In my role as Practice Nurse I wish to be the best I can be. This means having the skills to deliver up to date and safe nursing care to all my patients. I know this doesn’t happen overnight, and I need a plan of action to get there.
So, in the past year, what have I learnt?
The practice nurse has numerous skills and needs to be able to jump from one to the other as smoothly as possible.
For instance, the hospital nurse learns a set of things that are particular to her area of work, say geriatrics or mental health. The practice Nurse has to know a little bit of everything! The work is as diverse as the patients themselves.
In the past year I have learnt:
Ear Syringing/irrigation, Immunisation, dressings and wound management, spirometry, audiometry , ECG tracing, travel medicine, writing care plans, performing health assessments, diabetic assessments and reviews, motivational interviewing . That’s on the procedural side of things!
In the management of the treatment room I have :
Written a vaccine storage policy, organised the treatment room to maximum efficiency, kept stock up to date and ordered stock and vaccines as needed, instigated changes in the design or use of the treatment room, managed the autoclave for sterilisation of instruments, liaised with pharmaceutical representatives, recalled patients, organised a diabetic review clinic.
But it doesn’t end there!
Fortunately, I love to learn new things and as a registered nurse I need to have Continuing Professional Development (CPD). This means on-going learning and keeping up to date with best practice. I also have a Learning Plan which helps me to see
- What skills I need to improve or get
- How I will get those skills
It also means that I need to attend educational sessions.
These are held by various institutions or Pharmaceutical companies... Some courses are quite expensive (although you can claim the cost on your tax return each year). For instance, a recent wound management course cost $155.. perhaps some people are unable to meet that cost out of pocket so readily.
Here is where
WAPNA rises. As it is locally based, everything we learn here is relevant.
We have an evening session once a month and two all- day seminars per year. If I attend all the sessions and seminars for the year, this covers me for all my CPD points needed to remain registered! And it cost just $30 per annum. This is great value. The members are all local practice nurses so it’s great for networking too. One of the champions of WAPNA is the educational officer, Rosemarie. She works hard to get the right speakers for our educational sessions and she’s quick to help out with a request for information. All the committee members are volunteers and they do a fabulous job.
Another good place for education is the Osborne GP network. As our practice is affiliated with this organisation, generally the educational sessions are free or subsidised by the practice.
One other good place to learn is through the
WAGP Network (West Australian General Practitioners Network). The nurses offering educational sessions here are a dynamic bunch of women with heaps of experience and great presentational skills! You’ll never be bored listening to these ladies! This is also where you do the immunisation competency certificate. They have many online resources and links with other GP networks around Australia.
Practice nursing is a dynamic, interesting and exciting profession. The scope of nursing is phenomenal. You can go as far or as little as you please and still be effective in helping other achieve good outcomes for health and well being.
If you are new to Practice nursing (especially in WA) I do urge you to look at some of the websites here. I will try to link you with as many informative websites that I find, because in the end, no doubt we have the same goal... to help each other to be the best we can be.