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Monday, April 30, 2012

Bibliography

Why am I interested in nursing


Bibliography
                Author’s name: Allianz During my sophomore year in high school I had no plans on going to college. All of that changed during my junior year when I took biology class and chemistry and biology that is when I first became self-confident and I started believing in myself. I saw a lot of improvement in my grades and I became interested in these sciences. In fall of 2011 I became the first person from my family to go to college.
My grandfather always used to say to me “nothing in life is easy if it’s worth having,” and I am just so sad that he can’t see me now, turning away from the easy  path towards one I know will bring a lifetime of challenges and fulfillment. I always respected him and have tried to make my entire family proud of me. I am the first person from my working class family to go to college, and while I am proud of accomplishing this goal, which was by no means easy financially or emotionally, my career path after high school graduation has not been as fulfilling as I was hoping it would be. But I never lose hope. And now I am out for life long education.
I originally became interested in the health care field at a very early age because my mother was an assistant nurse and I spent considerable time in my childhood observing her at work. I was attracted to the idea of helping people with physical problems, although I had no thought about any specific specialty. However, in time physical therapy became the logical focus of my attention for a number of reasons. For one, I have memories from a very young age of my grandfather in Kenya, disabled by a stroke, his problems unmitigated by any attempts at physical therapy. I will never forget the devastating consequences of this.
Now I have decided to be a nurse. I will be a healthcare professional who is focused on caring for individuals, families, and communities, ensuring that they attain, maintain, or recover optimal health and functioning. As nurses, I will be capable of assessing, planning, implementing, and evaluating care independently of physicians, and I will help provide support from basic triage to emergency surgery. I may practice in hospitals, clinics, physician offices, private homes, schools, pharmaceutical companies, private industry, schools, cruise ships, retirement homes, hospice facilities, long-term care facilities, military facilities, and even camps. Or I may also advice and work as a consultant in healthcare. I can work full- or part-time, and may work as a traveling nurse for various organizations like the United Nations.
My duty as a nurse is to assist individuals in performing activities that contribute to health, recovery, or peaceful death, activities which the patients would perform if they had the strength, will, or knowledge required. I want to prevent cases like my grandfather’s death, because he didn’t have good nursing care. I will also strive to achieve the best possible quality of life for the patients, regardless of disease or disability. I will use proper clinical judgment to protect, promote, and optimize health, prevent illness and injury, alleviate suffering, and advocate in health care for individuals, families, communities, and populations.
Nursing is more than a profession of integrity and compassion, it is a privilege that carries out my values as a human being and the responsibilities granted to me.

Research question


What is a role of a Kenyan nurse?
What is the role of a Kenyan nurse? The role of a Kenyan nurse is to provide care for the patient, work with doctors, protect the patient, teach the patient and family and advocate for the patient and family.
Kenyan nurses care for patients continuously, 24 hours a day. They help the patient to do what they could do for themselves if they could. They care for the patients, making sure that they can breathe properly, helping patients sleep, and making sure that they are comfortable. They take care of their elimination of waste. Nurses know each patient’s diseases.
Kenyan nurses play a big role not only giving medical care to patients but also by giving comfort and support to the patient and his or her family. When the patient cannot recover, the nurse helps to make sure that the death is peaceful. When a person becomes ill or is injured, he goes through the nurse to see the doctor and then the doctor only deals with the main problem after the nurse has admitted the patient and managed their care.
            Nurses carry out many of the treatments prescribed to the patient. For example, the nurse helps the doctor during surgery in the operation room. The nurse might inject the patient with the drugs prescribed to the patient. The nurse changes the patient’s dressing and monitors the healing of the wound. The nurse also administers medication for the pain.
                Nurses also monitor the patient’s progress to make sure that the recovery has no complications. Nurses mostly find problems in patients because they usually have more frequent contact with them than anyone else. The nurse also plans and supervises the care given by nursing assistants, checks on the work of housekeeping staff assigned to clean the patient's room, and ensures that the patient gets enough healthy food.
            The information that I still want to know about nursing in Kenya is how people get qualified to become nurses in Kenya. What is the main procedure to be admitted in Kenya nursing schools? What are the minimum entry requirements? Are there good job opportunities for qualified nurses?
            There are so many ways to collect information for my project. First is communication. Communication is the most important way to collect information within my project. I will make phone calls to communicate with friends whom I know are nurses in Kenya. I will send them emails seeking more information because emails are the probably the easiest and cheapest communication tool that is available for me. I will text, ask for recorded audio and videos and I will use instant massaging to reach people for help. I will also use internet boards. I will also try to reach the Kenyan nurses living in USA and meet face to face to collect the information from them.

