EdTech Discovery
Hermes

Named after the Greek god of messengers, Hermes watches the education landscape: spotting new opportunities, pressure-testing the ventures we're building, and tracing every read back to the real-world signals behind it.

Updated Jun 24, 2026 · 10 ideas · 1848 signals

Signals

The evidence library: the raw signals the pipeline is watching across the education ecosystem. Every idea is built from these.

need Jun 27, 2026
r/nursing

Physically and Mentally cannot do bedside anymore.

I have just shy of 2 years of medical surgical/telemetry experience at a hospital chain. But I physically can’t do the floor anymore. Im currently nights and every joint in my body screaming. Also mentally and emotionally Im done. What are some good options/opportunities I could do without 2 years of experience? BSN Northern California I want work life balance and reduced stress. submitted by /u/_Crazy_Lady_RedNeck_ [link] [comments]

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need Jun 27, 2026
r/nursing

Who do you feel is the best at putting IVs into a patient?

I seen an instagram reel that claimed doctors were really not great at it. In my own experience i had two different doctors put a cannula in with mixed results. The ER doctor had to try twice and put it too far up the arm close to the joint in my elbow and it eventually popped out. The second doctor had to try twice as well because he didnt get it the first time. Not knocking doctors ive dealt with a lot of nephrologists who have done multiple biopsies etc on me and they havs all been fantastic. The Registered nurses in the renal ward i was in were darn good at it even if one really didn't like doing it. I am not sure if Enrolled nurses are allowed to do them but they always got an RN to do it. The same with the RNs in the cardiology ward they were great at it too. I belive the only other person to put a cannula in was a surgeons assistant (although it may have been someone else as it was during a kidney transplant). I am lead to believe anesthetists are meant to be really good at it t

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need Jun 27, 2026
r/nursing

Bro 😎 🤝

Being floated sucks but it’s cool when you have your bros to count on. But after 12 hours, not even knowing or remembering their names. 😂 Why are we like this guys? submitted by /u/The3NightExit [link] [comments]

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need Jun 27, 2026
r/nursing

How to handle smells

Hello! I’m a new grad nurse who just started and I’m on my second shift and I , shall I should say, do not always have the best reactions to some smells in the patient’s rooms (c. Diff patients, some dialysis patients, etc) and I was wondering what is something I can put in my mask to off set the smells or other tips ? Edit: damn y’all are really coming through with these great tips Thank you guys :-) submitted by /u/Content-Lavishness [link] [comments]

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need Jun 27, 2026
r/nursing

How much phenobarbital have you given someone in acute ETOH withdrawal?

I spent the day babysitting someone in acute ETOH withdrawal before they FINALLY got transferred to MICU. The total phenobarbital was 1,430 mg followed by 4 mg versed and the dude still wasn’t snowed and had some fight left in him. For MICU this may be a normal day 🤷‍♀️ but it seemed bananas 🍌 to me! submitted by /u/vegan4life77 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 27, 2026
r/nursing

How to deal with grief?

I've been a nurse for some time now, i recently had a patient who had died and it really affected me. The death was the patients choice he wanted to be on hospice care, and we accommodated it until his last breaths. Those first couple of days after were so painful. all I could do was cry I was inconsolable. I had recurring nightmares of the day. A month later, being today I had my behavioral health checkup and I started crying again. Does grief ever go away or is it just something we as nurses live with? I have a good support network and my coworkers are also my friends and have supported me through this but someday just the thought of what happened it makes it hard just to go to work. submitted by /u/Fairytail-diva-3 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

I work weekends and that 4 days off goes by too fast lol

I love it though submitted by /u/emtnursingstudent [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Should I have stopped the blood transfusion and reported to doctor?

I am a newer nurse on med/surg floor. I am 6 months off orientation. I had a patient the other day with a hemoglobin of 6.8 and we needed to transfuse him with 1 unit of PRBCs. As a background, patient normally had a soft BP like high 90s to low 100s. After their abdominal surgery, their HR was in 100s to 110s. EKG showed only Sinus Tachycardia, Chest X-Ray showed no aspiration/pna, WBC was 10.3 but he was getting antibiotics so the doctor was not concerned about sepsis. Their CBC showed the 6.8 hgb so that’s why he was getting the blood. The patient was mildly confused and tends to tense up when they don’t want to do something, but they were able to make most needs known and redirect-able. When I started the blood, their BP was 100/63 HR was 103 Temp 97.6. I stayed for the 15 minutes it was running and proceeded to do my vitals again. Mind you there were family members in room and they were chatting with patient and patient was eating (important note for what happens next). I proceed

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Now the sheriff has arrived to escort them to them to jail.

It's a heartbreaking situation all around. My young patient accidentally caused the deaths of two of their friends while driving under the influence. I don't think they fully understand the magnitude of what has happened or the seriousness of the legal consequences they now face. They have always been a respectful, polite patient—rarely requiring anything and always saying 'please' and 'thank you when Help them with anything. None of that changes the tragedy of what occurred, but it makes this moment especially difficult to witness. My heart goes out to the families of the two young people who lost their lives, and to my patient's family as well. They are all facing unimaginable grief, though in very different ways. Now the sheriff has arrived to escort them to them to jail. submitted by /u/one-life-2026 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

I work Baylor as a visiting nurse (weekend doubles only) and my manager tried to make me do oasis documentation on my off day. Am I an asshole for responding this to them?

