Nur 460 Lewis Smiley PGC Reflection Paper
Nur 460 Lewis Smiley PGC Reflection Paper
Nur 460 Lewis Smiley PGC Reflection Paper
Throughout the RN to BSN program, I have learned so much about nursing outside of the
bedside hospital nurse. This program has given me such a broader understanding of nursing.
Nursing on the global scale, nursing at the community level, nursing regarding healthcare policy
in government (state, national, and local) and nursing with regards to ethics. Below are the
Program Graduate Competencies and how each has been met through my work in the RN to
BSN program. In PGCs #1, #2, #6, #8 and #9 there were goals and how these goals were met.
My philosophy on nursing from the beginning of this program until now has changed in how I
think of nursing as a whole. Nursing to me had always been bedside nursing since I had never
experienced anything else but bedside. Now I see how many different avenues nursing can lead
someone and how many different careers one can have as a nurse.
PGC #1: Integrate general education knowledge, skills, and aptitudes to advance nursing
education knowledge and advance my growth in professional practice would be working with
RN3s on the ace unit and speaking with them on how they achieved it and how once I finish my
BSN, I could work on my RN3. This would be a huge step towards advancing my nursing
education and furthering my growth in professional practice. Looking through the requirements
and prerequisites for the RN3 advancement can only take you so far. Speaking to nurses that are
already RN3 could help me find the best way to achieve this goal. I was able to speak with
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charge nurses on the Ace unit that were RN3s and was able to get an understanding of the new
changes that were made to the program. Through the knowledge I have learned in this program I
have prepared myself for obtaining my RN3 and advancing myself on the clinical ladder at work.
I have also learned so much about nursing informatics that I can use to make my decision
learned a lot about nursing management and how much different it can be then floor nursing and
how there are many different skills that are needed to be a great manager compared to a great
bedside nurse.
PGC #2: Demonstrate leadership skills to promote patient safety and the delivery of high-
quality healthcare.
A goal regarding PGC #2 will be developing my leadership skills by working with charge
nurses on ace unit and working with management on ace unit and taking part in sitting in on their
patient rounds. Sitting in on patient rounds with the management team and the charge nurse on
the ace unit will help in developing my management skills. Patient rounds on the ace unit will
show me a side of nursing that I don’t experience often being on night shift. Working alongside
the management team and sitting with case management and the medical team I can see the big
Through my practicum on the Ace Unit (8 South) at Wilmington Hospital I have learned
so much about how the management team coordinates the morning rounds and how this
coordination process in rounds sets the goals for the day for each patient. Working as a night
shift nurse I have never experienced rounds and I see now how important they are and how the
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coordination between the manager, the case managers, the nurse, the pharmacist, and the doctor
set the tone for the whole day. During these rounds not only do the doctor and the nurse go
through the plan for the day regarding their acute hospital needs but the case manager and
management work towards looking at the discharge plan. They all try to collectively find the
barriers to the patient’s treatment at first and then once the patient is medically stable for
discharge, they investigate the barriers for discharge. The leadership skills of the charge nurse
and management team during rounds show me a different look into the leadership skills that I
have already developed as a nurse and charge nurse at night. The planning that goes into
organizing the whole floor and pulling the hospital team together to find answers to each
individual patient’s acute care needs and setting up discharges for not only today, but the future
PGC #3: Apply skills of inquiry, analysis, and information literacy to support evidence-
This PGC was met I would say in my nursing research class NUR 340 I applied skills of
inquiry and analysis to support evidence-based nursing practice when I was researching Catheter
Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI). In this evidence-based study they described that if
nurses not only used aseptic technique when inserting and manipulating foley catheters and
consistently evaluate the need for continued catheterization, they could decrease CAUTI in the
hospital setting. We also use similar evidence-based studies at Wilmington Hospital for us to
decrease the length of time for catheterization after surgery and even with urine retention we
always periodically do voiding trials to see if the retention has resolved, and we can remove the