                Title: Allianz Worldwide Care
http://www.allianzworldwidecare.com/members?choice=en
Author’s name: Afyanet Africa
            Title: National Nurses Association of Kenya

outline

Outline

What Kenyan nurses need to do in order to save lives
Government responsibilities in Kenya
What courses problems that course nurses crises
What is the best way to stop the problems?
What kind of problems are Kenyan nurses facing?
For how long are they going to happen?
What are the best ways to improve Kenyan nurse’s skills?
Why are nurses leaving the country?
What is the number of nurses hired in Kenya and the number of graduates that graduate every year?

2012 second semester


This semester I have been working on a project on the roles of a Kenyan nurse. I learned many things that I never knew. I did my research online about Kenyan nurses and even met with a Kenyan nurse to collect more information about my research.
The reason why I decided to choose these three papers for my final portfolio is because they have more and stronger information that I can use any time. The first of the three projects I chose is the research project which I did with a Kenyan nurse. The second one is the putting together of the information from my online research, comparing it with the interview of a Kenyan nurse. The third paper I chose is the research report that I used to summarize resources and the interview about Kenyan nursing.  I found these two projects very helpful to use in creating the final project.
I tried to set aside my draft for a day or two before revising.  This made it easier to view my work objectively and see any gaps or problems. I refined my arguments, reorganized paragraphs, and reworded sentences. I developed my ideas in more detail, I gave more evidence to support my claims, and I deleted materials that were unnecessary. I read my paper out loud. This made it easier for me to identify writing that was awkward or unclear. I let some of my friends read the paper and tell me anything that was unclear or confusing. I looked for careless errors such as misspelled words and incorrect punctuation and capitalization. Because errors are harder to spot on a computer screen than on paper, I typed my paper on a computer and printed out a copy to proofread.  I always remembered spell checkers and grammar checkers don't always catch errors, so I did not rely on them too much.
During my revision time, I checked on my thesis to see if it was present and clear and also if it was specific enough for the scope of my essay. I checked on my paper to see if it focused on supporting my thesis or if it wandered. I read my introduction and conclusion without looking at the rest of the paper to see if they matched together.  I checked to see whether my introduction and conclusion were consistent. I never stopped there; I kept working on my project with my tutors almost 3 times a week. I spent my time in the Success Center with the tutors for more help. They corrected my work and helped me to become a good writer. I did my best in revising to see myself improving and getting better grades.  Currently I am still working on my final project and am spending most of my time with people who can help me improve my writing.
Before I got into English102 I had not written many research papers. I knew how to write an essay, but my strengths were and are limited. My field-study essay was much better than my others. It was organized and it explained all the steps as shown in the introduction. On the other hand, my first and second essays were choppy and disorganized. I think this happened because I tried to make them longer, so I missed some organizational points.
I have some strength as a writer. I can write longer essays now and support my thesis. I have worked on my vocabulary and now it is improving. I always try to use transitions in my paragraphs and essays. Even though I try my best, sometimes it isn't enough. Unfortunately, that is why I can't always succeed in getting my point across clearly. I have a lot of weaknesses. Some of them I know are because my first language is Swahili and it can be difficult understanding English. I also find it quite frustrating when I have a lot of spelling problems and when I can't conclude an essay correctly.
I have learned a lot this semester. Starting with the first essay, I have learned how to evaluate my work from the beginning to the end. My plan for self-improvement is that I will take time to read my essays more and ask for the opinion of my classmates, teachers, and other people that will be able to help me revise and evaluate myself as well. Lastly, as I have been doing, I will keep trying my best and giving it all of my effort to be able to succeed writing essays not just in class, but in the future as well.
As an English 102 student I feel that I have grown as a writer in many ways. All throughout high school, I took Honors and AP English classes that taught me the fundamentals of being a good writer. But now that I have come to college, I have been challenged to think outside the box and more in depth about my writing style and focus. Through the many different genres we have written, I feel that I have become a better-rounded writer. Before, I was a very weak writer but stronger reader, but through this English class, I feel that I have become a stronger persuasive and personal writer. I had never truly focused on these forms of writing, and was pushed to give it my all. I am glad that I have learned so much and look forward to learning new styles next semester.




