where hospitals

where hospitals

Respond to your colleagues’ posts by sharing your thoughts on their specialty, supporting their choice or offering suggestions if they have yet to choose. 

At least 2 references in each peer responses!

 

Having been an RN in a few different countries, namely the Philippines, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Canada, impacted how I evolved as a nurse in the 21st century. Starting as an RN in a third world country 13 years ago was challenging. Instruments in the operating room, as well as gloves, were reusable through the process of autoclaving. Patients documents were hand or typewritten and attached in a solid steel frame chart. In far-flung areas where hospitals are out of reach, people die of myocardial infarction and infectious diseases due to the lack of resources. There is available transportation, including an ambulance; however, there is the absence of an AED or life-saving medications and providers to treat a disease. Besides, the travel takes at least 3 hours to arrive in the hospital. That is the reality of my hometown in the Philippines.

As I ventured along as a nurse in the Middle East, I was amazed at a national system of government-funded health care and how technology evolved. I practice how to use computer-based electronic health and utilized advanced technology in my daily patient care encounter. However, the electronic health record didn’t have much of the options in transmitting data compared to the electronic health record (EHR) that we have today. Those days, the usage of a computer was to record nurses’ notes, input records of vital signs, and check laboratory and imaging results of the patient. In today’s world, we can see competitions and evolving EHR in hospitals. Nowadays, several hospitals and health systems with mature EHRs have portals for patients to access and record their health data. (Glassman, 2017).