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What is the hardest job in the world?


Elite
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Yep, any job where you are committed, philosophically and in practice - regardless of remuneration or recognition - to helping others in dire/critical need... is the general category I'd put at the top of the list.

 

Not enough of us fit that bill, unfortunately, and it's unsurprising because it takes perhaps more than the human spirit, our nature and condition was cut out for.

 

 

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8 hours ago, dockers_strike said:

I really dont know how people have the strenght of character  to do this. Must be unbelievable hard.

It was really hard for her. She was still in training and not yet qualified and it made her question whether she could do the job or not.

 

Anyway, she continued her studies and qualified.

She's in a different hospital to Alder Hey but still a paediatric nurse.

They see some really heartbreaking things, I know someone has to do it, but there's no way I could.

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19 hours ago, Elite said:

No just from an educational/skill perspective. 

 

Undercover police officer has got to be up there for me.

 

You've got to live a complete lie ensuring your story is rock solid and you can't get complacent with it, are pretty much on your own within incredibly dangerous environments/people and are one slip of the tongue/leaked information away from being brutally murdered. Must be mentally exhausting.

Yeah I watched Deciet as well 

 

 

 

Paris Bostocks support worker 

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15 hours ago, Harry's Lad said:

My Grandsons mum is a paediatric nurse. When she was training and on placement she worked on a children's cancer ward for a few weeks and during that time a couple of little ones died.

Hard isn't a strong enough word.

I was in Alder Hey at 16 on a ward with kids, one day they’re there, the next not. Harrowing and never forgotten.

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16 hours ago, Harry's Lad said:

My Grandsons mum is a paediatric nurse. When she was training and on placement she worked on a children's cancer ward for a few weeks and during that time a couple of little ones died.

Hard isn't a strong enough word.

Yeah I reckon that must be about as hard as it gets. Must be great job satisfaction though when some pull through.

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16 hours ago, Harry's Lad said:

My Grandsons mum is a paediatric nurse. When she was training and on placement she worked on a children's cancer ward for a few weeks and during that time a couple of little ones died.

Hard isn't a strong enough word.

I used to know a young bloke who was a Catholic priest. His life was basically religious school, then seminary; no experience of what you'd call the "real world". When he was a naïve 24, he was ordained and given his first job - Chaplain to a children's hospital, trying to explain to grieving parents why God had let their children suffer and done.

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16 hours ago, Harry's Lad said:

Ah, really sorry to hear that mate. Horrible.

 

That's where her placement was Alder Hey amongst others. 

I imagine it takes a special breed to be able to cope with the stress involved, massive highs when things go well to massive lows when they don't.

I know I wouldn't be able to do it.

When my sister died a few years ago, she spent her final week in a coma in a specialist ward at Walton Neuro. Considering the condition of people as they go into that ward, the survival rate must be pretty low. I would totally understand it if the nurses tried to insulate themselves by treating these unresponsive patients as "cases" rather than people; but they didn't. When, for example, they had to turn someone to check for pressure sores or take any tests or readings, they would address the person by name and make small talk. That inevitably leads to some sort of emotional bonding that must make losing a patient so much harder. They don't have to take that massive burden on themselves, but they do, so that the patients' families know that their loved ones are being treated not just with professionalism, but with dignity and care.

 

I could not respect them more for that. 

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2 minutes ago, AngryOfTuebrook said:

When my sister died a few years ago, she spent her final week in a coma in a specialist ward at Walton Neuro. Considering the condition of people as they go into that ward, the survival rate must be pretty low. I would totally understand it if the nurses tried to insulate themselves by treating these unresponsive patients as "cases" rather than people; but they didn't. When, for example, they had to turn someone to check for pressure sores or take any tests or readings, they would address the person by name and make small talk. That inevitably leads to some sort of emotional bonding that must make losing a patient so much harder. They don't have to take that massive burden on themselves, but they do, so that the patients' families know that their loved ones are being treated not just with professionalism, but with dignity and care.

 

I could not respect them more for that. 

I'm sorry about your sister mate.

I've been in the Walton Centre myself and know exactly what you mean.

 

When I was in there on Dott ward, there was a fella who was in with Guillem Barre Syndrome, he was only mid 40's and couldn't do anything for himself.

 

The poor fella was terrified and you could hear him crying during the night.

The nurses were amazing with him, kind, patient and caring. 

 

They are woefully  underpaid for the work they get through and the manner in which they do it and that is nothing short of shameful.

 

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2 hours ago, Harry's Lad said:

I'm sorry about your sister mate.

I've been in the Walton Centre myself and know exactly what you mean.

 

When I was in there on Dott ward, there was a fella who was in with Guillem Barre Syndrome, he was only mid 40's and couldn't do anything for himself.

 

The poor fella was terrified and you could hear him crying during the night.

The nurses were amazing with him, kind, patient and caring. 

 

They are woefully  underpaid for the work they get through and the manner in which they do it and that is nothing short of shameful.

 

I'd rep you and AoT if I could. My sister is going into The Walton Centre this week for a major back operation,I took her there yesterday for a pre op covid test actually,but is terrified even though she knows how brilliant the staff are anyway. They absolutely deserve to be paid like the professionals they are.

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6 minutes ago, VladimirIlyich said:

I'd rep you and AoT if I could. My sister is going into The Walton Centre this week for a major back operation,I took her there yesterday for a pre op covid test actually,but is terrified even though she knows how brilliant the staff are anyway. They absolutely deserve to be paid like the professionals they are.

No worries mate, and the best of luck to your sister.

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