kenya nursing reserch 2012

During my sophomore year in high school, I had no plans on going to college or university. All of that changed during my junior year when I took biology class and chemistry and biology. I became self-confident and I started believing in myself. I saw a lot of improvement in my grades and I became interested in these sciences. In the fall of 2011 I became the first person from my family to go to college and now am majoring in nursing.
I originally got interested in the health care field at a very early age because my mother was an assistant nurse in Kenya and I spent considerable time in my childhood observing her at work. I was attracted to the idea of helping people with physical problems, although I had no thought about any specific specialty. However, in time physical therapy became the logical focus of my attention for a number of reasons. For one, I have memories from a very young age of my grandfather in Kenya, disabled by a stroke, his problems unmitigated by any attempts at physical therapy. I will never forget the devastating consequences of this; I have heard of hundreds of deaths that occur daily due to lack of medical resources in Kenyan hospitals.
There are many questions in my mind about poor nursing in Kenya. I want to know why Kenyan nurses are leaving the country. First I begin with education. Why do we have to hire nurses in Kenya who are not qualified to work in health facilities? Second is the health environment. In Kenyan hospitals we have a poor working environment for nurses and even patients and nothing has been done about it. Who is responsible for this and why don’t we improve the working environment for both nurses and patients? How does one qualify to become a Kenyan nurse? I also want to know the major problems facing the Kenyan nurses themselves.
A few weeks ago I chose to interview Ms. Mwangi, who currently works as a Director of Nursing in Kenya, and she has an interesting background in management. Ms. Mwangi is someone I consider a strong leader and mentor. She is very positive and genuinely enjoys her job.  She has 13 years of nursing experience in medical surgical nursing, research nursing, as well as public health and community health nursing. For the past four years Ms. Mwangi has served as Clinical Director, Director of Nursing in Kisii, Kenya. In these leadership roles, Ms. Mwangi has been supervising office support, nursing student clinical, and representing these organizations on several boards and committees. Ms. Mwangi currently works as a Clinical Manager of Nursing in Nairobi, Kenya. As a Kenyan nurse, Ms. Mwangi has been through a lot of problems in the Kenyan nursing system and now she knows the solutions and steps to be taken to solve those problems. Ms. Mwangi says that “Key factors responsible for shortage of nurses at service delivery points include fast-expanding health care delivery network that also experiences inadequate recruitment and misdistribution of staff. Contributing to the shortage are an aging nursing workforce, lack of proper workforce planning that includes skills analysis and distribution, and lack of up-to-date, accurate and comprehensive data sets to assist in remedying the workforce planning situation” (Mwangi, 2012). The Kenya government should build more health facilities because the number of patients is increasing. They should provide education to nurses to improve their skill in planning situations.
 By providing more money, equipment, and training, the future of nursing in Kenya will change. I want the future Kenyan nurses to be able to follow principles of ethics. They have to practice to be faithful to the patient in order to have a good relationship with the patient. They should learn to be fair at the same time they should prevent harm to patients. If they follow the right procedures, then we will have great care in Kenya.
I came to America to gain more education than the one provided in Kenya to be a good skilled nurse so that I can go back and provide proper nursing care. My duty as a nurse is to assist individuals in performing activities that contribute to health, recovery, or peaceful death, activities which the patients would perform if they had the strength, will, or knowledge required. I want to prevent cases like my grandfather’s death, because he didn’t have good nursing care. I will also strive to achieve the best possible quality of life for the patients, regardless of disease or disability. I will use proper clinical judgment to protect, promote, and optimize health, prevent illness and injury, alleviate suffering, and advocate in health care for individuals, families, communities, and populations.
There are many things we can do to have better nursing care in Kenya. We need to focus mostly on education. Kenyan nursing education is really not of high quality. We want to see that every registered nurse in Kenya knows all the procedures of a nurse. They should not be hired as nurses if they don’t have qualifications.
Previously Kenyan nurses have been having strike crises of low payments and instead the government holding talks with the nurse union, they end up threatening them with a sacking the entire work force. It really doesn’t make sense in any way and it is not possible to dismiss such a large part of the workforce. This is not the best way to handle such crises and the best way is by holding meetings and to implement a salary increase. The article “Sacked Nurses Receive Termination Letters” says that “250000 nurses have been fired because they went on a strike. The reason for this strike is because the government has failed to implement a salary increase agreed upon some time back 2011” (Wanambisi, 2011, pg. 3). Nurses have been fired because they are demanding what belongs to them and the government takes a step of firing them. For how long are they going to keep on striking and how many times will they be firing nurses who go on strike in demand of their money? The government needs to solve these problems.
