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Occupational therapist interested in nursing
I will ask around about the ETNEP education to see if it's being used...and I just downloaded the third edition! Wow! I just was skimming and I'm excited to start reading it tonight! You have been more than helpful Dishes, thanks very much! :)
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Occupational therapist interested in nursing
Thank you! I have been on the sites, but now I will look into joining. They have a great set up in Alberta, wherein OTs and nurses have an opportunity to join a " SWAT" team ( skin wound assessment team) to address wounds in LTC. After education, assignments, testing and onsite evaluation, one can become a team member for a facility. Everything is based on best practice and up to date research. I would have loved to join, unfortunately my mat leave and then move back east prevented this. I thought it was a fantastic way to not only disseminate information, but also quickly address wounds. Right now there is only one wound care doctor and one nurse ( and a second part-time nurse working wound care and ostomy care) for a population of ~136,000. Although we are obviously not entirely destitute and do manage to get by, I have witnessed times when nursing staff on acute care units and in LTC just don't get a response back from the wound care nurses due to their crazy caseload. Anyway, onward and upward in my pursuit for education, but just not as a nurse! í ½í¸Š Thank you again for the advice!
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Occupational therapist interested in nursing
Wow! I love the idea of a journal club!! Fantastic! And maybe we could ask members to each bring articles that relate to their own discipline ( nursing, OT, PT, nutrition, etc.), that they wish other disciplines would know about...that would get us talking too, and could promote a better team mentality. I am so glad you suggested that. Thank you!
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Occupational therapist interested in nursing
Hmm..thank you for the reply...perhaps better use of my time would be to hone my OT skills further and work towards management. Don't think I'm quite ready for that yet though, I like being on the frontline. Thanks again for your input!
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Occupational therapist interested in nursing
Thank you for the response! The thing is, I do love being an OT, especially within geriatrics ( dementia care, seating assessments, swallowing assessments, pressure ulcer prevention), I'm just wondering if broadening my skill set by becoming formally educated as an RN is a worthwhile enhancement/endeavour. I couldn't see myself switching careers entirely, but potentially melding the two to fit a niche...just not sure exactly what that niche would be or if others would see benefit of it..like you, I've seen postings on people deciding to be a nurse or OT, or planning to go from nursing to OT, but I haven't come across anyone who was an OT and became a nurse/combined the disciplines.
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Occupational therapist interested in nursing
Looking for opinions! I have a bachelors of science majoring in biology ( minoring in chemistry), and a masters of science in occupational therapy. I've been working as an OT in LTC settings mostly, for the last 7 years, with a smattering on acute care units of hospitals. I just found out that there is a fast track RN program that I could complete in 21 months. I'm interested for a few reasons: 1) I'm passionate about wound care/ pressure ulcer treatment and prevention. Wound care in my current LTC setting is kind of behind the times. I'm in a place where nurses "learned" this year that steristrips aren't best practice for skin tears in elderly clients.. This frustrates me because although I want to help ( and mentioned it when I started working at this site two years ago) truly my knowledge is limited ( I only know bits and pieces beyond my typical scope, and frankly who is going to listen to me anyway??) I feel I could really offer a full package of wound prevention and treatment knowledge with further education. 2) There is a breakdown in communication/ lack of respect at times between nurses and clinicians. Not always, and at times it's veiled, but long story short, it appears OTs " hound" ( albeit politely) nurses with individualized care plans for clients. And, the other side of the coin is that I have witnessed way too many eye rolls of clinicians who feel nurses just " don't care" or " don't pay attention" to proper use of equipment, interventions, etc. I love a multidisciplinary team: this meeting and contribution of different professions actually excites me! I kind of feel if I know of or experience the nursing side of client care, I may be able to bridge that communication gap and help others bridge it too? 3) I've met many great nurses that genuinely care about patients and it shows ( and not all of them are outright "warm and fuzzy", but even though some of them don't have sunny dispositions, their actions show how dedicated they are). I've met other nurses that don't appear as caring and sometimes there actions ( or inaction) make me cringe ( and not regarding anything OT-related). I guess the OT in me wants to figure out a way to " fix" this? Is it even possible? I just don't feel like I'm qualified to pass any sort of judgement until I've been in their shoes, literally. I'm not meaning to be disrespectful here at all, but I have only come across one disgruntled OT in my travels. There has to be a reason for this! I'd love to possibly offer solutions/ explore this more. Anyway, are these pursuits worth it? I've found forums discussing the jump from nursing to OT, but not the other way around. I'd love to hear some thoughts on the matter!