Nursing Objective Reflection

Student’s Name

Institutional Affiliation

The fluctuating landscape of the nursing practice system and the changing silhouette of the general population necessitates that the practice undertake a fundamental shift to provide more patient-driven nursing care and deliver primarily as conflicting to the specialty care. Furthermore, the nursing practice needs to deliver more comfort and care in society instead of the acute setting of care. Moreover, there should be a seamless nursing provision care that enables health specialists to exercise their ability to the fullest due to the level of education that one has received, which in turn will foster a rather interprofessional partnership.

I plan to utilize the information and the knowledge I have gathered while studying nursing in achieving an alteration that will enable the medical profession to provide advanced care to patients, eliminate medical errors and improve the general nursing safety measures. Utilizing this knowledge to provide care will also tap the traditional métiers of the practice. I also plan to take advantage of the adaptive capacity and the overall scientific knowledge in order to provide more improved and reconceptualized care in my profession and the society I will work for.

In line with Florence Nightingale’s aims and concept in the occupations within the nursing practice, I also plan to develop a more educated labor force that gives care to the sick and also incorporate the concepts of modern nursing and also incorporate the reinvention of the practice according to the extent of the nursing practice (Lynaugh, 2008). Due to the fact that new career pathways have been established, I plan to attract more talented and self-driven volunteers in my community and provide essential health services while disseminating knowledge to these volunteers so that they may be able to be self-reliant and also attract potential employers in the health practice (Aiken et al., 2009).

In essence, the nursing profession continues to evolve in very many fundamental ways, and it takes the initiative of qualified nurses like me to better serve the general public that has been hampered by various constraints in the past and also eliminate the outdated nursing policies especially the ones involving the scopes of the nursing practice while using the knowledge I have gathered while studying nursing.

References

Aiken, L., and R. Cheung. 2008. Nurse workforce challenges in the United States: Implications for policy. OECD Health Working Paper No. 35.

Lynaugh, J. E., 2008. Kate Hurd-Mead lecture. Nursing the great society: The impact of the Nurse Training Act of 1964. Nursing History Review 16:13-28.

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