Nurses should improve skills and knowledge throughout their nursing career. Nursing skills must be maintained and improved through training, continuing education, professional conferences, work experience and mentors. These will contribute to high quality health care for patients and is necessary to improve upon nursing skills in order to keep up with new technologies and procedures. They can learn these skills by going to school. In the article “Nurses and Doctors Go Back to School”, it says that “most of Kenyan doctors and nurses have left the country to go for further studies in western countries. Most of them have gone back to school because they are aiming the highest payment” (Situma, 2012 pg. 2). Nurses have taken a step ahead of going back to school to improve their skills to save people’s lives and at the same time to be paid good wages. Most of the nurses have left the country to other countries for education and job opportunities.
The government should let nurses continue with education coursework in which interactive simulations and scenarios for skills development provides an excellent opportunity for improvement in nursing practices. This continuing education coursework will provide training in nursing practices and procedures so Kenyan nurses should keep nursing skills up to date. The government should also pay for continuing education coursework which will be an added way nurses skills up to date. The article, “Nurses and Doctors Go Back to School, also says that “nurses have gone back to school to improve their working skills because the education they have is old. So they are going back mostly for needle handling” (Situma, 2012 pg. 1).  Going back to school for Kenyan nurses is really a good thing that they are doing. The old education they have doesn’t help a lot at this time. They need to improve their skills to care for patients in a good way.
I really think another great way to improve nursing skills in Kenya is to find a mentor in a nursing organization that can guide all the nurses and help them to improve their knowledge and skills. All hospitals should offer mentorship programs. Senior level nurses in the health workplace should be able to mentor other nurses and provide some individual training. In the article “Developing a Nursing Database System in Kenya”, it says that “All Kenyan hospitals are soon going to offer mentorship programs and we expect that all nurses will attend this program, they will gain more knowledge and they will pass to other new recruits in the facilities” (Rakuom, 2011, pg. 5). When nurses attend such mentorship meetings and classes they share ideas and advance the old ones. This is a nice thing that they need to do. They can solve many problems that could not be solved in years and I prefer all the nurses to attend these programs to gain more knowledge so that they can pass the same knowledge to new recruits.
The health sector in Kenya should make it mandatory for Kenyan nurses to attend professional conferences in nursing field. This is an important way for them to improve their skills. By doing attending these conferences, it will provide an opportunity for social networking with other professionals, educating each other with new care techniques and providing an opportunity for cross-disciplinary learning. These conferences will also provide workshops and individualized training sessions that can help with keeping up to date on new technologies and the improvement of nursing skills. In “Developing a Nursing Database System in Kenya”  says that “All the Kenyan nurses need to attend international conferences that are taking place in our country because they will learn more from attending and what they will learn, they will also go and offer the same mentor to the new recruits” (Rakuom, 2011). I think it’s a good thing that will do by attending conferences. They will gain more than not attending them. They will interact with other nurses from other countries and share their stories and come up with solutions to solve the nursing sector problems.
Another problem is nurses leaving the country. The numbers of Kenyan qualified nurses who graduate annually are many and because they are not hired, they decide to travel to western countries where they will be hired. The Kenyan government should be capable of attracting and retaining their nurses. If no, then they will not be able to solve the nursing shortage they have. The number of nurses that are on the move every year continues to increase. It really doesn’t sound that good when Kenya keeps losing the best nurses. They should try to retain their nurses by doing well for them by helping them financially and giving them grants to go back to school because many nurses who move from the country end up going back to school for more education. In the article “African nurses head to U.S. for better pay”, it says that “nurses have left the country to seek better payment in western countries because there is too much work in Kenya, too little payment” (associated press. 2011).” Too much work and less payment is not enough for nurses’ life. If they are paid good money it’s not easy for them to leave the country. Well educated nurse are paid less and now they have decided to leave the country. This is the biggest challenges the government need to solve before it’s too late.
Kenyan nurses play a big role not only by giving medical care to patients, but also by giving comfort and support to the patient and his or her family. When the patient cannot recover, the nurse helps to make sure that the death is peaceful. When a person becomes ill or is injured, he goes through the nurse to see the doctor and then the doctor only deals with the main problem after the nurse has admitted the patient and managed their care. Kenyan nurses carry out many of the treatments prescribed to the patient. For example, the nurse helps the doctor during surgery in the operation room. The nurse might inject the patient with the drugs prescribed to the patient. The nurse changes the patient’s dressing and monitors the healing of the wound. The nurse also should administer medication for the pain. In the case study, the article gives the basic understanding of the roles of Kenyan nurse and how they work with patients. “Kenyan nursing case study,” says that “Kenyan nurses deliver care within the boundaries of their role, focusing upon supporting patients to be healthy, monitoring of long-term conditions, health prevention and screening activities” (Rakuom, 2010, pg. 1). Nurses should do their best to see that every patient has received a proper care. They should not go beyond their boundaries of knowledge to care because they may course injury on the patient or death.  So nurse should do what they only know.
