PODCAST · education
Bedpan Banter
by SimpleNursing
Welcome to Bedpan Banter | The Human Side of Healthcare -- the podcast that feels like sitting at the nurses’ station swapping stories with your favorite coworkers. Hosted by the one and only Nurse Mike, this show goes beyond the textbooks and into the real, raw, and hilarious moments that make up nurse life.Whether it’s unfiltered stories from the floor, emotional patient moments, or those laugh-until-you-cry shifts you’ll never forget... we’re talking about it all. Oh, and don’t worry, we’ll be sneaking in a few knowledge bombs you can actually use on the job.If you're a nursing student, new grad, or seasoned pro who just needs to feel seen (and maybe laugh a little), you’re in the right place.
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22
Addison vs. Cushing: The One Lab That Changes Everything with Nurse Mike
A single lab value can flip your entire answer choice, especially when the adrenal glands are involved. We pick up with part two of our Addison’s disease and Cushing syndrome breakdown and focus on what actually helps under pressure: pattern recognition, memory tricks, and the nursing priorities that show up on NCLEX-style questions and real clinical scenarios.First, we walk through Addison’s disease (adrenal insufficiency) by tying low cortisol and low aldosterone to what you’ll see in front of you: fatigue, weight loss, hypotension, hypoglycemia, salt cravings, and that classic hyperpigmentation. Then we lock in the Addison lab pattern, especially the dangerous one: hyperkalemia. We talk through why potassium threatens the heart, what to monitor for on telemetry, and how early recognition can be life-saving. We also cover treatment with hormone replacement therapy like hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone, plus the non-negotiables of patient education, including stress dosing, sodium support, and never stopping steroids abruptly.Then we flip the script to Cushing syndrome (hypercortisolism) and the difference between Cushing disease vs syndrome so you can interpret ACTH correctly. We connect “too much cortisol” to moon face, buffalo hump, truncal obesity, thin extremities, and the lab pattern of high glucose and sodium with low potassium. From there, we hit the nursing considerations that matter most: infection risk, delayed wound healing, bone loss, fall precautions, diet education, and treatment options like surgery, radiation, and cortisol-blocking meds.If you want endocrine to feel predictable instead of random, press play, subscribe for future breakdowns, and share this with a classmate. After you listen, leave a review and tell us: which Addison vs Cushing clue helps you decide the fastest?To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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21
The Real Difference Between Addison's & Cushing's with Memory Tricks
Addison’s disease vs Cushing syndrome can feel like a maze of arrows, hormones, and “wait, which one is high?” moments. We cut through the noise by building the whole story from the ground up: what the adrenal glands do, which adrenal cortex hormones actually matter for exams and clinical reasoning, and how one simple feedback loop explains most of the lab patterns you’ll see.We walk through aldosterone (the salt hormone) and cortisol (the stress hormone) in plain language, then map the HPA axis step by step: stress triggers CRH, CRH triggers ACTH, and ACTH triggers cortisol. From there, everything becomes a logic problem. If cortisol is high, what should ACTH do? If cortisol is low, what does the pituitary try next? We also clarify the key difference between Cushing disease (pituitary-driven, ACTH high with cortisol high) and Cushing syndrome (adrenal or exogenous steroid source, ACTH low with cortisol high), and we contrast that with primary vs secondary Addison’s patterns.You’ll leave with practical memory tricks, a clearer way to think about endocrine disorders, and a framework you can reuse for questions on cortisol, ACTH, and adrenal gland physiology. Check the links for free Addison’s and Cushing’s practice questions, then subscribe, share the episode with a classmate, and leave a review so more nursing students can find it.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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20
What Nursing School Doesn’t Prepare You For with Nurse Brenden
