

It seems like a lot, right? But not too much…? There was more…

I did ok for a few years. My grades got better. I was starting to see more As than Bs. I simultaneously loved and hated nursing school (much like everyone does).

In May 2013, I woke up to go to work at the hospital where I was a patient care technician. I had noticed my left hand and arm were numb. I figured I slept weird on it and ignored it–I was running late. I got to work 15 minutes later, noticing the numbness and tingling had spread quickly and intensely through my entire left side. I looked over to my care coordinator to ask if she had ever experienced anything like this. I opened my mouth to ask her and as I started to try to speak, I felt my entire left side of my face start to slide and go numb. The words coming out of my mouth weren’t making sense. I blinked and tried to ask again because she looked confused. I tried to lift my left hand up to touch my cheek and couldn’t move it. It all went black as I hit the floor… distantly, I heard the rapid response called overheard.

And then I opened my eyes and I was in the ER with a chaplain speaking to me. The stroke cart was being wheeled into the room. I knew the nurses from bringing patients in on the ambulance. The doctor was asking me questions about times and asking me to move things (why can’t I move that?). My manager was standing there on the phone with my husband (we had gotten married that year). They were talking to me about TPA.

I’m 23… what do you mean you think I’m having a stroke? Yeah lupus runs in my family… shit… my words sound jumbled… I’ll shake my head yes and no. There is my husband. Yes… birth control–I take that. No… don’t smoke. Yes–give the TPA. Yes–fine, fly me to that hospital.

Screen Shot 2020-02-17 at 10.32.15 AMIt happened so fast… before I knew it, I was being loaded into a helicopter. I was in the air flying over my city. I was 80 miles away in another CT machine, getting more IV contrast. I was in an ICU bed. I wasn’t allowed to get up to pee. I could talk now though–that was a plus. My mom lives ten minutes away, at least I wouldn’t be alone but it would take my husband almost two hours to get to me if he drove the speed limit. I spent three days in the Neuro ICU while they ruled out causes and sent me home on medications. I was treated for a stroke but they determined that the cause wasn’t ischemic but rather related to more electrical/migraine activity. It was strange, I’ve never even had a headache. Who knew a migraine could be so scary?

I got better and spent the summer in Minnesota, leaving a few weeks later. It was between my Junior and Senior year so I had secured a spot in the Mayo Clinic externship program for 10 weeks on a trauma floor. I still had weird neurological symptoms all summer long but was still titrating off of medications for it. I tried to down play it and focus on what was to come.

I came home a bit smarter and ready to finish nursing school with a bang. I was beginning to look at jobs and apply for interviews, it was my goal to have an offer by January. I was spending my free time studying and applying. My grades were looking very good. I was the public relations officer for SNA and it seemed like everything was going my way.

Until my husband’s birthday. My husband came home to find me in full tonic clonic seizure activity on our kitchen floor. Never had I had a seizure until that day and in the span of a handful of hours, I had three separate events. I was admitted and started on an anti-epileptic medication. Over the course of the school year, I had multiple events resulting in admissions to the hospital and the intensive care unit, multiple titrations of medications, multiple visits to neurologists, multiple eegs. I thought this was going to be the year I had to drop out. My medications had me so unable to focus and I had missed so much class there was no hope to graduate. It was by sheer will and determination and the grace of my instructors to help me work around my diagnosis that I was able to pass that year.

 

So What Does This Have to Do With Anything? You Grow Through What You Go Through.

Resilience is how you come back in the face of adversity. When dealt a hand, how will you respond? It is easy to look at a person on Instagram or Facebook who projects a perfect picture and say “I will never be him or her… they’re perfect.” However, this discredits our own ability to achieve our goals way too much. The images we see only show partial truths.

The problem social media has is that we only see half the truth or none at all. We see what people want us to. We see perfectly choreographed pictures meant to endorse an idea. Often that idea is “I made it!” It is not always that people want YOU to feel inferior but that they want to feel better about their own lives, so they create their own narratives. They present their autobiographies in a more palatable way.

Me? Guilty. Guilty AF. Put me away, Judge.

However, now you know that behind the perfect picture is an imperfect person–and quite frankly, they are my favorite types of people. To get where I am, I had to constantly get thrown several steps backwards and then fight my way forwards every time. But every time I had to face adversity, it taught me how to problem solve and how to use my resources. As cliche as it may sound, what didn’t kill me made me stronger. It shaped my ability to be resilient.

