Final Reflection
Final Reflection
Final Reflection
3/20/2021
Final Reflection
Throughout the last 2.5 years, I have learned many skills that I will carry with me during
my nursing career. I began my journey in nursing in 2013 as a Certified Nurses Aide and
Registered Medication Tech. I enjoyed this experience, but knew I wanted to further my
education to better serve my patients. This previous time I spent administering medications
allowed me to have a basis of knowledge to build off of. I believe this gave me a jump start to
some of my courses. When working as a CNA in Assisted Living Facilities for over 5 years, I was
able to develop the basis of my nursing practice. Basic care is the foundation to which nursing is
caregiver. I worked in many different settings such as a Medical Surgical unit, Emergency
Department, Private Duty care and Assisted Livings. By balancing a full-time work schedule and
school, I feel very accomplished and proud of my achievements. Although it has been one of
the most difficult years of my life, I look back with pride on this time.
During my clinical experience I was able to gain knowledge on time management, critical
immersion clinicals in the ICU at St. Francis Medical Center. This experience allowed me to be
independent and utilize my own nursing judgement. This was my top choice for immersion
placement because I wanted to challenge my critical thinking skills. I believe I overcame a lot of
self-doubt by being placed in this setting. In the beginning of my experience, I was timid and
didn’t have the confidence to speak up to a physician about a patient’s changing status.
However, by the mid to end immersion experience, I was confident in my assessment and
always remained open minded to learning when I was wrong. Throughout nursing school, I have
embraced every learning opportunity and always sought them out when appropriate. I learned
that the best way for me to retain information is to perform the skill hands on. The skills I was
most fearful of included anything ventilator related. By the end of my immersion experience, I
Some struggles I still find myself having includes time management. I believe that this
will be a skill that is life-long in completing. Though it will get better over time, there will always
be areas in the skill that can be improved. I noticed that I struggled with receiving new
admissions into the Intensive Care Unit. This requires a detailed assessment on the patient,
because you have no previous findings to compare your assessment to. For instance, when you
get a new admission that has left sided weakness, you have to assess this further to make sure
it is not a new finding for the patient. If you are providing a reassessment, you have the patients
history that may better help you understand your findings. Meaning that if you receive report
on a patient you had the previous day, you can better understand what is a new finding versus
an old finding. To strengthen this ability, I believe that I need to be exposed to it more. We only
had this opportunity a handful of times during my clinicals and although I did the majority of
The attitude that I will carry from my schooling with BSMCON into my career, include
eagerness to learn and empathy toward the patient and family. I have seen first-hand how
important it is to support the family that is with the patient. Many times the family that was
visiting the patient, were primary caregivers for them at home. These family members are
burnt out but are unable to stop caring for their loved ones because there is not always another
option. By being empathetic towards the patient and family, you are creating a trusting
environment so that you can learn from the family and they can learn from you. My eagerness
to learn is a trait that I would like to carry throughout my career. There is not a nurse or health
care provider that knows everything. Through active learning and participating, you can help
your coworkers on skills they may not be confident on, and vice versa.