Nursing school can teach you the steps, but it can’t recreate the moment someone asks you to “boost the patient” and you realize you’ve never done it on a real person. We sit down with Brenden and talk about graduating in the COVID era of online nursing school, the confidence gap that shows up on day one, and how a solid preceptor can make the difference between drowning and growing.Then we get into med-surg nursing, the specialty people love to hate and secretly need. We unpack why med-surg builds real prioritization skills, how you learn to manage multiple patients, and why “lower acuity” doesn’t mean “nothing happens.” Brenden shares the kind of stories only the floor can produce, including a patient trying to whip a condom catheter and a shocking bite incident that turns into testing, reporting, and a hard conversation about workplace violence in healthcare.We also talk about nurse humor, dark humor as a coping tool, and how creating TikTok characters can help nurses and patients feel less alone. Finally, we break down a tense patient advocacy moment involving an insulin drip, missing orders, and the uncomfortable truth that sometimes you have to push back on a provider to protect your patient. If you’re a new grad nurse or just curious about real hospital life, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest “nursing school didn’t teach me that” moment you’ve lived.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Nurse Mike from SimpleNursing Breaking Down the 2026 NCLEX Changes
Two NCLEX answers can look “right” on the surface, but only one protects the patient first. That’s the real skill behind prioritization, and it’s exactly what I’m breaking down here on Bedpan Banter with a clear, test-ready approach built around the updated Next Gen NCLEX mindset.FREE NCLEX Practice Test here: https://simplenursing.com/nclex-practice-questions-review/We start with what changed and why the exam now rewards clinical judgment over memorization. I walk you through the NCLEX Clinical Judgment Measurement Model step by step: recognize cues, analyze cues, prioritize hypotheses, generate solutions, take action, and evaluate outcomes. Once you can hear those steps in your head, prioritization questions become more predictable, especially the hard ones where you’re stuck between two good options.Then we get practical with the rules that drive patient safety: why “safety beats everything” on NCLEX, how to use ABCs without knee-jerk picking airway every time, and how to rank acute vs chronic by asking “what just changed?” We also cover unstable vs stable red flags and the delegation essentials that show up constantly, including what you can safely hand to a UAP versus what requires RN judgment, assessment, teaching, or evaluation. Finally, we talk about Next Gen NCLEX case studies, bowtie and matrix items, and trending labs and vitals, where pattern recognition over time is the whole game.If you want to test yourself right away, grab the free practice questions linked in the description, then follow along at Simple Nursing for step-by-step NGN breakdowns. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s studying, and leave a review so more future nurses can find it.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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The Nurse that Spoke Up: A Path to Patient Advocacy
A nurse walks into a med room and hears laughter about a “placebo” given to a symptomatic patient. What happens next is a real-time test of ethics: speak up and risk backlash, or stay silent and let a lie stand between a patient and their care. We bring you the full story from a new grad, Nyanaguer, who chose the chain of command, stayed anonymous, and watched a unit obsess over “who told” instead of what was done to the patient. It’s a candid look at power dynamics, moral courage, and why patient advocacy must include truth-telling at the bedside.We dig into the anatomy of reporting: what to document, how to use the chain, and ways to reduce retaliation risk while keeping the focus on safety. Our guest shares what she heard, what she did, and what leaders did right during the investigation. We also explore empathy for “frequent” call-light patients and practical communication that lowers conflict: validate symptoms, set clear expectations, and treat every request as a window into fear, pain, or loneliness. Honesty is a clinical intervention; when trust improves, outcomes do too.Then we shift from hospital corridors to a different kind of care setting. After two years at the bedside, she launched a licensed residential assisted living home in Arizona, translating nursing skills into leadership, operations, and family-centered care. We talk regulations, funding, hiring, and building a culture where staff feel safe to report issues early. If you’ve wondered how to pivot without losing your clinical identity, this is a roadmap: carry your advocacy forward and design a place where it thrives.Subscribe for more human-centered nursing stories, share this with a colleague who needs a courage boost, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway—what’s one situation where you chose advocacy over comfort?To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Beauty that Survives a Double Shift with Diaspi Beauty
