Bedpan Banter

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.

  1. Nurse Erica EXPOSES Healthcare Worker Rights | Unions, Strikes & Ending Workplace Violence

    11 hr ago

    Nurse Erica EXPOSES Healthcare Worker Rights | Unions, Strikes & Ending Workplace Violence

    Getting hit, threatened, or harassed shouldn’t be a rite of passage in healthcare, yet too many nurses are told to accept violence as “part of the job.” Nurse Erica joins us to draw a clear line: this is a workplace safety crisis, and nurses have more rights and options than most people realize. We dig into what the data says about how often violence happens, why it’s under-reported, and why filing a police report still matters as documentation and accountability, even when prosecution feels uncertain.  We also get practical about what hospitals should be doing right now to prevent harm, from real entry screening and staffed metal detectors to capable security, panic buttons, locked units when appropriate, and zero-tolerance policies that are enforced instead of framed on a wall. Nurse Erica explains how OSHA expectations apply to healthcare workplaces and why “we’ve always handled it this way” is not a defense when staff safety is on the line.  Then we zoom out to nursing culture and power: unions, retaliation fears, and the protections many nurses don’t know they have, including Weingarten Rights when a meeting could lead to discipline. We tackle strikes and the controversy around strike contracts, why they can create patient safety risks, and how strikes function as a bargaining tool. Finally, we talk about just culture and the chilling effect of criminally prosecuting nurses after errors, using the RaDonda Vaught case to unpack how system failures and individual accountability collide.  To learn more about the legislation, visit: https://nurseerica.com/pages/legislation To purchase "Violence against healthcare workers" merchandise, visit Nurse Erica's etsy store here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheNurseErica If you care about nurse safety, patient safety, union rights, OSHA protections, safe staffing ratios, and healthcare workplace violence prevention, this one is for you. Subscribe, share this with a nurse you love, and leave a review with the change you want to see most in your workplace. To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/

    28 min
  2. How To Communicate With Deaf & Hard of Hearing Patients w/ Nurse Mikaela

    15 Jun ·  Video

    How To Communicate With Deaf & Hard of Hearing Patients w/ Nurse Mikaela

    Someone tells you “just speak louder,” and suddenly you realize they don’t understand the problem at all. That’s the heart of our conversation with Nurse Mikaela, a registered nurse who is deaf, as we dig into what real communication looks like at the bedside and why clarity, not volume, is often the difference between trust and confusion. We get practical fast: how to stop guessing and start asking patients their preferred communication method, how closed-loop communication prevents mistakes, and how to work with an ASL interpreter without turning the patient into a third-person bystander. We also talk about why deaf and hard of hearing patients may feel hesitant to ask for what they need, and how nurses can reduce that fear by offering options up front like clear face masks, writing things down, better positioning, and a calm environment. Then we widen the lens to accessibility in nursing itself. Mikaela shares what it’s like being told to drop out, how assumptions show up during orientation, and how accommodations and assistive technology like cochlear implants, mini microphones, and amplified digital stethoscopes can make safe practice possible across settings from ICU to home health. If you care about patient safety, therapeutic communication, and healthcare accessibility, you’ll leave with concrete steps you can use on your next shift. Subscribe, share this with a nurse or nursing student, and leave a review with the communication tip you want every clinician to adopt. To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/

    17 min
  3. You Can Rebuild Confidence After Failing The NCLEX with Murse Kash

    2 Jun

    You Can Rebuild Confidence After Failing The NCLEX with Murse Kash

    Three failed NCLEX attempts can mess with your confidence, your timeline, and your identity. We’re joined by Nurse Kash, a New York City pediatric cardiology nurse and creator, to tell the real story of what it felt like to fail three times, lose momentum, and still find a way back to the career he knew he was meant for. If you’re searching for NCLEX help, an NCLEX retake plan, or simply proof you’re not alone, this conversation is for you. We get specific about the two things most people separate but shouldn’t: NCLEX mindset and NCLEX strategy. Kash shares a practical gratitude technique for managing test anxiety, plus what changed when he finally got organized with a study calendar, focused question-bank practice, and deep review of rationales. We also talk about how to stop letting a score define you, how to block out noise for a solid month of “lock in” time, and why the right system can feel like night and day compared to random studying. Then we fast-forward to life after passing: new grad impostor syndrome, staying organized on shift, finding your go-to mentors, and building real confidence at the bedside. Kash opens up about pediatric cardiology nursing, supporting families through uncertainty, and why empathy and a simple smile can be clinical tools. He even shares how he suits up as Spider-Man for his patients after clocking out, creating the kind of hospital moment kids and parents never forget. Subscribe for more nursing school, NCLEX prep, and real-life nurse stories, and if this helped you, share it with a friend and leave a review. What part of your nursing journey are you rebuilding right now? To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/

    37 min
  4. The Problem No One Teaches Nurses: Scheduling (ft. EightTenTwelve)

    18 May

    The Problem No One Teaches Nurses: Scheduling (ft. EightTenTwelve)

    You can learn every drug and every protocol and still feel unprepared for the hardest part of nursing: being human under pressure. Nurse Mike sits down with Haley and Marcelle, two sisters whose childhoods were shaped by congenital heart disease, major surgeries, and the nurses who guided their family through the scariest moments. Now they’re on the other side of the bedside as pediatric perioperative nurses and founders, and they bring a rare perspective on what dignity, advocacy, and real support actually look like in healthcare. We get practical fast. Haley breaks down what an OR nurse really does, from safety checks and positioning to anticipating needs in a high-stress, tightly timed environment where the patient can’t speak for themselves. Marcelle walks through PACU nursing after anesthesia, where airway, breathing, circulation, pain control, nausea, and bleeding can change in minutes. Along the way we talk about working with strong personalities, why over-communication protects patients, and the truth about confidence as a new grad: you’re not behind, you’re just new, and that learning curve can last longer than you expect. Then we zoom out to life outside the hospital and the problem nobody trains you for: nurse scheduling, shift-work planning, and staying connected to people who live on a normal calendar. Haley and Marcelle share how showing up on the wrong day helped spark EightTenTwelve, a nurse scheduling and lifestyle app that uses OCR to import your work schedule from a photo or screenshot, syncs with Apple and Google Calendar, lets you share your availability with friends and family, and builds nurse community with a feed plus a centralized nurse discount hub. Here's the link to their website: https://eighttentwelve.com/ If you care about nursing, burnout prevention, work-life balance, OR and PACU careers, or smarter shift scheduling, hit play. Subscribe, share with a nurse friend, and leave a review so more nurses can find the support they deserve. To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/

    24 min
  5. 4 May

    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/

    12 min
  6. 22 Apr

    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/

    8 min
  7. What Nursing School Doesn’t Prepare You For with Nurse Brenden

    8 Apr

    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/

    21 min
  8. 1 Apr

    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/

    9 min

About

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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