Nursing Roles: The Role Of A Professional Nurse

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The Role of a Professional Nurse
It is ten o’clock at night and you have put the children all bathed and tucked into bed. You are exhausted from working and being on your feet all day. You still have to clean the dirty dishes from dinner and get yourself ready for bed. While you begin to clean up the mess, you begin to ponder on what you are grateful for; you have a wonderful family, you have an awesome house, you have an amazing job that you love, and before you know, you have finished cleaning up the mess from dinner. Now, it is time to get you ready for bed and rest up for the next busy day. Before you go to sleep you, think to yourself, “today was a good day, but tomorrow is going to be even better!”
In life, we all get so busy with our daily routines, we forget to step back and look at the little things. Something that one might seem so small another may view it as making this world a little better and easier to live in. A good example could be, …show more content…

15). Being a good communicator is a vital element because not it is not only explaining scientific diagnosis and issues, but also interpersonal, intellectual, and being able to perform technical skills (Kourkouta, pp. 65-67). Nurses need to be able to correspond with other healthcare professionals, client, and their family members or support groups. As the communicator, it is the nurse’s responsibility to find the clients ' problems and then write down or verbally tell the other members of the care plan for the client. The nurses have to establish the appropriate learning style, goals, and share the skills and knowledge with other health care providers. This is a crucial factor in the nursing process for the care given to the client. The nursing process is just a scientific method to define, exercise, and implement of tending to a client and is achieved due to communicating in writing, but also verbally (Kourkouta, pp.

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