What happens when a level-one trauma night shift meets a clean beauty lab? We sit down with clinical scientist and founder Diana Santiago to trace a remarkable path from calibrating analyzers to crafting high‑pigment, vegan, cruelty‑free lip color built for nurses, techs, and anyone chasing endurance over a double shift. This is a story about performance under pressure—on the unit and on your lips—and why affordable, ethical makeup can make a real difference in the chaos of care.Diana shares how quiet “field research” in hospital corridors revealed the biggest pain points: products that fade fast in cold, dry air; formulas that irritate; and prices that don’t respect a healthcare paycheck. Her answer? Hydrating glosses and liners powered by castor oil, noticeable color that sets quickly, and a tight lineup designed for speed before a 5 a.m. clock‑in. We dig into the chemistry behind clean formulations, from avoiding carmine, BHA, and BHT to focusing on comfort that plays well with scrubs, masks, and constant water breaks. With five liner shades, nine glosses, and a locker bag, the collection meets the real world without wasting time or money.Beyond beauty, we spotlight the often‑invisible labor of clinical scientists: quality control, linearity checks, instrument standards, and the unforgiving precision of blood bank work where minutes and correct crossmatches save lives. Diana’s candid story from a brutal night—simultaneous bleeders and a teammate pushing through dangerous blood pressure—underscores why small rituals of self‑care matter. We close with brand values rooted in perseverance and compassion, a playful live demo of nurse‑named shades, and where to find the products across the website, social platforms, and Amazon.If you believe self‑care should be practical, ethical, and made to last, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a colleague who needs a lift, and leave a review to help more healthcare pros find tools that truly support their shift.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Nurse’s Guide to Neuro & Stroke Patients with Dr. Uddin, Neurologist
You can feel the stakes the moment a patient starts to change. With inpatient neurologist Dr. Uddin at the table, we go straight to the front lines of neurocare—where strokes dominate, seizures confuse, and nursing judgment buys back brain. This conversation is a field guide for bedside pros who want to move faster, document sharper, and advocate louder when seconds matter.We break down the reality of inpatient neurology and why nurses often make the decisive difference. You’ll hear exactly how last known normal unlocks TNK or TPA, plus the small habits that add up: distance visual field checks that catch big deficits, short smartphone videos to separate seizures from look‑alikes, and the clean handoff language of GCS and NIHSS that pulls ER, neurology, and ICU into alignment. Dr. Uddin opens the toolbox—when reflexes reveal spinal cord trouble, what clonus really means, and why the neurologic exam can still beat a battery of tests when the clock is relentless.The human side runs through it all. Confidence grows when leaders praise the right calls and correct clearly. Veteran neuro nurses compress the story into three seconds that matter. Younger clinicians learn faster by asking, “What should I be watching for in this anatomy?” And everyone wins when we drop the jargon and say exactly what we see. If you’ve ever felt that tug to hit the button early and call the team, this talk hands you the why and the how.Listen for practical tips you can use on your next shift, from stroke scale nuance to reflex clues and documentation that saves lives. Then pass it on. Subscribe for more bedside-ready episodes, share this with a colleague who runs toward the rapid response, and leave a review with your best neuro tip—we might feature it next time.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Built for Ports, PICCs, and People | The Port Studio
A cold infusion room, a tangled sleeve, a zipper that sets off a scanner—tiny moments can turn a hard day into a brutal one. Our guests, twin founders of Port Studio Brinlee & Mariela, set out to change that after a stage 4 diagnosis at 21 made chemo, scans, and clinic visits a new reality. What they couldn’t find, they built: a chemo-ready crewneck with 100% cotton fabric and plastic zippers on both arms and chest for easy, sterile access to ports, PIC lines, blood pressure cuffs, and labs—without sacrificing warmth, privacy, or style.We walk through the human problems their design solves and why details matter: no metal for MRI and CT compatibility, dual arm zips for IVs and PICC lines, chest zips for port access, and a cozy feel that eases long infusion days. Their story goes beyond apparel into identity and resilience. The subtle “live” embroidery on each sleeve is a reminder to be present through the hardest hours, and their brand name nods to both their birthplace and the medical port—a symbol of connection, challenge, and hope. Along the way, we