To make Kenyan nurses better, they must care for patients well in order for patients to have trust them. Patients must feel safe and confident about their nurse. In the beginning the patient and nurse relationship can be difficult to establish due to lack of confidence because they are new to each other. The nurse has to establish trust with the patient by building a rapport. The nurse has to listen to what the patient has to say and learn to respect the patient’s wishes. This approach is extremely important as a new nurse.
Every Kenyan nurse should be able to face ethical problems, but they should also be ready to handle the issues. Kenyan nursing case study,  says “Kenyan nurse, truth telling versus deception is really on important issue that they have to deal with, especially when families want to deny telling the patient the truth about the medical condition because the patient has the right to know his or her diagnosis” (Rakuom, 2010, pg.3). Nurses must be faithful to patients and must respect their culture. A patient has rights to know his or her diagnosis any time that he or she has gone through any medical checkup.
According to Ms. Mwangi, when I interviewed her she said that “the government also needs to provide a good working environment in hospitals. Kenyan nurses should care for patients as they could care for themselves. Kenyan nurses should take of patients, making sure they can breathe property, help them sleep, and making sure that they are comfortable. They should take care of their elimination of waste and each nurse should know each patient diseases and how to treat them. Nurses should get enough resources to protect patients and themselves from diseases and germs. Hospital facilities in Kenya are very sanitary, but nurses still come in contact with germs and bacteria and so do other staff working in the nursing facility” (M. Mwangi, personal communication, January 10, 2012). Ms. Mwang says “Rules should be passed out to all nurses so that anyone feeling sick should not come in to work if they feel any symptoms, no matter how minor. Working with residents all day, germs and bacteria can easily be spread from person to person, and when working with the elderly it can be dangerous to their health. Visitors who are sick should be discouraged from entering the hospital facility for the health protection of the residents; this is an absolutely necessary precaution. During flu season especially, residents are vulnerable to catching illnesses and are not as capable of fighting them off because of their weakened immune systems. Visitors should come in when they are healthy. Staff and visitors should also be cautious while in the nursing facility” (M. Mwangi, personal communication, January 10, 2012).
Kenyan nurses should know that keeping patients healthy should be of the highest priority. Certain measures will have to be taken for the actual facility, such as ensuring proper ventilation, and monitoring that only healthy visitors and staff are entering into the nursing facility to make sure illnesses are not brought into the building.
In order to achieve these Kenyan nursing goals, both the government and the health sectors including nursing organizations should come together to solve the problems. The government should take the biggest responsibility to cater for the nurses’ problem. They should stop the striking crises that are increasing the death rates in Kenyan hospital. Human rights activist should also intervene to protect both nurses and patients. By solving all the problems, then I think nurses will play their major roles with quality. We can even prevent some deaths and spread of diseases. Even the World Health Organization (WHO) will be ready to provide more help to the country.
This project hasn’t been that easy for me. It has been a mountain to climb. I began with choosing the right topic for my research which actually took me two to three days. At the end of the third day I came up with one title which I felt is really good. The title was “Roles of a Kenyan Nurse.” The reason why I wanted to explore this topic is because I wanted to know more about my country and the field I want to go into. Previously I had heard that Kenyan nurses are not treated with dignity. They have low wages, poor working condition, and high employment of unqualified nurses.
I have been working hard for this project in order to pass the class. I have been working with my tutors for help where I don’t understand. I really a had hard time understanding the project and following the instructions but since there are student tutors, my project is becoming easier for me. I also spent plenty of time working in these projects although I had some other classes and homework to do. Since the beginning of day one of project one to project four I have been trying my best to do an excellent job. The reason why I have been spending more time on this project is because at the end there is a good result. The wise men didn’t go astray when they said “no hard work goes unpaid.”
From my further research I would like to know more about the Kenyan nursing education. What kind of post basic training do they offer?  What are the main minimum entry requirements, post diploma programs, minimum entry requirements, and degree programs? I would like to know the Kenyan feature plans for the faculty and job opportunities.
I would like to be granted the internship to keep doing the research for countries like Kenya to check the problems that they are going through so that we can make a change. Want an internship from organization like the African Medical and Research Foundation (AMREF).













