Nursing Apprenticeship Report. Infusion room apprenticeship for 14 days with skin testing, medication dispensing, venipuncture, etc.

This summer I came to **** hospital for a month and a half nursing apprenticeship. During this time, I was a trainee nurse, arriving earlier and leaving later than the regular nurses, and completing handover records as required. At the beginning, I feel confused about the actual operation, the nurse patiently explain to me, guide me, slowly I can skillfully each basic nursing operation and specialized nursing operation, equivalent to a small nurse. Through this one and a half months of apprenticeship, my theoretical level and practical level have been improved.

My gains from this nursing internship are as follows:

1 Strictly abide by the rules and regulations of the hospital, and conscientiously fulfill the duties of internship nurses. I strictly abide by the system of the department, on time to participate in the nursing room, familiar with the patient's condition, can correctly answer the questions of the nurse instructor, standardized and skilled basic nursing operations and specialized nursing operations, the correct implementation of the doctor's orders, the strict implementation of the three checks and seven pairs, can standardize the writing of various types of nursing instruments, and complete the shift handover records in a timely manner

2 Clinical is the consolidation of theoretical basics of knowledge base, the clinic has to be the field of knowledge, the field of practice. The first time I saw the car, I was able to see it and practiced. In the school to learn those pharmacology and pathology are used, that knowledge is not only used in the examination, more importantly, is to apply to the actual. As a nurse, you should not only learn theoretical knowledge well, but also apply the theoretical knowledge to the actual practice, and combine the knowledge learned in school with the actual operation by mail. Through the apprenticeship, I also learned a lot of things that can not be learned in school, such as the clinical manifestations of the patient after the use of drugs, the patient's reaction to the infusion of emergency measures? During this time, I also know the face of the patient flow, treatment programs and irregular characteristics, nurses should have the ability to improvise, reasonable arrangements.

3Learn the basic nursing operation and specialized nursing operation. The nurse's work is a process of practice makes perfect. We can only have solid skills if we keep learning and thinking and operating and exercising. I followed the lead nurse, listened carefully to the explanations and instructions, learned the basic operation of many medical equipments, observed and practiced many kinds of medical operations, such as the determination of vital signs (weight, blood pressure, respiration, pulse, temperature), intravenous drip, intramuscular injections, sterilization of instruments, adjusting the saline bottles, connecting the patients to the oxygen, and disposing of the wastes, and so on.

4 as a nurse must be calm and careful, not panic. Strictly implement the principle of "three check seven right", do check before operation, operation check, operation check, check the bed number, name, drug name, dose, concentration, time, usage. This is your responsibility, and you are also responsible for your patients. Sometimes a carelessness may cause a big mistake, which is related to the safety of life. As a nurse, you need to have the ability to deal with multiple accidents, such as: how to deal with drug reactions when patients are on IV, what to do when the ambulance sends an emergency patient, even if some of them are explained in the textbook, but I can't help but be panicked when I encountered these situations during my internship. As a nurse, you must be calm and responsible for your patients.

5The work of nurses is tedious but important. Nurses are indeed very hard, a moment is to transfuse blood, a moment is to inject medication, a moment to check the bed. But also to help the elderly, for them to pour water, accompanied by the elderly to the toilet, inspection of saline bottles of medicine whether the drip is finished these are the work of the nurse, although trivial, but are very important, the patient needs a nurse's careful care. Nurses this occupation is ordinary but can not be missing.

6 one and a half months of apprenticeship so that I have a certain understanding of the overall care of medical cooperation. The nurse's job is not just to carry out the doctor's orders, "according to the prescription" on the line. The duties of doctors and nurses are highly unified, and the goal is to relieve patients of physical and psychological pain. Only when doctors and nurses to do close coordination, clear responsibility, cooperation, *** with the management, in order to bring the greatest benefit to the patient.

All in all, after this one and a half months of internship, I gained a lot. On the one hand, through the practical application of the theory learned in school, enhance my practical ability, through some specific clinical operation and careful observation, accumulated some practical experience. This has prepared me well for my future role as a nurse, where I will be able to maximize my value. On the other hand, although in this one and a half months, I also experienced some not very smooth things, but these not smooth precisely I wake up to realize my own shortcomings, but also become my continuous learning, continue to move forward.

Through this internship, I am also determined to think more, observe more, apply more, and really learn the theoretical knowledge thoroughly, so that in the future the actual work can be really put into practice, and be a good nurse.

These days of apprenticeship I learned that the nurse's hands especially need to clean and protect. During the operation of the hands to wash clean, to be responsible for the patient, so that the nurse every day to wash their hands a lot of times. At the same time, these hands are always in a dangerous state, sometimes encountered contact with skin disease or chicken pox patients, to immediately wash their hands to prevent being infected. During the internship, I often saw many nurses hurt their hands by glass during the saline preparation process. I can't help but marvel at the fact that the profession of nursing, though common, is a sweaty and bloody one.

These days I go to work at 8 o'clock every day and finish at 5 o'clock. I assisted the elderly, poured water for them, accompanied them to the toilet, and inspected the saline bottles to see if the drops were finished. I am very conscientious, because everything should start from small things. As time went by, the head nurse would teach me a little bit of simple operation in her spare time in the afternoon. So I was given a few more tasks to do: adjusting saline bottles, connecting patients to oxygen, doing cerebral circulation, and disposing of waste. The head nurse warned me, the patient is anxious, as a nurse I must not be anxious, operation should be calm and never panic.

But even though I thought I was being very conscientious, I made a mistake when I was helping the nurse who was dispensing the injections to unpack the medication, and when I was writing the patient's name on each of the saline vials, and I gave the medication order to the wrong person. Based on my impression from the contact a few minutes earlier, I assumed that the old man was the same one from earlier and did not give his name to recognize him before giving him the medication order. Although the mistake was realized and corrected in time, I felt scared after the incident. If the patient's life had been jeopardized because of this mistake, would I have been able to bear the responsibility? This is a lesson that warns me that I must strictly implement the principle of "Three Checks and Seven Rights" before I do anything, so that I can check before, during and after the operation, and check the bed number, name, name, name of the drug, dose, concentration, time and usage.

In the apprenticeship, we often hear patients ask for a certain nurse to give him an injection, discussing who has a high injection technique, and who is playing a very painful. One of the most devastating things I heard was, "Don't ever give an intern a shot, I'm most afraid to let them do it." This made me very unconvinced, but I had to admit that the accuracy of the injection is a matter of accumulating experience and mastering skills. At the same time, I also know that only their own high technology, natural patients will respect you, trust you to let you for his injection.

This apprenticeship I learned a lot, but also let me find myself a lot of shortcomings. Nurses as a profession need to stand and work, but I obviously can not adapt to a long time standing. A day's work is already exhausted, go home and fall asleep. So I still need to exercise more. I need to know how I can save lives if I fall down. The apprenticeship also let me understand the importance of the discipline of pharmacology. Previously, I always thought that pharmacology as h as an examination course do not need to learn too seriously, nurses and not for patients to prescribe drugs. Until a patient asked me the name of the drug on the medical record card, I was dumbfounded and did not know how to answer. It seems that a good remedial pharmacology is very necessary.