End of Semester Evaluations
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Hi there,
I only have two more weeks of school and then I will have my first semester under my belt.
During out last "clinical" day we will meet with our instructor and she will go over an evaluation with us. We are also to bring to the table a self evaluation.
Do any of you do this?
What would you comment on for your self evaluation?
I guess the biggest thing for me is that I am extremely uncomfortable giving PO Meds.
If I have a patient who is to receive an injection along with their other meds. I have no problem drawing up the injection and giving it. But PO Meds throw me for a loop.
I guess a lot of it has to do with patients that have a multitude of drugs, ie. 9, 10, 11 meds. all at once. Then the name of the drug on the MAR is always the brand name, while the name on the packet is generic.
Then, I seem to get easily confused with d/c drugs and the way things are written on the MAR compared to the Kardex and/or the chart and doctors orders. Like during one clinical there were so many meds that two MAR sheets were used. The first three meds on the MAR were marked to be d/c but on the second MAR sheet the meds. appeared again and were not marked to be d/c. And it wasn't that they were d/c and then a new dosage was ordered. They were duplicates.
It often takes pharmacy a couple of days to quit sending up drugs that are d/c. Not that I would ever trust Pharmacy to tell me if a drug was still in use or d/c but it can get confusing when you have a drug that is d/c but it still shows up in the patients med drawer, especially if there is a question as to whether or not the med. truly is d/c. I asked my instructor about it and she said she did not know and to ask the RN for the patient. When I asked the RN assigned to the patient why they were duplicated she said she did not know and to not administer them as they were d/c. In the midst of all of this I forgot to initial the MAR for one of the drugs that I administered. Luckily, the RN was there with me while I was getting the meds together and knew that I had given it.
I guess I just feel like a goober as this is something we were checked off for back in Week 7 and something that should be under control.
I mean, it sounds so simple, just check that you have the grug, it's the right dosage, put it in the cup, give it to the right patient and just put your initials in the MAR.