UNE BSN May 2022

Month: December 2021

Presenting Change

We did a lot of research, so disseminating the findings on our project was not as hard as I thought it would be. We wrote everything out and basically just transformed it into a poster. Infection control in a hospital is not a difficult topic considering the things you as a health care worker could do to prevent the spread of infection are tasks everyone should be doing every day. When we realized the simple steps a health care worker needs to take in order to prevent the spread of infection through our research, disseminating our findings and creating an infographic was not all too challenging. We have yet to hear back on how the nurses on MS3 responded to our infographics and survey, but we did receive feedback from our clinical instructor.

Our clinical instructor agrees that infection control is very important in a hospital setting. She made a point to say that it is nice only having to wash your hands for 20 seconds instead of singing the “happy birthday” song to get it right, since that was the old recommendation. Under the “what are we preventing” section of our infographic, we put “C. diff” and she also thinks it would be beneficial if we were to have put C. Difficile. She also suggested that under hospital acquired infections, skin and wound infections could also be hospital acquired. Other than those critiques she really enjoyed our project and seeing what it has turned into. She also said she is teaching a clinical group there in the spring as well so she can see if it has made an impact!

Through this team project I learned how to work in a larger group of people that we had just recently met aside from the importance of infection control! Coming into an unfamiliar environment with unfamiliar people as a new nurse is bound to happen. Taking these skills we have learned through working with our group into the nursing world, will be very beneficial. As a group we found an issue that needed to be addressed (infection control), we researched it, and created a poster on how to improve it. The final dissemination project will be hung up on MS3 at SMHC and we did all this while being nursing students. Doing all this as a student gave me the confidence of being able to contribute to quality improvement and evidence-based practice initiatives as I enter the workforce as a new nurse. If my clinical group was on a floor for a couple weeks before choosing something to work on, I feel confident that I could make the floor I work on every day better.

As a team member, I faced obstacles at the beginning of this project. I was unable to attend the first 3 clinicals. That is when we were supposed to be figuring out what we were going to do our project on and building connections on the floor. It was difficult at first being on the outside of what was going on, however I realized that I could still do just as much. We discussed doing our project on infection control and I realized that just because I wasn’t at clinical those first 3 days does not mean I can’t do as much as them. Once I realized that I was able to build the confidence to get things moving on our project. Through this process I realized that if a due date was approaching, we have yet to discuss it, I would be one to reach out and take the lead on what we need to get done. I have realized I can be a leader, while also being part of the team.

Disaster Nursing

Disasters could happen at any time whether it be natural or man-made. When something like this happens, we need people to come together and help make things better/ easier. Nurses could be a big help when it comes to caring for victims of a disaster. Nurses are leaders, educators, responders, policymakers, and researchers when it comes to disaster preparedness and the response. Although nurses will be assisting with the aftermath of a disaster in a health care facility, emergency preparedness and disaster planning could also come in handy when not at work. For example, if a registered nurse is driving by and sees an accident that just happened, they should stop and use their skillset to make sure the people in the accident are stay stable enough until they are taken to the hospital. They could use their knowledge on how to feel for pulses and assess the state of the victims so when the first responders come you could give them a small report. We also were told in class that it could come in handy to leave a blood pressure cuff, a stethoscope, and a first aid kit in the trunk of your car since you never know when or where you will need it. You always want to be prepared as a medical professional to help.

            Using the accident as an example when also talking about Provision 2 of the ANA Code of Ethics. This states that the nurse’s primary responsibility is to the patient, yet Provision 5 states that a nurse owes the same duty to self. I am thinking about if the accident had a car that was on fire, and the person was still in the car. Obviously as a nurse you want to help and you want to make that person your priority however, it may be dangerous to attempt to get that person out. In a natural disaster such as a tornado, a nurse may help with the victims. There may be people under rubbish or under a building that is not very stable. In these situations, you must think about the chances of you as the nurse getting hurt. Nurses will not be able to save patients if they are the ones getting hurt trying to care and save people in disaster situations. I feel as though emergency preparedness is a very important skill a nurse could have. It would enable them to be ready to help in any given moment at any place. There are crazy incidents that happen all the time that no one is ever prepared for. It would make the lives of the people effected easier if we had experienced nurses trying to help.

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