Reply to Lisa
Thank you, Lisa, for your post. Ideally, working with babies makes it easier for one to take care of their offspring with more excellent care. In most cases, children are deemed as blessings from God. However, by the time one has young kids to care for, it is often tricky as in various cases, and children tend to have disturbed their parents who are committed to other duties. Appropriate caregiving by the parents makes the children grow into responsible adults in the future. For your case, Lisa, I comprehend that you know how to handle your kids, so you much care for them. This is evident as you take them out for virtual learning and other things. All these, coupled with other skills you have as a baby catcher and nurse, would help your kids grow uprightly and succeed in all their endeavors. Thank you for the beautiful post.
Reference
Furr, S., Lane, S. H., Martin, D., & Brackney, D. E. (2020). Understanding roles in health care through interprofessional educational experiences. British Journal of Nursing, 29(6), 364-372.
Reply to Jaspreet Kaur Saini
Hello Jaspreet. It was beautiful going through your post. In the nursing career, clinical rotation is essentially concerned with the teamwork. It is appropriate for the registered nurse to work to achieve their objectives collaboratively. Through teamwork, registered nurses, CNAs, and the LPNs offer excellent possible care in support of their patients (Elkbuli et al., 2020). In clinical rotation, it is appropriate to work collaborating with the fellow nursing fraternity to achieve objectives in the healthcare institution. By all these processes, a nurse has the potentiality of executing particular duties within the organization (Elkbuli et al., 2020). This mainly happens when doing evaluations, ambulation, and bathing patients. Again, through clinical rotations, nurses would be in a position of learning a lot from their peers through observing personal styles of caring for the patients. Thank you for the beautiful remark Jaspreet Kaur Saini.
Reference
Elkbuli, A., Kinslow, K., Liu, H., Senkowski, C., Naveed, I., Heidi, B., … & Ang, D. (2020). USMLE Scores and Clinical Rotation Role in Predicting ABSITE Performance Among Surgery Interns. Journal of Surgical Research, 247, 8-13.