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Hello y'all!
I need some help as my RN I was going to interview fell through and I do not have much time to set up another interview, If someone could so kindly answer these questions for me and email me so I can use them as a reference on my paper that would be wonderful!
-The nurse's current role, past experience, and educational path
-The registered nurse's current job responsibilities
-How the registered nurse perceives nursing has changed since she/he graduated from nursing school
-How the nurse integrates the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)rules to maintain patient confidentiality
my email is [email protected] if you have any questions or want to reply directly towards me!
THANK YOU IN ADVANCED
I need some help as my RN I was going to interview fell through and I do not have much time to set up another interview, If someone could so kindly answer these questions for me and email me so I can use them as a reference on my paper that would be wonderful!
Sometimes we learn things from assignments that weren't explicit in the syllabus. In this case, you have learned that:
1) Planning ahead in case plan A falls through is a better idea
2) Asking someone else to do your work for you rarely ends well
3) Posting your full name and email in public is a really bad idea
4) Nursing instructors read AllNurses too
5) There are a lot of places to find nurses, and we will tell you where some of those are. This is not the same thing as, "telling you where to go."
We get these requests a lot, so if there are any other students out there who might get this kind of assignment, listen up:
Part of your faculty's reason for giving you this assignment is to get you to go out there and speak to a nurse face to face. You also learn something about other places nurses work and what that's like. A big email blast is not a substitute for shoe leather. AN is not Google.
See, in nursing, you have to learn to speak to a lot of people you would not otherwise encounter; you might find yourself out of your comfort zone. This is part of nursing, a huge part. An anonymous respondent online, well, you don't really know who we are, do you? We could be the truck driving guy living next door for all you know.
So if all you do about learning new things is "Go to the keyboard and hit send," then you are limiting your chances of actual learning a valuable skill you will need all your working life. Also, your faculty will not be impressed by your citation of an anonymous person who may or may not be a nurse on the internet.
That said: Where will you find a nurse? Think outside the (computer) box.
Local hospital: go to the staff development/inservice education office and ask one of them. They value education and will be happy to chat or to hook you up with someone who is.
Go to the public health department downtown. Ditto.
Go to the local school and ask to speak to a school nurse. Ditto.
Go to a local clinic / physician/NP office. Ditto.
Go to the local jail and ask to speak to the nurse there. Ditto.
Notice all of these say, "Go to..." and not "Email..." Remember that part about meeting new people face to face, new perspectives, and comfort zone.
Go!
Go forth and sin no more.
susan wong
2 Posts
Seriously?