talk about early symptoms, the shock of diagnosis, genetic testing without clear answers, and the caregiver experience of an identical twin navigating fear and survivor’s guilt.Nurses are the heartbeat of this conversation. We share how a remembered name, a warm hello, or a quick chat about life—not labs—can shift a patient’s mindset, with research hinting that positive experiences can influence treatment response. We also weigh in on how accessible clothing streamlines workflows, preserves sterility, and reduces awkward moments for everyone at the bedside. This is a candid, practical, and hopeful look at patient-centered design, oncology care, chronic illness, and the small choices that make a big difference.Want to spread some light? SimpleNursing has covered the cost of 100 accessible crewnecks that YOU can gift! These 100 are first-come first-serve so if you miss it, use code SIMPLE10 for 10% off at theportstudio.com. Remember to subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help more patients and nurses find this conversation.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Seeing Abilities Before Disabilities with Sarah & Emily
Start with a laugh, stay for the truth. We sit down with Sarah, a psych nurse, and her sister Emily to explore what real inclusion in healthcare looks like when you move past labels and meet the person in front of you. Their story arcs from a pandemic-era TikTok experiment to a community of millions who come for the pranks and lunchbox notes, then stay for the hard-earned wisdom on dignity & communication.Sarah opens up about struggling through clinicals until psych finally felt like home, pushing back on the myth that mental health units are “glorified babysitting.” She walks us through practical, bedside-level practices that change outcomes: greet and engage the patient first, explain every step, validate pain even when words are scarce, and escalate when first-line meds don’t touch obvious distress. Emily’s recent surgery becomes a case study in bias and advocacy, from a dismissive PACU moment to the relief that came when someone finally listened.We also talk representation and identity with a powerful milestone: Emily finding a Barbie with Down syndrome after sixteen years without a doll that looked like her. That spark of recognition connects to better care—when people feel seen, anxiety drops and trust rises. Then we switch gears to their other passion: fostering hundreds of rescue cats using transferable nursing skills under veterinary guidance. It’s a joyful reminder that compassion is portable and clinical judgment adapts across settings.If you’re a nurse, student, caregiver, or just someone who wants to treat people better, you’ll leave with concrete takeaways: speak to the person, assume comprehension, use plain language and teach-back, preserve autonomy, and look for abilities before limitations. Come for the humor, leave with a sharper clinical lens and a bigger heart. If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find us.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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13
NCLEX 101: Test-Taking Strategies That Actually Work
Your NCLEX doesn’t demand perfect memory. It asks one core question: can you keep patients safe when the stakes are high and the clock is running? We break test stress into simple moves that lower anxiety, sharpen judgment, and turn tricky stems into clear decisions you can trust.Professor Alison joins us to unpack the thinking behind safe answers: how to name what the question really wants (the right thing, the wrong thing, or the first thing), how to prioritize beyond ABCs by weighing acute vs chronic & expected vs unexpected, and how to catch instability keywords like new, sudden, rapid, and worsening. We walk through a live select‑all‑that‑apply example and show how to treat each line as true‑false, avoid over‑selecting under partial‑credit scoring, and spot language that signals unsafe care. You’ll learn that drugs often “overdo” their jobs, how to use body‑system logic to eliminate distractors, and when opposites in the options point to the correct answer choice.Strategy meets routine with a practical two‑to‑three week plan: daily comprehensive sets of unused questions, test mode only, and periodic endurance blocks to build stamina. We share how to schedule breaks without losing momentum, why micro‑breaks after every rationale can sabotage focus on test day, and how to simulate the testing center to desensitize distractions. We also get real about readiness: what score ranges suggest you’re on track, when to push your date, and how to bounce back if you didn’t pass by using the performance report to target client‑needs gaps.If you’re tired of guessing and ready to think like a safe nurse, this NCLEX crash course is for you! Share this with a classmate who needs a lift and leave a review with your NCLEX questions—we might break them down on a future show.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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How A Miami CVICU Nurse Builds Confidence & Preps For CRNA School with Sam Del Toro