Reference

. African nurses head to U.S. for better pay. (2012) Associated press.
http://www.hrhresourcecenter.org/node/1534
Rakuom, V. (2011). Developing a Nursing Database System in Kenya
http://www.ichrn.com/publications/casestudies/ICHRN_Kenya_CaseStudy.pdf
Situma, C. (2012) Kenyan Nurses, and Doctors Go Back to School. YallAfrica
http://allafrica.com/stories/201203100433.html
Wanambisi, L. (2012). Kenya: Sacked Nurses Receive Termination Letters. YallAfrica
http://health.newsplurk.com/2012/03/kenya-says-sacks-25000-striking-health.html

Annotated Bibliography

Annotated Bibliography
 Roles of a Kenyan nurse have always been an interest to me. So since I am in a nursing major, researching the roles of Kenyan nurses has been my first priority. My search started by logging onto EBSCO databases. I typed in the words “what are the roles of a Kenyan nurse?” It provided me with different types of articles like the first article that I chose was “Nursing the Sick.” This article didn’t have much information about the roles of a nurse. It talked about the problems the patients have and how to cater to them.  The second article I chose had all I was looking for about the roles of a nurse, but not in Kenya. I didn’t stop there. I kept on with my research on EBSCO host and other resources for more information. I went through hundreds of articles, but I wasn’t successful with my research. I went to the librarians for help in finding the right article, but they didn’t find any. I decided to try searching with different phrases like “Nursing in Africa.” It actually provided me with two articles. One was “Palliative care in Africa.” It talked about how to provide equal care for the patients. The second one was “Roles of a Nurse.” It really didn’t have much information, but I felt that my quest had come to an end.
Then I went through all three articles and compared them with other countries like the United States and England. I came to my conclusion that Kenyan nursing is poor and it needs improvement by educating nurses and updating equipment.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Interview questions


  • Interview questions
  • ·         Who inspired you to become a nurse and eventually a Kenyan nurse?
  • ·         What do you enjoy most about being a Kenya nurse?
  • ·         What kind of leader do you perceive yourself to be?
  • ·         Tell me about your clinical background before becoming a nurse
  • ·         What is the hardest part about being a nurse in Kenya?
  • ·         What are the problems are Kenyan nurses facing?
  • ·         What are types of Nursing Specialties do you have in Kenya.
  • ·         How are you paid as a Kenyan nurse?
  • ·         How one would make a Good Kenya Nurse?
  • ·         What Paths should I take to become a Registered Kenyan Nurse?
  • ·         How do you work on team building with your team members?
  • ·         What should Kenya people do to stay healthy?
  • ·         What are the major health challenges you are facing in Kenya?
  • ·         What is the Working Environment of a Kenyan Nurse?