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catheter. The CAUTI rates in our hospital have gone down with the evaluation of catheter use
In Nursing Informatics class NUR 410 we investigated information technology and how
it could improve patient outcomes. The project that I looked to for future use in a hospital was a
call bell system that would be linked to the Electronic Health Record (EHR). This technology is
out there, and I thought of even enhancing it to not only track a nurse or patient care technician
(PCT) going in and out of rooms with call bells using a badge, but also be able to connect to a
handheld to be able to describe why the nurse or PCT went into the room and chart it directly
from the room to the EHR. This would not only turn off the call bell when the nurse or PCT
entered the room, but it would also save on charting time by letting the nurse or PCT chart on
their own personal handheld what they did with the patient while they were in the room. Whether
it be toileting, mobility, turning, or nourishment this would be documented while the nurse or
PCT was walking out of the room. This would save time because the nurse or PCT would not
then have to go sit down log into a computer and document what they had done in the room, plus
also it would make sure that this occurrence was documented which sometimes if the nurse or
PCT automatically gets pulled to another room things may get missed. Attached below are the
PGC #5: Advocate for patients and the nursing profession with regard to healthcare policy
This PGC was met during my Nursing Policy class NUR 420 through the investigation of
healthcare policies on the state and national level regarding the Affordable Care Act. The ACA
was enacted to broaden Medicaid coverage. The Medicaid expansion’s purpose was to give more
Americans access to health care based on their income alone and not based on if they were
disabled or had small children. It was made to cover the Medicaid gap which was evident in the
US. The ACA was a federal mandate but gave each state the right to approve or deny Medicaid
expansion. (U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 2022). There is a gap in coverage
where certain states have denied the Medicaid expansion and this has left millions of Americans
My personal nursing philosophy was broadened through the nursing policy class, I saw
into the whole world of nursing in politics and how nurses are a big part of hospital regulation
policy and general health care policy. It was amazing to see the depth that nursing has in the
government and how there are so many high-ranking politicians that were nurses first. It was also
interesting to find how hospital policies are put together based on government policies and
sometimes the other way around. Where policies that a hospital has put together eventually are
adopted by the state and or federal government as policies all hospitals should adhere to. Most of
these policies were put together by nurses for the safety of patients and the protection of those
One goal with PGC #6, regarding management and delegation, is for me to learn more
about how dayshift charge nurses and the management team delegate. I will be focusing on this
during my clinicals by observing charge nurses and the management team on ace unit to collect
information on how they delegate tasks. Something to work on for myself is delegating tasks for
the nurse to do while I am helping them with a task and not just completing the task myself.
Even though I learned a lot through studying nursing management it is necessary to work
alongside management of an actual floor to see how things run in real life. It is essential to see
the real interactions between management and the floor nurses. This can be best addressed
collaboration and delegation can all be seen in one place during rounds on the Ace Unit. I have
learned so much through observing rounds that I could have never known working night shift. I
have always worked through these aspects of patient care regarding advocacy, interprofessional
communication, collaboration, and delegation in my daily routine working as a floor nurse and
charge nurse just in different ways. By speaking with doctors regarding patient care, advocating
for my patients and other patients on the floor and collaborating with my nurse colleagues and
delegating to unlicensed personnel. This course and the practicum work on 8S helped me see a
PGC #7: Integrate health promotion and disease prevention practices to positively impact
This PGC was met with my practicum work through NUR 330. Through my work with
Joseph Demarco RN, my preceptor, in the Medical Aid Unit at Wilmington Hospital I was able
to see how the outpatient part of nursing worked. We not only worked with a diverse population
in the City of Wilmington community, but we were constantly working towards health
promotion and disease prevention. Joe would check on patients through a phone call to them
after they had either been in the Emergency Room or been admitted to the hospital. He would
work with these patients on their compliance with their medications after the hospital which may
