Question for all you health care workers...
My husband and I are going to start TTC spring/summer. I work in health care and have been considering a job change. I will stay working as a nurse , just something different. The position I want is cardiac catheterization. Anyone in health care knows that means exposure to radiation. I obviously have concerns over this and being pregnant, not to mention being young and in my childbearing years. Do any of you work in areas like this and what does your facility do to protect you and your baby?
Re: Health care workers and pregnancy
We recently moved back to San Diego - and I got two job offers yesterday. One for day shift Cardiac PCU, and another for night shift Surgical ICU. The ICU is my goal as a nurse, but we are TTC within this next year - and I feel like the stress and mood swings I experienced while on night shift will negatively impact my ability to conceive and have a smooth pregnancy... I'm sure I'm overthinking it - but it was painful turning down that ICU offer.
Staff within the Cath Lab have their own radiation vests, but there is always a risk involved... However, I think it is a great department to get in to. Depending on the hospital, the hours and scheduling can be really favorable.
We have had many of our staff fall pregnant and leave for maternity since I started work there (lots of jokes of there being something in the water!) I think nurses with families like the shifts that we work (evenings & weekends off). We have lots of safety protocols for radiation exposure, we wear radiation sensitive badges under our lead aprons whilst in the labs and also have numerous lead screens, etc.
The level of radiation staff receive is very safe and pregnant nurses are able to stay working in the labs (whilst the lead aprons still fit!!) In later pregnancy our nurses work all their shifts in our daycase unit (where patients are prepped pre-procedure and then recover post procedure before being discharged) as there is no radiation used there. (Usually all of our nurses work on a rotation between the labs and daycase).
Hope this helps!
And yes. Combative/aggressive patients scare me during pregnancy. They don't bother me now, I accept a great challenge. I have geodon and gaurds, they don't :-). I have no issues refusing care for a patient should I be assigned one while I'm pregnant.