Ever wonder what it feels like to hold a patient’s life in your hands while learning a new device, managing six drips, and calming a terrified family—in two languages? We invited Sam Del Toro, a Miami CVICU nurse heading to CRNA school, to take us inside the reality of high‑acuity cardiac care and the leadership it demands at the bedside.Sam opens up about choosing nursing over medical school, leveraging a tough science background to become a competitive CRNA applicant, and landing an ICU role during the COVID hiring crunch. She shows how Spanish as a first language isn’t just cultural identity—it’s clinical force multiplier. From explaining extubation to translating consent for open‑heart surgery, language and empathy reduce fear, prevent errors, and build trust in a city where many patients meet the hospital for the first time on the worst day of their lives.We dig into Miami’s cardiovascular trends—STEMIs, heart failure, and the dangers of delayed care in middle‑aged Hispanic men—and explore how chest pain often hides as back or stomach pain. Sam's rule is simple and lifesaving: check distal pulses early and often. We also talk about confidence as a new nurse, why humility accelerates growth, and practical ways to learn fast—volunteer for codes, open the crash cart, handle documentation, and ask smart questions that make doctors’ decisions easier.Toughest moment? Caring for her grandmother through septic shock, then using hair care and skincare to restore dignity and control. It’s a reminder that the strongest medicine sometimes looks like small, human choices. We wrap with honest talk on burnout, why many ICU nurses pivot to advanced practice, and how great managers build cultures that keep teams together.If this conversation helped you think differently about critical care, subscribe, share with a nursing friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway!Use Code SIMPLENURSING to save 15% on your next Uniform Advantage order.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Turning Students Into Nurses: What Support Really Looks Like at West Coast University
Want a real look at how nurses are shaped—fast—and still come out safe, confident, and patient-centered? Nurse Mike sits down with Professor Katrina Lino from West Coast University to unpack the inner workings of an accelerated BSN: five-hour lectures that actually land, student-centric support that extends past graduation, and a teaching philosophy that treats pathophysiology as the root of every smart clinical decision.We walk through how to keep a room engaged, when to pause for brains to reset, and how stories lock complex mechanisms into memory. Professor Kat explains why mastering “what’s happening” in the body turns Pharmacology, Med Surg, and Assessment into a connected map instead of scattered facts. Then we go beyond slides into the high-fidelity Sim world—mannequins that blink and desaturate, Virtual Reality anatomy that peels back layers to vessels and organs, and AI patient interviews that sharpen rapport before day one on the unit. The payoff shows up in clinicals: students who debrief deeply step onto the floor with clearer priorities and stronger voices.We also confront the tough transitions. How do you stop hiding behind the computer and start building trust at the bedside? What turns a good clinical into a great one when a preceptor is stretched thin? Professor Kat shares practical moves: own a patient assignment, start with conversation, and practice assessments even when you’re not passing meds. We tackle the Med Surg vs ER first-job debate—foundation and follow-up on the floor, triage instincts and breadth in the ER—and connect both paths back to long-term growth. And yes, care plans still matter in the real world, with goals and interventions that guide teams toward measurable outcomes.If you’re a student, educator, or curious future nurse, this conversation offers grounded strategies you can use today: build concept-map study guides, label NCLEX stems by the nursing process, and seek simulation that mirrors reality. Subscribe, share with a classmate, and leave a review with your take: med surg or ER for the best first year—and why?** West Coast University cannot guarantee employment.Use code SIMPLENURSING to save 15% on your next Uniform Advantage order.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Staying Grounded Between Bedside & Brand Deals with Natalie Rae
