I have always been eager to learn and have wanted to be the best at my career. After graduating with my ADN, I started work right away in an intensive care setting. I felt that working in an ICU would give me the knowledge and experience I desired. While working in the unit, I learned to be a critical thinking nurse as we cared for all types of patients: medical, surgical, trauma, cardiothoracic, neurologic, and oncology patients. One of the reasons I love our ICU is because the unit is not split into separate intensive care units. As nurses we had the opportunity to care for all varieties of patients. I was trained to be a surgical open heart nurse and have had the privilege to care for these patients for the last seven years. As I developed in my nursing abilities I was asked to precept new graduate nurses as well as nurses new to the unit. Serving in the capacity of preceptor and teacher is a role that I love. Over the last two years I have advanced to charge nurse within my unit. While working at the hospital in a full-time position, I served as a member of our …show more content…
I strive to be the best that I can be and have received my CCRN certification as well. I am an active member of AACN. There has always been a part of me that thought someday I might want to become an instructor for nursing students. The opportunity arose and I accepted a position as an instructor for a licensed vocational nursing program in August 2015. I love my job as an instructor, but could not give up my intensive care family. I currently work 1-2 weekends per month to keep up my critical care skills. After only a year working in a college, I have desired to better myself and my education so that I may better serve my students. My goal is to obtain a master’s degree in nursing education and then achieve my certification in nursing education
My love for nursing began early in my life; in high school, my continuing desire to become a nurse resulted in my applying and being accepted to Midwestern State University. There, I received a BSN and became a registered nurse. My experience at Midwestern prepared me for a successful career by instilling confidence within me as I joined the workforce. As my experience grew and years went by, I became eager to further my education and pursue my master's degree. Then life happened: the two-legged version that requires love, compassion, energy, and time. Now that my child is in school, with the support of my family, I am ready and dedicated to become a family nurse practitioner.
My ambition is to graduate St. Francis College as a Registered Nurse with a Bachelor’s degree in the upcoming years. Although majoring in nursing will not be easy, I feel I am prepared for the challenge. At this time in my life I cannot see myself majoring in anything else. As a young girl, with a mother working in the medical field, I was always fascinated going to work with her. Working in a doctor’s office these past two and a half years myself has given me much experience with patients and has made it more to clear to me that this is what I want to pursue as a career. I wish to be a nurse because I seem to get a feeling of warmth and internal satisfaction when helping those in need. I have begun to learn that medicine is not the only cure for people’s ailments. It is the care they receive by those around them whether it is in a hospital, nursing home, or even their own home. This is where I believe that I can make a great difference in people 's lives by helping them recover.
After completing my bachelor’s degree at Florida State University in the fall of 1997, I began my career at a small hospital in Largo, Florida. I started on a thirty eight bed cardiac/telemetry unit. I had the fortunate opportunity to orient with a seasoned nurse who loved her career in nursing. She was an enthusiastic preceptor that not only educated me on the tasks of nursing but inspired and introduced me to critical care and critical thinking. I spent the next three years at this hospital working in the Coronary Care Unit until deciding to become a travel nurse and see the country. I began travel nursing with my best friend and we worked in Florida, Washington D.C., New York and Denver. At all of these locations we worked in the intensive care unit. Each experience provided a different population and vast new experiences.
I am a RN-BSN graduate from Anna-Maria College. In April 2015, I was inducted into the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International and Iota Phi Chapter. I have been an Oncology RN for the last eight years and enjoyed it because of the opportunity to work as a staff member, relief Charge Nurse, participate in the Epic and Retention and Recruitment committees. I actively care for our patients who need hematologic and chemotherapy treatments. At UCI Medical Center, I had the privilege to work with an organization that is Magnet certified and reflects the importance of excellent customer service to the population it serves. Previously, I had the opportunity to work as a Travel nurse and explored different work environment throughout
My career commitment as a nurse has grown tremendously over the past three years; through my daily experiences as a Medical Assistant. I have devoted my time as a full time student and employee of the health care profession. Both of these occupations have helped shape me into the person I want to be for as long as time allows. Daily I witness these community role models that posses abilities such as problem solving skills, promotion and protection of an individual’s advocacy all tied in with compassion to meet the health care needs of an individual.
