What are the Benefits of a Nurse Residency Program?
A nurse residency has many benefits and consists of additional training, support, and time to adjust to your new role. Most residency programs have the same core components which include the following:
Orientation
New nurses receive an orientation to the healthcare facility, its policies, procedures, and the specific unit in which they will be working.
A general orientation is typical for any new employee, but more time is often given to a new graduate nurse. All newly hired nurse employees are then oriented to their assigned unit and often allowed several shifts to shadow an existing peer nurse.
In the past, this was the ideal scenario but occasionally in the post-covid world of busy hospitals and too few nursing staff, an experienced nurse may “hit the floor” with very little orientation. Newly graduated nurses are often given more shifts to shadow, which can help decrease their anxiety and increase their self-confidence.
Clinical Training
The program involves hands-on clinical training under the guidance of experienced preceptors or mentors. New nurses gain exposure to various patient populations and medical conditions.
Education
Nurse Residency programs often include formal education components, such as seminars, workshops, and classes, all aimed at enhancing clinical knowledge, communication skills, and professional development.
Often, the new graduate nurse will attend “class” offered by the hospital education department for several days, or even half of a shift, and will then work on the floor after class to complete a shift. This similar educational format is frequently available for nurses who want to complete a critical care nursing course before they can work in a specialized critical care unit.
Support and Mentoring
New nurses are assigned experienced mentors or preceptors who provide guidance, feedback, and support throughout the transition period. This mentorship helps build confidence and facilitates the learning process.
You will have experienced a variety of nursing styles by shadowing nurses during nursing school. Many times, your nursing school’s clinical shift may have been shorter, and you missed the initial or end-of-shift reports, but now as a new Registered Nurse, you will be able to shadow the full shift experience with your mentor and learn the skills of note taking and reporting to other nurses.
Be willing to learn from your mentor, even if you would not choose to be best friends with your new mentor outside of work. Intelligent people are willing to learn from others to improve their skills.
Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving
Nurse Residency programs focus on developing critical thinking and problem-solving skills that are crucial for making sound clinical decisions in real-world healthcare scenarios.
The real test outside of nursing school is the application of all that you learned to help patients heal and not just to pass an exam. You will improve in your clinical judgment with each shift you work under the guidance of your mentor, and you will then need to make decisions because YOU are the nurse!
Interdisciplinary Collaboration
Nurses interact with other healthcare professionals, such as physicians, pharmacists, and therapists, and you will begin to make phone calls and meetings to discuss patient information and care plans.
Evidence-Based Practice
Emphasis is placed on teaching new nurses how to integrate the latest evidence-based practices into their patient care approaches.
You learned many of the standard guidelines in nursing school, but there is so much more. Unfortunately, nursing schools have been forced to adjust and shrink their curriculum to help students graduate to successfully pass the NCLEX.
Even if it felt like it, you did not learn everything there is to know. The things you really learned in nursing school is how to learn, and there is so much more to learn about medicine, nursing research, and clinical guidelines for a plethora of disorders.
Professional Development
Nurse Residency programs often include discussions about ethical dilemmas, cultural competence, and other aspects of professional nursing practice that you only read about in nursing school.
You will begin to learn about the educational requirements of practicing nurses by your facility. Nursing is a life-long educational profession.
Gradual Responsibility
As new nurses progress through the residency program, they are given increasing levels of responsibility and autonomy in patient care under supervision.
Although you may be in a hurry to have a full assignment like the “experienced nurses,” you will look back on this time during your residency and long for the luxury of time when you only had limited patients!
Evaluation and Feedback
Regular evaluations and feedback sessions are conducted to assess the progress of new nurses and identify areas for improvement.
Be humble as you receive feedback to improve. It is important to remember that your skills are still young and that you are still a novice and becoming an expert takes time.
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