Coffee break?

Coffee break?
Whatever happened to working smarter and not harder?

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Student Orientation to Clinical Site

October 18, 2012 Student nusre (SN) orientation to clinical site started at 1300 in the lobby at SJGH. It was my responsiblity to create a form and distribute hospital access badges for my 10 students. Once everyone received their assigned badges we proceeded to our reserved conference room which was conveniently located on the floor where our clinical experience would begin. After I welcomed the students to "Transition to Nursing Practice" which involves nursing leadership and management skill development, we discussed expectations for their clinical experience.  I gave a brief introduction about myself, then I discussed changes in the syllabus.  The students signed a student  agreement statement form that they were made aware of the changes to the syllabus.
 
We toured the Intensive Care Unit, Emergency Department, and Med/Surg units. Two students would be assigned to a primary nurse in the ICU and ED for each day of clinicals. Clinical area assignments were made with student input. One student, the Safety Auditor (SA) for each clinical day is expected to make student assignments and check in with each SN in the clinical areas. In order to give the SA a global perspective of nursing responsibilties as a leader, the SA/ charge nurse duties included a two hour shadowing with the nursing supervisor for the hospital. A math test was administered and I gave a one hour lecture on Data Action Response (DAR) charting with a SJGH policy review. A documentation activity was incorporated in the lecture that engaged the students in care planning. They were encouraged to use concept mapping tool to formulate a plan of care, clinical reasoning skill development. The SNs were oriented to IV pump and each SN practiced how to use it.

  My experience for the orientation to clinical area was exciting and exhausting! I had an agenda with scheduled breaks and we finished the day on-time, 2100! The last minute syllabus changes, conference room reservation/confirmation, and post-conference lecture preparations was stressful.  Flexibility and a sense of urgency got me through the day, successfully. The students were eager to hear my expectations and they were patient with me. I look forward to the interaction with my students in the clinical environment... My2cents

1 comment:

  1. Some very great ideas here Mary - having students sign that they have read and understand important changes is just one of them. The SA idea is new to me but I really like it! Flexibility is important indded. Keep up the good work!

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