Remove 2019 Remove Nurse Educator Remove Professional Development
article thumbnail

Clinical Education – whose job is it anyway?

The Nurse Break

Clinical Education – whose job is it anyway? Clinical nurse educators and those that work within education teams (and may be known be other names such as clinical development nurses, or staff development nurses) are at the forefront of clinical education. Wu, A.W. & & Busch, I.M.

Education 105
article thumbnail

Mentorship: A strategy for nursing retention

American Nurse

Mentoring serves as a partnership between the experienced nurse and less-experienced colleague, which includes shared accountability for mutually defined goals. The aim is professional development rather than skill development. Ultimately, they play a large and fulfilling role in retaining newly hired nurses.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Nursing ethics and shared governance model

American Nurse

Takeaways: Through shared governance, nurses are encouraged to participate in organizational decision-making to satisfy professional obligations. Incorporating ethical competence and professional development into everyday nursing practice is imperative to fulfilling ethical obligations for optimal patient care.

article thumbnail

The Value of a DNP Degree: Translating Your Knowledge into Nursing Practice

American Nurse

DNP-prepared nurses are well-equipped to identify system-level problems and propose new models of care (Beeber et al., Soon after I completed my DNP degree, I was assigned to lead the Clinical Professional Development team within the hospital while still leading the School of Nursing. 2019, July). Waldrop, J.,

article thumbnail

Patient care assistant training

American Nurse

See External vs internal training ) The CNO accepted the proposal, and implementation began in the third quarter of 2019. A PCA role content expert partnered with training and development experts in the organization’s network learning department to design and implement the internal PCA course in 2020. Who will attend? April 18, 20222.

article thumbnail

What to Know About Continuing Education for Nurses

IntelyCare

Nursing education doesn’t stop after you receive your license. Instead, nurses at all practice levels are required to complete continuing education (CE) courses. These are also referred to as continuing nursing education (CNE) courses.

article thumbnail

Nurturing Success: Empowering Students with Different Abilities in Nursing School for a Healthy Future

American Nurse

With the destigmatization of mental health concerns and the increase in diagnoses of anxiety disorders, nursing students are becoming more likely to have and utilize accommodations in the college classroom (Horkey, 2019; Morina & Orozco, 2020). 2020; Horkey, 2019; Neal-Boylan & Miller, 2020; Yarbrough & Welch, 2021).