A brick wall, a Jeep duck, and an engagement ring sets the episode scene—but the real story is how a new grad who started on a Covid unit turned humor into healing and built a platform without letting go of the bedside. We sit down with Natalie Ray to unpack modern nursing: the trauma and the laughter, the brand deals and the hourly pay, the praise and the pile‑on that comes with being visible online.Natalie shares how TikTok became a lifeline during lockdowns and the exact guardrails she uses to protect her license and her livelihood. She explains the backlash that came from something as simple as a recognizable brick wall and offers clear, repeatable steps any healthcare worker can use to keep personal content separate from their employer. We also dig into the myths around money—why the luxury lifestyles you see aren’t funded by bedside pay alone—and why staying part‑time at the hospital keeps her grounded, empathetic, and honest with her audience.The conversation widens to clinical education and culture. Natalie walked away from a toxic teaching environment, arguing that recent bedside experience and student advocacy matter as much as degrees. We compare ratios and raises, talk about unsafe assignments, and call out the “pizza party” approach to staffing. Through it all runs a practical blueprint for resilience: curate your unit culture, learn from feedback, debrief at home without blaming your partner, and choose the kind of nurse—and teammate—you want to be.Hit follow, share with a friend, and leave a review with your take: if you had to pick one today, would you choose better ratios or better pay?Use Code SIMPLENURSING to save 15% on your Uniform Advantage Order!To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Surviving Nursing School Without Losing Your Social Life with Leanys Capote
Cardiac chaos, clinical goosebumps, and a calendar that plans even the commute—this conversation pulls back the curtain on what it really takes to thrive in nursing school. We sit down with a fourth-semester student who swapped a marketing major for bedside care and found her stride using short, high-yield study videos, sticky music mnemonics, and AI-powered NCLEX practice to turn overwhelm into understanding.The heart of the story is mindset and method. She walks us through building a living schedule in Google Calendar to protect focus, workouts, and genuine downtime, then shows how spaced repetition across formats—audio, flashcards, concise videos, and targeted reading—locks in complex topics like cardiac and pharmacology. We also compare test rituals, from fidget pens to calming playlists and mint tricks that settle the nerves.Clinicals bring everything into focus. A first natural birth delivers awe, empathy, and clarity about OB, while ER and trauma rotations reveal controlled chaos, quick stabilization, and teamwork under pressure. Psych challenges expectations and underscores the need to read the room, respect boundaries, and communicate with compassion. We dig into balancing school with life—yes, you can travel or see friends—if you plan, prioritize, and keep promises to your future self. For those weighing jobs and loans, we lay out options: part-time roles like CNA or tech in target units, strategic debt, or pausing work to protect grades. And for creators, we share how to stay authentic online while guarding privacy and honoring HIPAA.If you’re exploring nursing, already in the trenches, or returning for a second career, you’ll find grounded tactics you can use today: smarter studying, calmer testing, kinder communication, and a community that keeps you going. Subscribe, share with a classmate, and drop your best study ritual or clinical tip in a review—we’ll feature our favorites in a future episode.Use Code 'SIMPLENURSING' for 15% off your Uniform Advantage order!To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Climbing the Nursing Ladder: CNA → LPN → RN with Kesheen Curtis
Scrubs, scope, and second chances—this conversation with Kesheen is a candid look at how a nursing career really takes shape. We start with a hard detour: walking away from a BSN program that drained his momentum, then rebuilding confidence through an LPN at a community college. From there, pediatrics clicked.We get practical about the move from CNA to LPN and the shift into leadership. Delegation stops being a buzzword when you’ve been the tech who always stepped in. Kesheen breaks down how he learned to prioritize, ask for help, and protect his bandwidth while honoring the team. We dig into the gray zone of LPN vs RN scope—initial assessments, education, IVs, and blood administration—and why the only answer that counts is your state board and your unit policy. Internet debates don’t cover hospital nuance; printed policies do.Study tactics are straight to the point. Active recall on a whiteboard, teach-back in plain English, and question banks that mirror NCLEX logic build confidence. For SATA, flipping each option into true or false slows panic and speeds clarity. We also talk money and timeline: why an LPN-first route can be more affordable, how to weigh debt against regional salaries, and ways to work without burning out. And on social media, authenticity wins—share what you actually use, let your policy guide your practice, and tune out the noise.If you’re navigating nursing school, returning after a pause, or trying to find your place on the floor, this story offers both compass and map. Use Code 'SIMPLENURSING' for 15% off your Uniform Advantage Order!To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Part 2 with Hospice Nurse Julie: How Honest Conversations & Science Ease The Fear Of Death
