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Posted: Mar 31, 2008 03:05 PM
Views: 1887
Received 64 "Thank You" From 15 Posts
I remember my first day as a GN as if it was yesterday.... "I finally made it and what a rush"! I had a great day and couldn't wait to come back... This was so awesome and I was a NURSE! Well, guess what? Reality soon settled in and all of a sudden I felt like a ship lost at sea. No one helped me, my preceptor was condescending and wanted to know why I was so slow and stop teaching---get those meds out! Then, one day my world fell apart and I decided I just had to go to a different unit. I did and things were so much better...BUT, things should have been different on the first unit and all it would take is a little bit of positive reinforcement, a little bit of encouragement, a whole lot of patience and the ability to empathize with the new GN or nursing student ---hey, no one is born a nurse----we all were there at one time or another. So, here is my remedy for successful nurturing of the new nursing generation:
- Be kind and welcoming on their first day, it is a big new world for them and they will get lost, forget their lunch money, forget your name, and possibly be totally overwhelmed with the whole floor. Introduce them to the doctors so they will have a sense of belonging.
- Leave your attitudes at the door... you are not there to influence any of their opinions, you are there to be their mentor, teacher, leader, etc.
- Be abundantly patient with them : no one knows everything, not even you, and everyone learns at a different rate. If you want them to learn and learn well patient will help them to practice the fine are of nursing.
- Praise them highly for doing well and never criticize them at the nurses station (please take them aside, alone and speak with them). It is hard enough to be new without being embarassed too.
- Evaluate them on their merits , not their popularity, looks, or your opinion of their dress, school they went to etc.
- Don't play sink or swim with them, let them work their way up to a full load, let them learn to do things but don't leave them all alone, give them a chance to see new things, positive experiences will help them spread their wings
- Don't expect them to follow your every move or way of doing things,they will be successful when they learn how to do things their way. Speed is less important than accuracy especially with meds... get them used to knowing what they are giving and why they are giving it---not just blindly giving something that is on the MAR---it could be a mistake!
- Remind them to take their breaks, go to the bathroom, and have some fun once in a while---and to leave work at work
- Remind them to watch their tongue around management, supervisors, team leaders etc, because the toes you step on today could be attached to the but you'll have to kiss tomorrow!
- Above all, please, teach them to be kind, compassionate and caring. Let them learn empathy so they view a patient as they would thier family member---then they will follow the Golden Rule.
We need the next generation of nurses desperately, because without them-- "WHO WILL CARE FOR US" ?