have changed and work with their compliance with their other medical needs such as dressing
changes and physical therapies. Through observing this interaction, I have seen a very different
part of nursing. The Medical Aid Unit at Wilmington Hospital also works to triage their patients
Through this community rotation I saw what it was like to be an outpatient nurse in the
community setting and it was eye opening, and this made me take a different look at my nursing
philosophy. There were so many ways that the community nurse must try to communicate with
their patients to keep them on task. In the hospital our patients are in their rooms, and we don’t
have to find them or try to find ways to contact them. This makes for some frustration on the part
of the community nurse but also when you can get through and make a difference in that
person’s life that you have finally got in contact with and helped them with their health care
needs at their home it is amazing. Nursing is such a rewarding career and now I see how it can be
A goal related to PGC #8 is to look more into the ethical policies and the ethics
committee at Christiana Care through working with my preceptor Debbie who is an educator and
working with management on the ace unit to get a better understanding of how the ethics policies
relate to the everyday workings of the hospital. Debbie Lykens my preceptor has also set up a
meeting with Dr. Curtin who is the Chief of Geriatric Medicine at Christiana Care plus also the
medical director of the Acute Care of the Elderly (ACE) Unit and the medical director of the We
Improve Senior Health (WISH) program. My preceptor Debbie also set up a meeting with the
program director of the WISH program Denise Lyons. Denise lead to the development of the
WISH program at Christiana Care in 2001 and worked towards the geriatric review course at
Christiana Care and since then 400 nurses have earned gerontological nursing certifications from
Through the meetings with Dr. Curtin and Denise Lyons I have seen such a different side
to ethical nursing in the care of the elderly patient. There have been such great strides from the
beginning of the We Improve Senior Health (WISH) program that Dr. Curtin and Denise Lyons
started in 2001 to now with how elderly patients are treated. The elderly patient through the
WISH program is given a specific framework that is related to their own specific disease
processes as an elderly patient and treated uniquely rather than treated the same as every other
patient. This has so much to do with treating these patients with ethical considerations so that
they can have specific care plans tailored to their needs. The WISH program has worked so
seamlessly on the ACE unit, but the end game is for the WISH policies to be used throughout the
whole hospital in every unit. The WISH program also considers end of life needs and Do Not
Resuscitate (DNR) orders. Also, the WISH program considers the needs of patients with
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dementia and stroke histories since this is impacting a lot of elderly patients. It incorporates
Throughout the BSN program I have also changed my philosophy on thinking as a nurse.
I feel that I learned a lot of things in the ethics class that I could use in my nursing practice today.
The class opened my eyes to certain situations that I have never been a part of but also gave me a
new understanding of how I could have handled something different in my previous nursing
interactions. There were many scenarios that have come up before and I have a much better
understanding and new outlook on how I would handle those interactions in the future.
PGC #9: Demonstrate lifelong learning that empowers personal and professional growth.
For a goal regarding PGC #9 I will be working with the management team on ace unit
and looking towards lifelong learning and possibly moving towards a career in nursing
management. Lifelong learning through the advancement into nursing management can be best
accomplished through working with the management team on the ace unit who were at one time
floor nursers and are now nurse management and with my preceptor who is a nurse educator now
and once was a floor nurse. Finding the best way to transition will help with accomplishing my
For my lifelong learning plan to start after I complete my BSN, I will be first working on
obtaining my RN3 I would like to in the future look towards possibly becoming a nursing
informaticist. To start a career in nursing informatics I would either need a graduate certificate in
requiring 36 credits with 6 credits of practicum included. The certificate program will not only
give you information about nursing informatics if you are not definitely sure of changing your
career to informatics but also get you in possibly at a lower-level nursing informaticist. The
master’s program will be more suited to a complete career in nursing informatics and if I was
References
U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (2022). Medicaid expansion & what it means for you.
Healthcare.gov. https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/medicaid-expansion-and-you/