Why I Want To Be a Nurse


                                                           Why I Want To Be a Nurse

What is nursing

“Nursing is the protection, promotion, and optimization of health and abilities, prevention of illness and injury, alleviation of suffering through the diagnosis and treatment of human response, and advocacy in the care of individuals, families, communities, and populations.”
Nursing includes a range of specialties and definitions that vary from country to country. According to the International Council of Nurses, "Nursing encompasses autonomous and collaborative care of individuals of all ages, families, groups and communities, sick or well and in all settings. Nursing includes the promotion of health, prevention of illness, and the care of ill, disabled and dying people. Advocacy, promotion of a safe environment, research, participation in shaping health policy and in patient and health systems management, and education are also key nursing roles."

Why am interested in nursing


During my sophomore year in High School I had no plans on going to college or University. All of that changed during my junior year when I joined biology class and chemistry and biology. Through first I became self confident and I started believing in myself. I saw a lot of improvement in my grades and I became interested in these Sciences. In fall of 2011 I became the first person from my family to go to college.
My grandfather always used to say to me “nothing in life is easy if it’s worth having”, and I am just so sad that she can’t see me now, turning away from the easy  path towards one I know will bring a lifetime of challenges and fulfillment. I always respected him and have tried to make my entire family proud of me. I am the first person from my working class family to go to college, and while I am proud of accomplishing this goal, which was by no means easy financially or emotionally, my career path after graduation has not been as fulfilling as I was hoping it would be. But I never lose hope. And now am out for a long life education.
I originally became interested in the health care field at a very early age because my mother was an assistant nurse and I spent considerable time in my childhood observing her at work. I was attracted to the idea of helping people with physical problems, although I had no thought about any specific specialty. However, in time physical therapy became the logical focus of my attention for a number of reasons. For one, I have memories from a very young age of my grandfather in Kenya, disabled by a stroke, his problems unmitigated by any attempts at physical therapy. I will never forget the devastating consequences of this.
Now I have decided to be a nurse. I will be healthcare professional who is focused on caring for individuals, families, and communities, ensuring that they attain, maintain, or recover optimal health and functioning. As nurses, I will be capable of assessing, planning, implementing, and evaluating care independently of physicians, and they provide support from basic triage to emergency surgery. I may practice in hospitals, clinics, physician offices, private homes, schools, pharmaceutical companies, industry, schools, cruise ships, retirement homes, hospice facilities, long-term care facilities, military facilities, and even camps. Or I may also advise and work as consultants in the healthcare, insurance, or legal industries. I can work full- or part-time, and many work on a per diem basis or as traveling nurses.
My duty as a nurse is to assist individuals in performing activities that contribute to health, recovery, or peaceful death, which the patients would perform if they had the strength, will, or knowledge required. But not like my grandfather’s death which didn’t have a good nursing care. I will also strive to achieve the best possible quality of life for the patients, regardless of disease or disability. I will use clinical judgment to protect, promote, and optimize health, prevent illness and injury, alleviate suffering, and advocate in health care for individuals, families, communities, and populations.
Nursing is more than a profession of integrity and compassion, it is a privilege that measures out my values as a human being and the responsibilities granted to me with the precious gift to me.

