Clinical Differences between your
BSN and MSN – Guest Post
Advanced Nursing 2021, Tokyo, Japan |
Let’s
start out on a positive note, which is rare for me because my sense of humor is
dark and drier than the saltines locked up by Dietary because the nurses were
eating too many. I love nurse
practitioners. They are adaptable,
dependable, and their education opens up a world of possibilities and knowledge
that doesn’t exist at the BSN
level. Like CRNAs, the skill and finesse
they learn in school elevates caring to an art form. Sometimes it’s a lot of fun! But, on the
healthcare hierarchy totem pole, graduate students are still a bug trapped
underneath the pole. Clinical sites
evaluate them much more closely and lord more power over them than in nursing school. When it came to the hands-on, manage-the-patient-as-if-you-were-a-nurse
part of nursing clinicals, I
was about as skilled as this guy.
It took a long time for anyone to notice because I had a 4.0 and could answer
any question thrown at me. With an MSN, the
bar is much higher. You need to start
performing on Day One rather than blunder through a three month orientation
trying not to kill anyone at your first job.
The closer scrutiny on clinical results is
necessary and rewarding, but there are two major ironies for CRNA and NP
students to accept. There are a lot of
fabulous things too, but those aren’t as interesting to write about. The first irony is that you are paying money
to make other people money–sometimes while being treated poorly. An example is the anesthesiologist resident
being supervised remotely while sedating for colonoscopies, except that he
makes enough to buy Ramen while the nurse anesthesia student does not. The second is that although you occasionally
generate the same level of notice and respect that Housekeeping does, whether
your clinicals
are at a small office or a large hospital,
some of your preceptors will be intensively interested in your personal life.
Watch out for bullying
Identifying
psychotic preceptors is an invaluable tool as a graduate student. My site on bullying and corporate wellness
can help with some of this. Who can you
trust? Programs with multiple clinical
sites have a liaison between the school and the program, although that doesn’t
automatically mean anything. Find out
from students who have been to that clinical
site before, although they may be more loyal to advance practice nurses at an
institution than they will be to you.
Seniors may be after a job or desperately want to please someone at the
site with juicy information about a new student. At this point, you may suspect I’m a
suspicious sourpuss. I’m actually
embarrassingly gullible and tend to see the best in people rather than their
glaring faults, which is why advice like this was so helpful for me. And really, you should be treating everyone
as well as you can. Not two-faced or
disingenuous, but the way you want to be treated. The simpler you can keep your clinical
relationships, the more you can concentrate on doing well clinically
instead of the petty drama that some people live for. I know it doesn’t sound like it, but I found clinicals
tremendously more fun and interesting the second time around.
Trying to understand expectations between preceptors
Once you do find trustworthy preceptors that have your best, long-term
interests in mind and really want to help, try new things and work on your clinical
weaknesses with them. As a new student,
skills like arterial and central line placement or intubating with a new type
of blade or equipment are good examples.
Even discovering your deficits may seem bewildering. One preceptor will compliment you on your
critical thinking and the next may berate you for the exact same thought
process. Understand that many of the
brilliant preceptors who ask you highly specialized and difficult questions
only have a handful of them that are meant to stump you, unless they’ve been
reading textbooks between patients.
Often there’s a strong correlation between a fixation with antibiotics
or airway or amiodarone dosing and a terrible mistake they once made. Even if an outcome is one in a million, if it
happens to your patient, you’ll pay special attention to it in every subsequent
case until you retire (or receive adequate therapy).
Prioritize
your emotional wellbeing
As a last side
note, would extensive counseling help you survive and perhaps even thrive in
graduate school? The answer is yes. Of course, if you had the time and money for
counseling during school, you probably wouldn’t really need it. Similar to training your brain how to study,
resilience is one of the most important skills you should master. This is quite different than stubbornness,
which can be evidenced clinically
as trying that spinal for a sixth time instead of just changing your inflexible
plan. In the future, we will talk much
more about emotional help on FreshNP.com and how to build a healthy, balanced
support system that doesn’t suck or suck your loved ones dry. Although it helps to stay close to home
instead of leaving everyone you know for that perfect school hundreds of miles
away, I’ve been asked if it’s better to be a nurse at a facility before
becoming a nurse practitioner or anesthesia student. Can you step out of the shadow of your old
job? An incompetent student will still
have major problems six months into a program, even if everyone loves her.
What do you think? How do your NP clinicals
compare to nursing school,
or how do you expect them to differ?
For More About Advanced Nursing 2021, visit: https://nursing.nursingmeetings.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment