Greetings all,
So this daily blog thing gets to be a little more labor intensive than I am used to, that is for certain. But in any case I have had another amazing day here in Iceland. As I have said to my new (and fabulous!) friends here, I must really like them as I don't usually spend this much time with anyone. We have all had so much of our time programmed, which is great because then we see and do so much, but it is also tiring, at least for me, to not have some alone time. SO! Day 1 of the informatics course and despite my very complete background in informatics, I still learned so much today. I now have a much better understanding of my mom complains about
SNOMED because when I think about trying to program SNOMED into an existing EMR, it just sounds like a nightmare. But I also can see that it would be very very beneficial for data collection across different enterprise systems, and so great to start to have an opportunity to collect detailed data that isn't just billing based. I also tried to be a champion for the
EHR vendor a couple of times as it is easy for the end user to want want want when the programming requirements are completely unknown. It was great to have some time to break out into groups with the master's students from Iceland today as well.

After class the three nursing students, Tai, Jamie and I were taken by Margaret, a very kind nurse-midwife who works as an NICU nurse right now, to
Vokudeild at Landspitali, the only NICU in Iceland. It was a very nice, clean, bright facility. When we arrived we were greeted by Ragnheiour Siguroardottir, the nurse manager. She gave us an information packet, a video to take home as well a sheet with their latest statistics which she had just finished compiling so that we could have the most current data - how very kind! We were all dressed in yellow coats, scrubbed in and then were taken to where the sickest babies are kept. We saw a tiny preemie, a new babe having
umbilical lines placed and another babe who had just switched from the oscillator to a regular vent. They have the same exact monitoring equipment as our NICU, the isolettes are also very similar, just a different model I believe, and the NO machine also looked quite similar. They nest their babes just like we do, they have the same snugglies and they cover their isolettes but a little more completely than we do. On the other hand, they intubate their infants through the nose - which I didn't even know was done but definitely has some advantages. They also do not have Neonatal Nurse Practitioners so the umbilical lines were being placed by not one but two doctors with a nurse standing by. Tai pointed out that the staff in the NICU were wearing sandals with socks (not as a fashion faux pas but as a safety hazard...). It was so good to chat with Margaret and Ragnheiour about the differences in their NICU as well as the similarities. My favorite things I saw were the funnel that they used for dispensing a wiff of oxygen to the babes, the warm water beds they use to help transition the babes from an isolette to the cribs and last but not least the
kick scooters that the nurses use to get to the cafeteria that is almost a half a mile from the unit. We went back to the Paris Cafe for dinner tonight for a round of hamburgers and wine and beer. The nurses (+1 honorary nurse) spent hours sitting in the cafe talking about all things relevant from Graceland to Roald Dahl and everything in between. It was great to kick back and relax. Ok, it is almost 2AM and I should really get some sleep. Hope everyone is well where-ever on the globe they may be.
-Anna