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Stenbolone and dihydroboldenone

We had to renew our TCAR (bogus cert if there ever was one) (trauma care after resuscitation) and they made it a 20 hour course this year.

We chose to wait until we were in CO to do it… I’ve never hated being inside on the computer so much as when I was forced to be in the middle of CO summer.
 
Elbow wrist mobility, is the reason I don’t do front squats enough. When I do, I do the cross arm method.

Whatever happened to real
Mentorship?

All this online paper certficAtion over actual qualification, has taken a major toll
On the work force imho.
 
My story With that crap… we had to do mandatory computer training to maintain our secret squirrel clearance…annually. Well I was retiring so I didn’t do the 6ish hour refresher…on company time.

Fast fwd 2 months and I got picked up by a contractor. Before I could start i had to provide all the security stuff along with other crap and don’t you know that refresher was a mandatory prerequisite!!! Sooo there i was retired… sitting at the kitchen table taking the refresher training ON MY OWN TIME!!!
 
Tbgr said:
Whatever happened to real
Mentorship?

All this online paper certficAtion over actual qualification, has taken a major toll
Pretty much every thing you need to know as an RN is learned OTJ. nursing school prepares you for a license not to save lives.

The quality of most people’s care they give is directly related to who mentored and trained them. Which can lead to some serious issues. In the nursing profession online continuing education has allowed access to quality information that levels the playing field and removes the excuse of my preceptor never told me that.

As far as certifications go: BLS (basic life support) is required to take any patient in any medical setting, ACLS (advanced cardiac life support), PALS (pediatric advanced life support), TCAR (trauma care after resuscitation), CCRN (critical care registered nurse), etc all require a certain amount of experience to even sit for certification class.
 
I take that back. TCAR is a joke and should be scrubbed from certification history books. That’s just my humble opinion.
 
NeuroRN said:
The quality of most people’s care they give is directly related to who mentored and trained them
This has to be the truest statement ever. When I started in my trade I had the opportunity to work with some great people who taught me everything I actually needed to know about doing my job. The years of licensing and certs have no real world usefulness.
 
I think it depends on the outlook of the person. I view my certs as tools and not check offs. Anyone, literally anyone can pass the acls test if they study, but did the study to pass or to learn how to use the tool.

That made more sense in my head haha

The certs SHOULD provide reinforcement of what you are learning/learned otj.

But I think far too much of it comes down to who that first couple of teachers are on the job. Most nurses mimic those people’s attitude for the rest of their career. Which can be good and bad.
 
For sure. I dislike the NP teaching model. It’s actually quite awful. Most programs focus heavily on writing papers and bullshit projects rather than the clinical side of things.

If I go back to school it will be Physician Assistant school.

But I’ve been through a lot of school and going back honestly sounds like the absolute worst.
 
AGREED! I’m cool with my travel gig right now. Maybe once the money dies down I’ll consider it… but for now we’re just gonna keep traveling the country!
 
Definitely getting better. Still can’t press, do triceps or biceps…. But I can static hold anything, do back workout, pec dec fly, and pull my patients up in bed with out any pain.

But presses (bench or shoulder, free weight or machine) triceps or biceps is still quite uncomfortable. Makes no sense at all. Just gonna keep on doing what I can!
 
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