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What Does Resilience Do For You, Then?

So let’s talk about traits emotionally resilient people have and why nurses or pre-hospital folks or really anyone in medicine or emergency response can benefit from it.

  1. They practice good self-care.
    • Part of dealing with other people’s crises is learning to be able to know when it is time to put that burden down and focus on yourself. Understanding that you are one person and can only save the world once your mind, body, and spirit are cared for is something many people never learn. As a result, they burn out or develop vices to deal with the ugliness of the world. They inflict more harm on themselves in an effort to stop the emotional hemorrhage.
    • “Make it a priority to create a homeostasis (a baseline) for yourself–then take time to bring yourself back to that place. Care for yourself so you can care for others.”
  2. They understand bad things don’t define them.
    • At any time, something can go wrong–whether it is simply because Mercury was in retrograde or because you over-estimated your own abilities or because you took a short-cut when you shouldn’t have. Regardless, a bad thing happened. Now what? Well… how do you move on? Do you continue to make the same mistake, allow the worse thing to continue to dictate the circumstances of your life or do you control the narrative? We cannot always control what happens but we can control what we do after the fact. Do we run and hide, pretend it isn’t happening, or do we face it, learn from it, and come out better? We are defined by how we REACT to the catalyst, not necessarily by the catalyst itself.
    • “If it doesn’t matter in five years, don’t let it bother you for five minutes.”
  3. They treat others with compassion.
    • Empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. It is considered a more noble feeling than sympathy in that it puts two people on level playing ground as sympathy is defined more of feeling pity for someone. Some people feel this is a form of being looked down upon when you already feel low. People with emotional resilience understand what it is like to be low–thus they feel compassion. They do so in a manner without judgement–they understand what ugliness and hurt looks like. These are the people we serve as emergency responders and healthcare providers. We see humanity at its worst thus they need us to show humanity.
    • “I see you because I was you…”
  4. They understand what it means to “race in the rain”.
    • Life will never be perfect–the emotionally resilient have learned this. Things will go wrong. Train for the worst case scenario but hope for the best. Accept that things are in flux and are dynamic. Expect the unexpected and make the best of that. Emergency medicine and first responders are ideal examples of this concept.
    • “…grant me the serenity
      to accept the things I cannot change;
      courage to change the things I can;
      and wisdom to know the difference…” –Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971)
  5. They admit when they need help.
    • Being first responders and healthcare providers, we are expected to be proficient in problem solving and critical thinking, swift on our feet, and courageous in the face of adversity. However, it is important we acknowledge our short-comings both in knowledge and in coping. We need to know to ask for help when lives depend on us, including those times when our own lives depend on our abilities to admit we need help. Every year, more and more first responders and healthcare providers succumb to the darkness of their jobs rather than admit their perceived weaknesses and every life extinguished is one too many.
    • “From what I’ve seen, it isn’t so much the act of asking that paralyzes us–it’s what lies beneath: the fear of being vulnerable, the fear of rejection, the fear of looking needy or weak. The fear of being seen as a burdensome member of the community instead of a productive one. It points, fundamentally, to our separation from one another.” –Amanda Palmer
  6. They know when it is time to listen, when to be supportive, and when to allow for space.
    • Having needed your own time to be heard when you speak, to feel like you were supported, and needed time to be alone in your thoughts, you understand that people need what they need when they need it. The emotionally resilient understand that to push too much against a rigid trunk may cause it to splinter and break where if left to its own devices, it may grow strong on its own. They understand that people cope with things differently and do not remain static in their processes.
    • “The wounds that never heal can only be mourned alone.” –James Frey
  7. They build a tribe of supportive people.
    • The resilient understand that people can drain your energy and impact your healing so they choose who they surround themselves with purposefully. They find people who support them and while those people may not necessarily understand the problems they see or experience, they still support their personal growth through it all.
  8. They know who they can go to for support and who will give them the truth they need versus the people who will simply perpetuate drama.
    • Some of the most important things a person learns about themselves comes from the people they respect. Some times, we have inflated self-esteems or overly low opinions about ourselves so it is important we have people we can rely on to tell us how it is. Are our skills lackluster? Is our critical thinking off base? Do we put off bad airs around colleagues? Your person will make sure you’re not left in the dark. Meanwhile, avoiding people who will inflate your ego or trample your dreams will help you stay within your homeostasis.
  9. They possess an ability to reflect on themselves as they have developed self-awareness.
    • This particular point took me a long time to develop. I had to learn to be honest with myself. If you read my post about my first year in flight (here) you’ll recall how I suffered from a bit of an ego coming from my ER but then an overly low sense of self-worth when I got to flight. But bringing myself back to center and being able to give honest evaluation of myself has been a constant struggle that has gotten a little easier all the time. Becoming more self-aware allows you to internally tune your chords to create a better running human and make you a better first responder/healthcare provider.
  10. They have an ability to be grateful.
    • Life is full of disappointments–we often don’t get what we want no matter how hard we work. Whether it’s the flight job of our dreams, that paid firefighter job, the medical school admission we wanted… learning to be grateful for the opportunities we DO get (“I did get the interview at least…”) is another difficult lesson. Learning to see failure and rejection as lessons as opposed to the end of your dreams is step one to re-framing your thinking. The resilient understand not everything goes right the first time but they are grateful for what they already have and what they were offered. They get excited for what may come. It isn’t to say they can’t be disappointed, its just they don’t wallow in their miseries.

