Nurses LPN/LVN
Published May 20, 2008
Found from a blog in Advance for LPNs, a petition to allow LPNs with experience to sit for their RN boards. I would love to do that. What does everyone else think? Here is the link:
http://www.petitiononline.com/lps2t/petition.html
miffe03
9 Posts
well I would sign the petition maybe its before I decided to go to Nursing school I already had my AS degree all nursing prerequisites, so since day dot have approached my assessments utilizing the disease process, however when former LVN/LPNs who have completed the step-up program, talk about the difference because you know use the disease process, I want to scream. How did you assess your pt as a LVN/LPN how could you not use this process to update careplans, to report to your Charge nurse about changes, to give PRN treatments. How were you able to complete your care?. Please tell me.
Woodenpug, BSN
734 Posts
The difference between LVN/LPN and RN is difficult to explain to someone who as not "been there, done that." I mean real experience as an LVN/LPN as opposed to doing it while earning the RN or for a few months prior to getting into RN school. I've been an RN now for a little more than a year and can assure you that it is quite different, however, all of the learning for me has been "on the job." With the exception of learning better formal writing and formal speaking skills, the RN school was of little use. (again, for me.) As I posted earlier in this thread, I still support the petition and have signed it.
For part of the answer as to how RN is different - I spent most of my patient advocacy time as an LVN convincing my RN of what is better for the patient. As an RN, I spend most of my patient advocacy time with MD's, Pharmacists, Nursing administration and lab techs. I don't have to convince myself to get a needed order, pass a PRN med, etc.
withasmilelpn
582 Posts
The difference between LVN/LPN and RN is difficult to explain to someone who as not "been there, done that." I mean real experience as an LVN/LPN as opposed to doing it while earning the RN or for a few months prior to getting into RN school. I've been an RN now for a little more than a year and can assure you that it is quite different, however, all of the learning for me has been "on the job." With the exception of learning better formal writing and formal speaking skills, the RN school was of little use. (again, for me.) As I posted earlier in this thread, I still support the petition and have signed it.For part of the answer as to how RN is different - I spent most of my patient advocacy time as an LVN convincing my RN of what is better for the patient. As an RN, I spend most of my patient advocacy time with MD's, Pharmacists, Nursing administration and lab techs. I don't have to convince myself to get a needed order, pass a PRN med, etc.