Since I was in the 10th grade, I knew I wanted to pursue my education at Mount Vernon Nazarene University for nursing. Furthermore, my first college visit on MVNYOU day confirmed my decision. I greatly treasure the close knit community and the Christian based morals. To get a head start on my journey, my sophomore year I applied and was accepted into the Career and Technology Education Center of Licking County for Clinical Care (C-TEC), a nursing based program. In the duration of my last two years of high school, instead of simply graduating with my diploma, I graduated with my STNA, CET, CPT, CPCT, and my CPhT. I have gained a knowledge of the basic fundamentals of nursing. I am an active member of many different clubs and organizations supporting
I have worked in every area of the hospital and nursing homes in my nineteen years of clinical practice as a nurse. I have excelled and enjoyed the care that I have provided over the years. I have been a charge nurse wherever I have worked and enjoyed brainstorming and critically thinking through what needed to be done for a patient when they were not doing well. I have prevented many code blues and have been a preceptor to many excellent nurses.
Learning to becoming a CNA was the greatest opportunity and experience I could have done for myself. It has changed me as a person and as a caregiver. I have built amazing relationships with my residents non like any other. They have become my family. Because of my residents, I have learned a great lesson. The best way to give the best quality care is to treat people as if they were family; and that is what has brought me to become a great certified nursing assistant. I have such great relationships with my residents and because of that I am able to see the impacts I have on people. I am able to see their faces light up when I walk into their rooms. Everyday has brought great joy to my life and to be a part of a person’s life, like I have been,
I am a proud employee at Scripps Mercy Hospital and have been here since 2012 working as a CNA. I have recently been accepted to San Diego City college Associate Degree Nursing program. Since the age of 16 I knew nursing was my calling. I attended a local community college as part of a program in high school and earned my Nursing assistant certificate. I have worked extremely hard to get where I am today and earning this degree would mean the world to me. This degree would allow me to contribute my skills as an RN to provide efficient, effective patient-centered care at Scripps health.
I have been fortunate enough to gain experiences that have effectively taught me how to be a leader and work together with a team and I am confident I will be able to apply this to my nursing career more
Through my Registered Nurse to Bachelor of Science in Nursing (RN-BSN) educational journey, my nursing vision expanded exponentially creating a desire not only for more knowledge and skill, but also producing an understanding of lifelong learning commitments. Ever-changing technology is leading health care into the future with a demand for evidence-based practices to ensure safe care delivery, creating more opportunities for nurses to lead patients, families, and communities toward improved health practices. Essentials l, ll, lll, lV, V, lX Last November, I was offered an Administrative Supervisor position with my current employer, and I accepted. By doing so, I have had the opportunity to work in a multitude of capacities fostering self-growth,
I recently became certified as a psychiatric and mental health nurse. I serve on our unit practice council helping to find solutions to unit specific issues. I have also served on the hospital wide nurse’s week committee, and a fall prevention committee.
I've very adaptive to new technology such as programs used for online documentation and electronic MARS. Other registered staff in my unit often comes to me for problem solving and troubleshooting with our online documentation program. I always put my patients first and I take the time to listen to my patients & families, no matter how busy my schedule may be. I work well under pressure and in a solo or team environment. I strive to become more knowledgeable in nursing in order to provide the best care I can to my clients In order to excel at my profession and passion I need to do everything I can to make myself better. As part of that, I did not stop with Bachelors, I did my masters, then I did Medical-surgical certification & I am also certified preceptor, have certification from UCF. My upbringing developed my core beliefs of community, family, loyalty, compassion and honesty. It also taught me that all things worthwhile require hard work. I love being a nurse, but recognize my yearning for more. I love nursing and have enjoyed my time as a floor nurse although my work experiences are acutely based, I have observed the direct relation between primary and acute care. As a nurse primarily working with patients, I have observed how patient miseducation, miscommunication, and
Soon after, I received my licensure and began working at The Queen's Medical Center as a Registered Nurse (RN) in early part of 1994. Since becoming a RN, I have provided care to a great deal of patients and reassured countless numbers of family members. As a RN, I've also become the coordinator of care, patient advocate, and teacher to the patients I cared for while serving as the eyes and the ears of the physicians. As with any human, I enjoyed sharing the laughter with my patient and cringed at site of their pain and despair. For these reasons, I believe that being a RN is a great career choice for me. However, for these same reasons, I still feel that I am not a complete nurse; hence I've decided to go back to school and try to earn my Bachelor in Science Degree in Nursing
I've always knew that I wanted to work in the healthcare field, since almost everyone in my family had a role in the healthcare field. My mother, aunts and cousins are mostly registered nurses, my father works as a recreational aide in a nursing home. My whole life has been around the healthcare field such as volunteering in different hospitals, nursing homes and seeing the roles they play in the health field. I am currently attending Saint Francis College to earn a Bachelor's Degree of Science in Healthcare Management. I enjoy seeing how everything comes together in a hospital that most people don't see such as rules, regulation and policies.