Exam (elaborations) NR 511 WEEK 8 REFLECTION WITH UPDATED CORRECTED CITATION
NR 511 WEEK 8 REFLECTION WITH UPDATED CORRECTED CITATION NR 511 WEEK 8 REFLECTION WITH UPDATED CORRECTED CITATION Running head: DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS REFLECTION 1 Ann Marsh Chamberlain University Differential Diagnosis Reflection NR 511: Differential Diagnosis & Primary Care May 2018 This study source was downloaded by from CourseH on :07:11 GMT -05:00 This study resource was shared via CourseH DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS REFLECTION 2 Part 1 – Clinical Experience and Gap Review In this NR 511 clinical rotation I was in a primary care office where I saw a total of 129 patients and completed 130 hours. I saw a well-rounded adult-age population comprising of every age group from 18 to 85+ with most of them being in the age range 36 to 55. I saw two pediatric patients age 1-4, one patient age 5-11, and five patients age 12-17. This totaled 6.21% of my patients seen this session who were in the pediatric range; this is short of the required 15% for the family nurse practitioner program (FNP). As one of my weaknesses was confidence and ability to connect with pediatric patients I will bring my stethoscope to practice on my nieces and nephews. I will also ensure I have good clinical experiences with pediatrics in the future. Per the MyEvaluation reports, I saw four patients from the pacific islander population (3.10%) and thirty-two from the Hispanic population (24.81%) which is fairly representative of the Utah population. According to the US Census Bureau, in Salt Lake County Utah, the pacific islander population here is 1.7% and the Hispanic population is 18% (United States Census Bureau, 2017). Per the MyEvaluation logging tool, I also saw one African American patient (0.78%) and two Asian patients (1.55%) which is slightly lower than the population of these groups in Salt Lake County, Utah at 2% and 4.2% respectively (United States Census Bureau, 2017). However, I did label 4 patients, or 3.10%, of my patients seen as “other”. The following areas are considered Asian by the US Census Bureau: Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent (United States Census Bureau, 2017). I should have labeled these “other” ethnicities as Asian because they were primarily middle eastern. If I had done this, I would have the appropriate
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nr 511 week 8 reflection with updated corrected citation