 

Screen Shot 2020-02-22 at 9.39.24 PMBecoming More Resilient

Short of having gone through some dark things and developed coping mechanisms, resilience can be learned. I’m not going to reinvent the wheel though–many great articles exist on the ability to re-frame your thinking to become more resilient. It all starts with how you critique your past and prepare for future challenges.

 

 

  • Don’t allow yourself to be stuck in negative thought cycles.
  • Stop being afraid to fail– you will never succeed if you never try!
    • Do mothers and fathers criticize a baby for falling after taking a step? No… they celebrate that first step and when the baby finally walks, no one remembers the baby falling. So too when you succeed, no one will care about how many times it took you to get there.
  • Find the lessons in past failures or challenges.
    • What can you learn? Consider job interviews– every interview is a practice for the next one. Take what went well with you, get rid of what didn’t.
  • Stop dwelling on your past failures and start planning for the next attempts.
    • When the door shuts in your face, instead of staring at it…look down the street for the three more slightly ajar ones that may be alluding your gaze if you don’t look carefully enough–behind those doors may lie your path to your dreams.
  • Emotionally distance yourself from the challenges you come across.
    • Try to picture the situation you are in as if you were outside your own body, watching it play out. Would someone who was not you be upset about this? Try doing this exercise when you are distracted by crises to allow yourself an opportunity to evaluate your situation and options.
  • “This too shall pass.”
    • Things will move on–the passing of time eases the burdens of the soul. While it stings now, that broken bone will heal.
  • Find the positives in the challenge.
    • Attempt to reframe your mind–use a technique called positive reappraisal. It means that when you are in a situation where there is no real positive, you create your own. Consider you went to an interview that you did not get an offer for– you reframe the thought with “I at least got an interview–it means I am at least meeting standards needed to get into an interview. This is further than I was before.”
  • Make it a point to get uncomfortable– stop staying in the shallows.
    • A popular quote in the Crossfit community is “I’d rather choke on greatness than nibble on mediocrity”–and while I’m not into Crossfit, myself, I really like this quote. Mediocrity in this example is being comfortable but boring. Make it a goal to go against your comfort levels to attain the greatness you want, whatever greatness means to you.

 

Failure has such an ugly connotation associated with it. However, we shouldn’t allow what we perceive as failure to make us feel less awesome than we really are. Us failures are an awesome people–we survive and overcome. We are proficient in adapting and problem-solving. Failure is really actually quite beautiful. So whoever you are, wherever you are… if you’re out there looking at some Insta-celeb’s ‘Gram and thinking how your life doesn’t measure up, please pick your head up and straighten that crown. You are every bit as successful and amazing.

 

–Clear skies and tail winds.

 

 


Footnote: Obviously there was a lot of personal stuff I divulged here–I really hope my own personal story of perseverance has maybe inspired you to stay your course. Feel free to share your own stories of failure and overcoming in the comments to inspire your peers. As always, I welcome any and all feedback.

So, You Wanna Be A Flight Nurse?

