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Explore every episode of the podcast Bedpan Banter

Dive into the complete episode list for Bedpan Banter. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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1–24 of 24

TitlePub. DateDuration
Getting Better, Not Bitter: SimpleNursing's Reinvention Story10 Sep 202500:15:04

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/

Bedpans to Business: The Story Behind SimpleNursing03 Sep 202500:22:50

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/

What You Never Knew About Sonography with Natalie Avni24 Sep 202500:36:46

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 aspects

Follow @NatalieAvni on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube for more insights into the world of sonography.


To submit your stories & comments, visit: https://simplenursing.com/podcast/

ER Nightmares: When Objects Go Missing01 Oct 202500:13:20

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/

Cleaning Bedpans, Setting Boundaries & Melanie Gomez's Nursing Journey to FNP08 Oct 202500:29:12

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/

Part 2 with Hospice Nurse Julie: How Honest Conversations & Science Ease The Fear Of Death22 Oct 202500:25:43

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/

Part 1 with Hospice Nurse Julie: What Nurses And Families Should Know About A Good Death22 Oct 202500:41:29

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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