Parts of the LVN clinical training in Module 4 is that LPN licensed practical nursing students are scheduled to participate in various field trips throughout the Bay Area. There are scheduled field trips to HeadStart, Martin Luther King, Jr. Preschool, Lynn Center, California Medical Facility in Vacaville, John Muir Medical Center and Sonoma Developmental Center. These scheduled field trips during LVN courses are done to enhance the knowledge and experience of our students and thus better prepare them to be the best nurses they can be. One of our field trips for Group 11 was to go to the Napa Coroner’s Office to observe an autopsy.
On July 16th Group 11 drove to the Napa Valley eager to have a life altering experience. Students were anxious with cold, sweaty palms but also excited to experience the unknown. We were welcomed by the Deputy Sheriff who gave us a nice tour of the facility and told us that there were two autopsies scheduled for that morning: a 25 year-old male and a 58 year-old female. The Deputy Sheriff was explained that these two cases will be good experience for the students, as they will be able to see a variety of cases in one day. We were briefed by the Deputy Sheriff as to what to expect and what was expected of us, but nothing could really prepare us for what we saw.
Our Clinical Coordinator, Nancye Maffei, handed out the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and instructed us to put it on. As we put it on, we began to wonder why we needed this level of protection to observe an autopsy. Nancye told us that during previous autopsies the pathologist allowed students to touch and hold human organs. Experience from previous classes also taught us that there is the risk of exposure to clothing and skin.
We were told if we could not stand the smell or being that close to a dead body we could always stand behind the glass window in the other room. As we were guided inside the coroner’s laboratory you could feel the cool breeze and the absolute absence of noise. As the metal gurney was wheeled in with a closed body bag, reality started to kick in. When the pathologist opened the zipper of the body bag we could feel the anxious, tense feelings of the students in the room.
The Pathologist (as well as all of the staff) was very accommodating to the Gurnick Academy of Medical Arts LVN students. As he proceeded the pathologist told us exactly what he was doing. The experience was very overwhelming to the students but it definitely taught them a lot about human anatomy and physiology. For most LVN students it was the first time they had seen a human brain, heart, lungs, larynx, stomach, kidney, liver, thyroid, spleen and other organs. It was an experience we will remember.