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One of the most common questions I get on my Instagram is “I wanna be a flight nurse but don’t know where to start! What do you recommend?”

Well let me start by saying– there is no one clearcut path and the path is a different one from state-to-state. But don’t let this deter you from continuing to read!

If you read my “About the Blogger” page–you’ll see that my own path was a winding, treacherous one with little guidance but my own dreams and aspirations. That is step one–set your goal. So already you’re own your way to joining the flight community by simply identifying your own dreams.

“Ok Steph…great…super helpful…” I hear you cry.

But quite honestly, it is the truth. I wouldn’t have gotten here without understanding my passion and keeping that end goal firmly in sight. The way is not easy–as it shouldn’t be. You’ll need that dream to motivate you through the journey.

So to start– flight nursing is generally guided by standards set by our regulating/certifying body “the Commission on Accreditation of Medical Transport Systems” or CAMTS (pronounced “cames”). This body accredits critical care transports to ensure patient safety and high-level patient care. It is an umbrella organization that really actually has representatives from a multitude of different organizations such as the Air and Surface Transport Nurses Association, the American College of Surgeons, the National Association of EMS Physicians, the International Association of Flight & Critical Care Paramedics, and the American Association of Critical Care Nurses (plus more not listed). While accreditation by CAMTS is strictly voluntary, many governmental regulating agencies require participation (with good reason!)

As a participant of CAMTS, many helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) agencies require their crews to maintain competencies in a myriad of different subjects, advanced certification, and a minimal amount of years of experience.

You Can’t Just Jump Right In

“But why?! I always wanted to be a flight nurse/paramedic–can’t I just graduate school and start right away in the field?”

Consider the role of the flight nurse/paramedic–you and one other person are responsible for the life of the sickest or most injured people. You operate based on past experience and your own knowledge base in a small, confined space of an ambulance or helicopter without the oversight of a physician at your immediate disposal. You operate relatively autonomously (based on set protocol sets for your organization) and lack the resources normally found in a hospital.

One such call reminded me of this fact– after retrieving a newly intubated patient who was a difficult one to ventilate, required a great deal of sedation, and simply put was a hot-mess express of a human, our helicopter threw warning lights. We had to be transported with this patient from the confines of the referring hospital to an air field at a remote site, in the pitch black of night, with this patient. And when our helicopter threw warning lights, we were grounded and couldn’t launch. Meanwhile, we were running out of meds to keep this patient sedated, his fever broke causing him to sweat out his one IV site access, we had no lights but our flashlights, and just the two of us in a small space (pretty sure we were stepping all over each other). I was blessed to have a partner with experience as we attempted to secure more IV access, keep him sedated and titrated his ventilator settings while we awaited another helicopter to retrieve us. Then came the circus of transferring our gear and the patient through a muddy field (still pitch black) into a running helicopter (while keeping the patient under sedation/ventilated) AND making sure one of the lovely first responders who stayed with us didn’t wander into the spinning tail rotor blades of death.

It made me miss the bright lights, multiple staff members, and roominess of my ER rooms (never will I whine about the lack of space in them again!) Because in those situations, you don’t have all that to back you up–hence why you NEED to be competent and experienced.

Respiratory therapy? Thats me. Decision-maker during a code? Thats me. You don’t have your ancillary services readily available. Your physician is miles and miles away via radio–you are their hands, their ears, and their eyes.

What Should I Expect to Get to Qualify?

Still interested? Of course you are! Because in addition to operating at the highest level of your license…well to put it bluntly–this job is freaking cool!!

So what does it take to be a flight nurse? It varies from flight service to flight service but you should expect these (at least):

  • 3-5 years of critical care experience (ICU or ED)
  • Basic Life Support (BLS)
  • Advanced Life Support (ACLS)
  • Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)
  • Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP)
  • Trauma Certification (ITLS, PHTLS, ATCN)
  • Advanced Certification (CCRN, CEN, or CFRN, etc)
  • Prehospital licensure (varies state to state, contact your state’s EMS regulatory agency for more information on this– Pennsylvania requires non-EMT RN’s to take a “Pre-hospital Registered Nurse (PHRN)” program prior to testing or if an EMT already, the RN to challenge the “National Registry Paramedic Cognitive” exam)

Many of you already out and working, probably have some of these or can get them through your hospital. Others (like me) have to go out and find these.

