this was my last shift. so to day i took the full pt team with out any problems. we have 4 pt most of the day then we got a 5th one. i got an IV with the new IVs and it was a hard stick. so i felt really good about myself. after it was over my preceptor said some really nice things about me. and about how i did over all the shifts.
i was able to work on Objective 5: Participate in care
monitoring, quality improvement, and incident reporting. While on the 7
th
floor I was able to attempt a care coordination meeting were we reported the
concerns that the patient had and gave suggestions to the charge nurse one what
could b done on the unit to address those concerns. Fortunately we did not have
to do an incident report for any reason.
also i finished my SMART goals 2, 3 and 5
Goal #2: I will be able to know the normal values and causes
for variation for a CBC, CMP, renal function panel, pt, ptt, INR, and CRP with
minimal assistance by the end of my proctorship. This goal was very valuable
for me to know. At first I would always use the function on the computer to see
the normal values for labs. But with this goal now completed I don’t need to do
that anymore. I started off using flash cards to test myself of lab value
normal range, and then I added the causes for variation in the different labs.
I never realized so much that there were almost always things skewing the lab
values. Whether it is dehydration, a medication, bleeding, or getting blood.
There are so many things that can be confusing. I wont say that I am an expert
now, however I will say that I now have a much better Idea about what to do
when I see abnormal lab values.
Goal #3: I will be able to
identify the adverse effects and contraindications of Zofran, Morphine, Novolog, Lantas, Metoprilol, Lasix,
HCTZ, and carboplatin, with minimal assistance by the end of my
proctorship. This was probably my most challenging goal that I had. I at first
was just looing them up in the clinical pharmacology site at intermountain’s
website, but that was not going well for me, I kept feeling that I only
partially knew any other the medications. After the 4th shift I made
flash cards that had the medication name on the front and had all the other
information on the back. I took these to clinicals and was able to look at them
during slow times. I also had to review them at home. By the end of my preceptorship
I was able to know the major side effects of the medications and any nursing
implications or contraindications. A patient was prescribed Lopressor, and with
out any resources I knew that we were going to make sure were checked her blood
pressure before we gave it, sure enough it was low. So I knew to hold the dose.
This goal was a lot more difficult then I had originally thought because there
really is so much information to know on different medications.
Goal #5: I will be able to carry the entire patient load
(3-5 patients) by myself with minimal assistance by the end of my proctorship.
To achieve this goal I started for the first 2 shifts helping my nurse with all
the patients, just getting a feel for the floor. After that I took 2 patients
on my own, and then 3. On the 5th shift I took the full team, 4
patients, and then we got an admission so I had 5 patients. Also on the six
through 8th shift I took the full patient load. At first it was not
as hard as I thought, but that was because we had an easy patient load. The 5th
shift I was feeling pretty good about things, and that is where things came
undone a little. I was just falling behind in the things that I had to do and I
was not prioritizing right, and my nurse
had to talk to me and tell me what I needed to be doing and that I need to do
things faster. Overall this was a difficult goal, but I worked up to it and accomplished
it before the end of my preceptorship.