Do you also subscribe to the theory that leaving the patient alone for 5 seconds is abandonment?
Calm down man, I was just trying to point out that leaving a trainee alone with a patient that requires IV therapy, long enough for said trainee to indulge his inner-Clooney, might be indicative of a more systemic problem. Please don't bait-and-switch by comparing that with leaving a patient alone for 5 seconds. However, if there's an ambulance chaser around, 5 seconds IS abandonment.
As for OP, I empathize, but I've been down that road before. When I was fresh out of high school, I was hired by my school district to help the district's 2 computer guys over the summer (keep in mind computers in school were pretty new back then).
At one point, I got written up because our boss told me to do Thing A. Unfortunately, Thing A turned out to be thoroughly impossible, technically speaking. I tried many different tricks, before doing the research and realizing it wouldn't ever work. Being that my boss had left shortly after tasking me, and being that this was pre-cell phones, I re-joined the rest of my group and assisted them in their task of pulling wires, figuring that was more productive then banging my head against the wall in pursuit of a fruitless task. I was written up for overstepping my boundaries or something along those lines.
A month or two later, I was approached by one of the ladies who worked for the school district (who was herself not very pleasant). She said she needed some big strong men to help her carry computers into the office. As I followed her outside
to do exactly as she had asked, I noted that if she was looking for big/strong men, she should probably keep looking - I was a cross country runner, 6'2" & 160lbs soaking wet, able to bench press somewhere in the neighborhood of 50lbs. She complained that I was insubordinate and I was fired on the spot. Oh, also that day was my 19th birthday.
The guy who fired me ended up getting arrested a few years later for having a Tony Montana-like coke habit, so I guess there's that.
The point of this silly reminiscence is to note that as a subordinate employee, it isn't really for you to decide what is beneath you. I was in college at the time as a freshman studying Information Systems and I already had more experience/knowledge than the guys who were my bosses. Yeah, it bugged me, and in my opinion my firing was pretty harsh, but it was their prerogative.