It Came at a Cost, Though

One secret I’m going to tell you though: it was expensive for me to get qualified. While I had BLS, ACLS, and PALs as job requirements for the ED… I had to go out and find the rest.

Being an EMT, I challenged the paramedic cognitive–this cost me about 200$ whereas had I gone through the PHRN prep program at a local community-college, it would’ve cost me $1,500 and 7-8 months of class time. (More on this later)

Neonatal Resuscitation Program cost me about 75$ even though it was offered through my hospital. Depending on where you take this, it can go upwards of 100-200$.

Advanced Trauma Care in Nursing (ATCN) cost me another 250-275$ (add on the additional almost 300$ I paid to become an instructor after being identified as an “instructor candidate”–unless you get chosen for this and wish to obtain it, don’t worry about this added cost.)

In addition, I bulked up my resume with Advanced Burn Life Support (ABLS), Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC), Advanced Stroke Life Support (ASLS), and other trauma courses above and beyond what the minimums were.

Flight programs also lean heavily on bachelors of science in nursing degrees–you either need to already have it, be working on it, or obtain it within a certain amount of years.

So What Did I Do and What Do I Recommend?

Another question I frequently get is “should I do this or that?”

Let me start with my journey and what worked or didn’t work for me before I give my recommendations.

As I noted in my “About the Blogger” page of my blog– I started in BLS EMS back in 2007. Finished my BSN in 2014 and entered into a community Adult ICU. This ICU had its share of ventilators and drips but generally speaking, anything of high acuity was shipped out to the larger tertiary care center not far away. I was frequently assigned between the ICU and stepdown unit (stepdown more often than ICU) or floated to the medical/surgical floors to work as an aide. I quickly tired of this and sought after a position in a busy emergency department closer to home.

I worked in the ED for four years before getting interviews for flight services. I often gravitated more towards the critical/trauma bays and found myself super frustrated with the urgent care level patients–I craved the ability to use my critical thinking and to handle the sickest patients.

April 2016, I obtained my Trauma Certified Registered Nurse certification from the Board of Certification of Emergency Nurses and March 2018, I obtained my Certified Emergency Nurse certification.

I challenged the paramedic cognitive after self-studying and passed.

I entertained two offers for flight services and accepted one closer to home and began my orientation in October 2018.

What I quickly realized in my orientation: I’m not the hot shot I thought!

While I saved money and felt I was ready to undertake the PHRN role–I found that not taking the PHRN prep class put me behind. I had to learn all the State ALS/Critical Care protocols in addition to my service’s protocols. I had no experience in airway management beyond manakins and theory whereas my colleagues who prep-classed had clinical time through their programs.

Recommendation: regardless of your experience, take the prep class and take it seriously.

Further, while the emergency department gave me broad experience with all ages (womb to tomb if you will), I lacked a great deal of critical care experience that my ICU-level colleagues possessed. I did have more experience with initial stabilization and emergency care which serves me well on scene-calls but when a majority of your transports are interfacility, ICU-level patients, you feel this lack of experience.

Recommendation: If you wish to pursue a career in the ED–great! But be prepared for a steep learning curve. Take advantage of having all age groups. However, I strongly recommend time in a major ICU in neuro or cardiac specialities. This gives you a better jump off point for you to pull experiences from. If you can swing it in your life–DO BOTH! ICUs generally specialize in certain ages, so you don’t get the experience of neonatal or pediatric in the adult ICU and vice versa. In hindsight, I wish I had more ICU experience.

So the Wrap-Up

If you’re interested in flying…reach out to organizations in your area and schedule fly-alongs. Ask the crews there “what do you recommend?” I’m one flight nurse and my journey has been one of many avenues you could follow. They often can help you figure out how to get your prehospital certification, guide you to what their programs look for, and is a great opportunity in general to just make sure you can handle flying!

Flight medicine for me has been the most challenging and rewarding adventure I’ve ever had. I’ve felt elated at the sensation of flight, the satisfaction in saving a life, and the camaraderie of working with the greatest nurses and paramedics in the field. But I’ve come home broken and questioning my place here. It is like that whole first year of nursing all over again. I wouldn’t change it though. It’s been a beautiful adventure.

 

So welcome you future flight nurses–can’t wait to see you in the skies. Feel free to reach out to me with any questions you might have.

Clear skies and tail winds!