What if the moments that scare us most at the bedside are simply the body doing what it’s designed to do? We sit down with Hospice Nurse Julie, a New York Times bestselling author, to unpack the biology of dying in clear, compassionate terms and show how honest language can calm a room faster than any euphemism. From getting permission to “be candid” with families to explaining why IV fluids can backfire near the end, we focus on practical skills that turn fear into understanding.We explore terminal lucidity—the rally or surge that brings a sudden burst of energy, appetite, and personality shortly before death—and lay out how to recognize it without false hope. Julie walks through the actively dying phase step by step: Chain Stokes breathing cycles, agonal respirations as brainstem reflex, and terminal secretions often called the death rattle. You’ll learn how to assess for real distress, when to use morphine to ease the work of breathing, why suction can increase saliva, and how simple repositioning and mouth care support comfort. The goal is humane, evidence‑informed care that lowers anxiety for everyone at the bedside.We also open the door to experiences that many witness but few discuss. Julie shares a powerful shared death experience that arrived at the exact time a patient passed, and we talk about end‑of‑life “visiting,” where patients often see deceased loved ones. Whether you frame these events as spiritual, neurological, or both, acknowledging the trend validates what countless families report and helps them feel less alone. By pairing physiology with presence, and science with tenderness, we offer a guide to the last hours that is clear, grounded, and deeply human.If this conversation helps you feel braver or more prepared, share it with a colleague or caregiver who needs it, and subscribe for more insights on the human side of healthcare. Your reviews help others find the show—leave one and tell us what you want to learn next.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Part 1 with Hospice Nurse Julie: What Nurses And Families Should Know About A Good Death
What if the thing we fear most—dying—is often gentler than we think? We sit down with Hospice Nurse Julie to unpack the stark differences between ICU deaths shaped by machines and a natural decline supported by hospice, where bodies often lead the way with less hunger, more sleep, and a surprising absence of pain. Julie shares the moment she learned to raise her hand in rounds and ask for family meetings, and how clear, direct language can transform care plans from “survival at all costs” to comfort with dignity.We dig into practical, bedside communication that any nurse or loved one can use right away. Julie offers real phrases that reduce confusion, outlines the typical signs seen in the last months of life, and explains why “keep them comfortable, safe, and clean” is a powerful daily compass for caregivers. For complex pain, she walks through the advanced options agencies should be ready to deploy—subcutaneous pumps, port access, and coordinated protocols—so families know what to demand before a crisis hits. She also clarifies palliative care versus hospice, how Medicare standardizes hospice benefits, and why timelines matter when it comes to preserving meaningful time at home.Burnout and boundaries get the honest treatment too. Julie names compassion fatigue for what it is—detachment born from unsafe expectations—and shows how to say no with professional courage, using the language of safety to protect licenses, patients, and team culture. For nurses eyeing hospice, she separates myth from reality: hospice requires strong assessment skills and autonomy, and an inpatient hospice start can build confidence before moving into home care. Along the way, we talk about Julie’s book and journal that teach therapeutic communication step by step, and how social media made these conversations more accessible for families everywhere.If you value candid, compassionate care and want real tools for the hardest conversations, this one’s for you. Listen, share with a colleague or caregiver, and tell us: what honest phrase will you try first? Subscribe, rate, and leave a review to help more people find thoughtful, practical conversations like this.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Cleaning Bedpans, Setting Boundaries & Melanie Gomez's Nursing Journey to FNP