Another thing is that she almost guilt trips me to do things off hours after I request time off. It’s really obvious and I think that’a funny. Idc if I get paid for more documentation, that’s 2 hours off my life for not that much extra money. Why do I feel bad for saying no to being ordered around when there’s at least 3 other nurses seeing said patient during the week? Edit : Thank you for putting my mind at ease gang! I’ve been dwelling about this since Tuesday. submitted by /u/princess_commie [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Work saying no to me calling out

My job requires us to call out sick at least 2 hrs before our shift starts and I called 3.5 hours before to let them know. And I was then told that I essentially have to come in unless I find my own coverage. I feel so weird about this but lmk if this is standard. For reference I’m a nurse for about 7 months now at my first job working at a psych hospital where my ratio last night was 15 patients and I had an orientée to train, mind you I got off orientation with no support and training was extremely subpar. Speaking up does nothing. Yea…. I don’t know what I’m still doing here either. submitted by /u/UrbanRealism [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Situations that changed you/radicalized you as a new grad RN?

Currently a New Grad RN dealing with a situation where I made a safety report at work and have gotten some blow back from management directly related to my decision to report this situation. Feeling really discouraged after initially feeling like I was doing the right/hard thing, only to be gaslit and borderline intimidated by mgmt. Has anyone experienced something like this? submitted by /u/Gaialuna222 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Is this harassment or am I reading too much into this? Private duty nursing

this is really stressing me out. I do pediatric private duty nursing on the side. The dad of the client I work for keeps giving me hugs whenever he sees me or is leaving the room. The hugs have started to become more lingering ones and last night he put his hand on my mid back while I was literally changing the babies diaper :/// I still can feel it. The dad never hugs me when his wife is around. I know should’ve set boundaries from the beginning no touching/hugging :((( but could this be innocent? I think maybe it’s because he from a different cultural background and being touchy is okay?? I used to love working there now it’s making me really anxious, scared he gonna try something else :(( he’s way older submitted by /u/mucjiso [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

What’s your dream job if you weren’t a nurse?

If I knew it wasn’t so competitive, I’d love to have been a perfumer or a sommelier. Or own/operate a small cat cafe and help adopt out some kitties. Other alternative: stay-at-home person (I am not a wife and have no children). What about you all? submitted by /u/user73628497 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

LTC during a heatwave:

Here are some of the quotes from residents today: Are you still doing okay in the heat honey? Take it easy kiddo! My son brought cherries from the market, take a break and have some :) Can you grab me a soda? And take one for yourself too! My daughter brought ice cream for everyone! And of course: 6. Can you grab me a blanket? Im cold 🤣 submitted by /u/keiko17 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Why are we shitting on new nurses that come here when they’re panicked?

I’ve been a nurse for 10 years but remember feeling scared about mistakes when I was new. When you first start out, you don’t have a lot of context to be able to categorize how severe a mistake is. Using humor and poking fun is one thing but for fucks sake what’s with all the superiority complexesssssuhhh submitted by /u/Typhoid__Beaver [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

Judge blocks Trump plan that would limit graduate student loans in nursing and other fields

submitted by /u/UnlimitedBoxSpace [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

I am helping out a pregnant co worker out of goodwill, but its just too much now, how and who should I raise the concern too?

we are both nurses at a hospital she works one side and I work the other. She is temporarily taking over someones position because they went to LOA. Anyways, I don't mind helping people. she looks like shes ready to give birth but thats until the end of August. Sometimes she has me do her wound dressings because she cannot bend her back. I have to go to her patients rooms who are infected because its deemed a risk to her and her baby. If there is a transfer the PCA's can't do themselves, she cannot assist them as it is deemed heavy lifting so she calls me. Any cancerous drugs, she has me administer them. long story short, I don't mind helping them, but isn't this the companies fault, I mean what so she gets a pass, she doesn't have to foot the bill and risk her life but I have too, while we both still get paid the same. submitted by /u/DribbleKing97_ [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

A follow up to the post about the 2,993 mg/dl glucose

submitted by /u/neo_vengance [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

hot take: DNR

I think that either MOST if not all elderly people should be DNR. Why are we shattering these elderly bones?? Like maybe code status should change automatically to DNR at a certain age, and if you want to, then you can change it back to full code. Like what is the mortality rate of CPR on an 80 year old? 85? 90? submitted by /u/su9arfiend [link] [comments]

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need Jun 26, 2026
r/nursing

To anyone who doesn’t want to be forced to use ai, just say you’re catholic and take a religious exemption. They can’t make you prove you’re catholic

submitted by /u/eyecupee [link] [comments]

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need Jun 25, 2026
r/nursing

Beat the glucose posted yesterday!!! This one tops the charts for me. 169mmol/L/ 2933 mg/dL.

submitted by /u/ruggergrl13 [link] [comments]

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need Jun 25, 2026
r/nursing

That’s so true.

submitted by /u/roftymax [link] [comments]

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need Jun 18, 2026
r/nursing

Subreddit update

Hi all, You may or may not have noticed by this point, but as of 1800 EDT, we have enabled GIF replies in the subreddit. If this goes sideways, blame u/tillszy who asked for this in a post . Have at it, you degenerates. submitted by /u/StPauliBoi [link] [comments]

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need Jan 26, 2026
r/nursing

Announcement from the Mod team of r/nursing regarding the murder of Alex Pretti, and where we go from here.

Good evening, r/nursing . We know this is a challenging time for all due to the outrageous events that occurred on a Minnesota street yesterday. As your modteam, we would like to take a moment to address some questions we've gotten regarding our moderator actions in the last 48 hours and to make our position on the death of Alex Pretti, and our future moderation actions regarding this topic, completely clear. Six years ago at the beginning of the pandemic, we witnessed an incredible swell of activity from users not typically seen as participants within our community. Misinformation was plentiful and rife. As many of you recall, accusations of nurses harming or outright killing patients to create a 'plandemic' were unfortunately a dime a dozen. We were inundated with vaccine deniers, mask haters, and social distancing detractors. For every voice of reason from a flaired and long-standing contributor in our forum, there was at least one outside interloper here simply to argue. At that ju

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