Published Nov 20, 2016
juliabidles
1 Post
Could any registered nurse answer these 5 simple questions for my school project please? Also if you could please state what floor/unit you work/worked on.
1. What made you choose nursing?
2. Is nursing rewarding? What has been your most rewarding experience?
3. What type of issues have you experienced that are a conflict to nursing?
4. What do you see as the future of nursing?
5. What duties are included in your job description?
AliNajaCat
1,035 Posts
Call the local hospital nursing education department, the public health department, the college health clinic, the parish nursing folks, the public school nurse...make a date for coffee and a chat. The idea is to get you out of your comfort zone and talk to a live person, a skill you will desperately need in actual nursing school. You can do it. It's only a phone call.
Esme12, ASN, BSN, RN
20,908 Posts
are you in high school? Or is this for college?
allnurses Admin Team
339 Posts
Please note that some off-topic/unfriendly posts have been removed.
allnurses does not need members policing students with comments that are unwelcoming and unfriendly. If members do not want to respond to help the member, just leave the thread without leaving any comment. Future comments in this vein will be removed without notice.
Per our Terms of Service:
Our first priority is to the member's who have come here because of the flame-free atmosphere we provide. There is a zero-tolerance policy here against personal attacks. We will not tolerate anyone insulting others' opinions nor name calling. Our call is to be supportive, not divisive.You will enjoy a great deal of freedom here, with the ability to freely debate upon a number of subjects, as long as you remain civil and polite to each other. You are among the most intelligent, friendly, experienced, passionate and vocal nursing posters anywhere on the Internet. You are part of a site whose opinions are widely read by men and women considering nursing, nursing assistants, students from around the world. This website is one of the most highly respected within the nursing community and is listed as a resource in nursing publications and at other nursing related websites. We didn't get to that status without the professional and courteous contributions of our membership. We welcome you to a place you will soon call home.
If you have questions, you may come to the Admin Office and privately discuss this with the Administrators.
Lev, MSN, RN, NP
4 Articles; 2,805 Posts
I chose nursing because it was a solid career choice, was interesting and stimulating, required contact with people, and seemed to be in demand (well it was easier to get a job before the recession)
Nursing is rewarding when people appreciate what you do and when you can make a difference, which doesn't happen all the time. I don't have a specific example.
The issues I have experienced are managers who are out of touch with their staff, staff feeling out of touch with upper management aka the big wigs, supplies not being stocked, and chronic staff turnover with high patient acuity.
In the future of nursing I see more RNs getting graduate degrees and less RNs wanting to stay at the bedside for long. I do not see national set staffing ratios for decades to come.
Assess patients and implement the plan of care. Triage patients. Maintain a safe patient environment. Document in the medical record. Administer medications. Lift heavy loads. Be on feet for extended periods of time (not joking these are in the job descriptions).
Buyer beware, BSN
1,139 Posts
This is great advice for the neophyte passionate student nurse and could be the first rudimentary step toward dealing with your first drug seeking patient.
This way you'll be somewhat desensitized when that special patient says " get me the dilaudid now you so and so or I'll kill you."