PICU nurse and social media personality Melanie shares her journey from med-surg to pediatric critical care, exploring the challenges of transition and her pursuit of becoming a Family Nurse Practitioner.• Started as a med-surg nurse during COVID before transitioning to PICU after two years• Experienced significant learning curve moving to pediatrics, especially managing family dynamics and developing critical thinking skills• Currently pursuing Family Nurse Practitioner degree while working part-time in PICU• Chose FNP over other specialties to broaden opportunities outside hospital settings• Believes family-centered care with better parent education would transform pediatric healthcare• Shares emotional story of a long-term patient whose birthday wish was simply to eat at a restaurant• Emphasizes importance of connecting with coworkers to process emotional cases• Recommends perspective-taking: "Even on your worst day as a nurse, your patients still probably have it worse"Follow along with Melanie on IG & TikTok @cafeconscrubs! Don't forget to follow and subscribe, and remember, don't let the bedpans bite.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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ER Nightmares: When Objects Go Missing
Nurse Mike shares shocking and hilarious stories from the emergency room and from listener submissions. These unfiltered tales reveal the bizarre reality of healthcare that nursing school never prepares you for & finding things in places they shouldn't be.Please be sure to follow, share and like our episode and if you have any crazy stories, please be sure to comment below or send them in on our website.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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What You Never Knew About Sonography with Natalie Avni
Natalie Avni shares her journey from failing anatomy class to becoming a department supervisor in sonography, revealing the diverse career paths and opportunities beyond just scanning babies.• Failed her first anatomy course but persevered through sonography school with a newborn• Balanced motherhood and education by studying until 2am while her husband handled bedtime• Specialty certifications are required for different areas like OB-GYN, abdomen, and vascular• Career options include clinical work, education, sales, and application specialists• Sonography offers more regular hours than some healthcare careers, making it family-friendly• Built a successful social media presence during COVID when patients were hesitant to visit offices• Working relationships with nurses vary by department - labor and delivery nurses were most collaborative• Toxic workplace environments should not deter you from the entire profession• One supportive person can completely change your career trajectory• Managing emotional situations when delivering difficult news is one of the most challenging aspectsFollow @NatalieAvni on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube for more insights into the world of sonography.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Getting Better, Not Bitter: SimpleNursing's Reinvention Story
Nurse Mike reveals how Simple Nursing almost went bankrupt before finding its true purpose and transforming into an evidence-based nursing education platform. Through strategic partnerships, data-driven content creation, and patience the company reinvented itself by analyzing thousands of NCLEX questions to provide what students actually need.Don't be scared, be prepared. Nursing school doesn't have to be the scary, confusing, daunting, mysterious thing it's made out to be.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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Bedpans to Business: The Story Behind SimpleNursing
Nurse Mike shares the origin story of SimpleNursing, from his beginnings as an EMT and paramedic to becoming a nursing educator with a massive online following. He details his unexpected journey into healthcare, nursing school struggles, and how a school dismissal led to creating educational content that would change his life.To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Welcome to Bedpan Banter | The Human Side of Healthcare -- the podcast that feels like sitting at the nurses’ station swapping stories with your favorite coworkers. Hosted by the one and only Nurse Mike, this show goes beyond the textbooks and into the real, raw, and hilarious moments that make up nurse life.Whether it’s unfiltered stories from the floor, emotional patient moments, or those laugh-until-you-cry shifts you’ll never forget... we’re talking about it all. Oh, and don’t worry, we’ll be sneaking in a few knowledge bombs you can actually use on the job.If you're a nursing student, new grad, or seasoned pro who just needs to feel seen (and maybe laugh a little), you’re in the right place.
HOSTED BY
SimpleNursing
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