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I start clinicals next week and I am so incredibly scared! If anybody has any advice for me please share... preferably nurses or other nursing students.

Thanks!

2007-01-07 10:11:02 · 3 answers · asked by ? 3 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

Don't ever be afraid to ask questions of your instructor, they love that. If you don't understand something ask. That said, make sure if it's a matter of simple research you've made an effort to find out yourself by looking it up in a drug book or a textbook, etc.

Offer to pitch in and help the nurses and be conscious of their timetable. If you get a grumpy nurse, ask what you can do to help and make her day easier. If you can't work it out, ask your instructor to switch you, we can't get along with everyone.

Be proactive. Let the nurse KNOW that you need to put in a Foley catheter or you are looking to put down an NG tube. Let all the nurses on the floor know if they have a patient who needs one of those things, you'd like to do it. If you wait for opportunities for skills to come to you, you will miss them. Instructors are usually pretty good at directing you toward the skills you need to practice but not always.

Always tell patients who you are, what you are doing and how you are going to do it especially before you touch them. Be kind and tolerant of all sorts of people, you may meet drug addicts, people of other races, felons, people with HIV, people who you don't agree with their lifestyle. You must care for them as objectively as you can.

Don't plop down your books and pull charts at 7am and sit there and pore through them when others need the workspace and doctors are looking for the charts, remember you are a visitor there. If you pull a chart be near the space you took it so if someone needs it, immediately hand it over. If you sit down to chart, try to pick a spot you instructor designates as a good spot. We nurses like to stake out a spot at the beginning of a shift and it's real annoying to find a student in it after you've gotten comfortable.

Don't be afraid of doctors, they are people too. If you meet a rude one (and this goes for rude patients and coworkers too) be as kind as you can while also being firm and direct.

Be sure to get to clinicals on time, preferably a little early each day so you can get the "best" patient available. Don't ask to leave early or sit around doing nothing. If your patient is stable and sleeping then offer to help someone else or follow your nurse while she does her rounds, there is always stuff to learn and observe. Even though you're not getting paid you are still there to work.

2007-01-07 20:25:14 · answer #1 · answered by BabyRN 5 · 1 0

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2016-12-28 08:27:01 · answer #2 · answered by hileman 4 · 0 0

There is no reason to be scared. If you read your material and studied it the testing will be really easy. If you get all hyped up you will make silly mistakes.

2007-01-07 13:48:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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