Clinical Experience
From the perspective of a nurse practitioner student doing their second week of clinical rotation at a gerontology primary care office: Describe your clinical experience for this week.
Did you face any challenges, any success? If so, what were they?
Describe the assessment of a patient, detailing the signs and symptoms (S&S), assessment, plan of care, and at least 3 possible differential diagnosis with rationales.
Mention the health promotion intervention for this patient.
What did you learn from this week’s clinical experience that can beneficial for you as an advanced practice nurse?
Support your plan of care with the current peer-reviewed research guideline.
Sample Answer
Clinical Week 2: Deepening the Geriatric Dive
This past week, my second in the gerontology primary care office, was a significant step up from the initial orientation. The initial jitters have lessened, replaced by a growing appreciation for the complexity and nuance of geriatric care. I’m starting to move beyond just observing and truly engaging with patient assessments, albeit under the close supervision of my preceptor.
Challenges and Successes
Challenges:
- Polypharmacy Management: The sheer number of medications many of our elderly patients are on is daunting. This week, I saw a patient on 12 different medications. Understanding each drug, its indication, potential side effects, and especially drug-drug interactions, feels like navigating a minefield. It’s challenging to reconcile medication lists, identify potential cascades, and suggest de-prescribing when appropriate, all while ensuring the patient’s existing conditions are adequately managed.
- Atypical Symptom Presentation: Several times this week, I observed how infections or acute conditions in older adults don’t always present with classic signs. For instance, a patient with a UTI might present with confusion or falls rather than dysuria. It’s a constant mental shift to consider atypical presentations, which can be frustrating when you’re used to more straightforward symptom clusters.