Research question


What is a role of a Kenyan nurse?
What is a role of a Kenyan nurse? A role of a Kenyan nurse is to provide care for the patient, work with doctors, protect the patient, teach the patient and family, advocate for the family.
Kenyan nurses care for patients continuously, 24 hours a day. They help the patient to do what they could do for themselves if they could. They take care for the patients making sure that they can breathe properly, helping patients sleep, and making sure that they are comfortable. Taking care of their needs to eliminate waste from body. Nurses know each patient’s problem that they have.
Kenyan nurses play a BIG role not only by taking care of a patient but also gives comfort and support to the patient and his or her family. When the patient cannot recover, the nurse helps to make sure that the death is peaceful.
            When a person becomes ill or is injured, he goes through the nurse to see the doctor and then the doctor only deals with the main problem after that the nurse will admit the patient and manage their care. Mostly in rural areas nurses deal with patients and if the patient is critical, that’s when they refer him or her to the doctor.
            Nurses carry out many of the treatments prescribed to the patient. The nurse helps the doctor during surgery in the operation room. The nurse injects the patient and the drugs described to the patient. The nurse changes the patients dressing and monitors the healing of the wound at the same time the nurse gives medication for the pain.
                Nurses also monitor the patient’s progress to make sure that the recovery has complications. Nurses mostly find problem in patients because they have more frequent contacts with them than anyone else. The nurse also plans and supervises the care given by nursing assistants, checks on the work of housekeeping staff assigned to clean the patient's room, and ensures that the patient gets enough healthy food.
            Nurses protect the patient. When a person is ill and weak, he or she has an injury; the nurse plays the major role of protecting the patient by ensuring that the patient is well taken care of.  The nurse also takes care of the environment where the patient is in order to prevent the spread of the infection from one patient to another. The nurse makes sure the patient’s room is clean; patient is clean and has Safe food which is healthy. Always the nurse is the mother of hygiene she washes her hands carefully before and after the patient care and before care.
The nurse also makes sure the patient is physically safe. She takes care of the patient when he or she is sleeping in bed so that she cannot fall off bed of fall when trying to walk or slip on a wet floor. The nurse protects the patient from anything that may be harmful to the patient.
            The nurse also teaches the patient and family about how to control the disease and how to handle the diseases that they already have. Nurses also teach patients how to care for them self after they will leave the hospital or the health facilities.
            The nurses are the advocates for the patients. They are always with people when they are born, when they are injured or when they are ill, and when they die. Most people before they die, they share their views with the nurses. Nurses are always on the bed side of the patient all day long. They are always there when the patient cannot sleep because of pain or loneliness. They are there to bate patients, feed them and support them. They are the ones who speak for the patient when he or she cannot speak.









research questions



  1. What Kenyan nurses need to do in order to save lives
  2. Government responsibilities in Kenya
  3. What courses problems that course nurses crises
  4. What is the best way to stop the problems?
  5. What kind of problems are Kenyan nurses facing?
  6. For how long are they going to happen?
  7. What are the best ways to improve Kenyan nurse’s skills?
  8. Why are nurses leaving the country?
  9. What is the number of nurses hired in Kenya and the number of graduates that graduate every year?

PROBLEMS FACING KENYA NURSING


Kenya’s nursing system is unique. Over the past decade, it has been reported that there are over 7,000 unemployed nurses. Over 1,300 new nurses graduate annually from colleges. At the same time, many functional health facilities are understaffed, with over 500 nurses retiring, which means there is a shortage of manpower and nurses are overloaded with work. Working conditions are poor, and there is a lack of resources and low education. Most of Kenya’s dispensaries throughout the country do not have qualified nurses. In addition, key factors responsible for the shortage of nurses at service delivery points include a fast-expanding health care delivery network that also experiences inadequate recruitment and misdistribution of staff. Contributing to the shortage are an aging nursing workforce, and a lack of proper workforce planning that includes skills analysis and distribution.
In my interview I chose to interview Ms. Merry Mwangi who currently works as a Director of Nursing in Kenya, and has an interesting background in management. Merry is someone I consider a strong Leader and mentor. She is very positive and genuinely enjoys her job.
Merry has 13 years of nursing experience in medical surgical nursing, research nursing, as well as public health and community health nursing. For the past four years Merry has served as Clinical Director, Director of Nursing in Kisii Kenya. In these leadership roles Merry has been supervising office support, clinical, and representing these organizations on several boards and committees. Merry currently works as a Clinical Manager of Nursing in Nairobi, Kenya.
During our meeting, the first question I asked was, “what kind of leader do you perceive yourself to be?” The response to my question regarding background and role she has today, was that she has "grown up" as a Nurse Manager and as an assistant nurse manager, she stated that, “An effective leader knows his or her strength and weakness and therefore it makes it easier for them to delegate appropriately. A nurse leader or any leader devotes his or her time to develop individual skills for staff and to deal with any issues within the unit. By doing this an effective leader is able to form teams who are responsible for various duties. “If a leader is able to motivate staff members personally, staff members' duties will be carried out more effectively”. A good leader should be an advocate for their staff who advocate for patients. A leader should be someone who has the big picture and makes decisions based on the needs of the hospital and important qualities or characteristics of leaders include flexibility, good communication, and organization, presence/availability to their staff, critical thinking, and definitely common sense.
To become a successful in a leadership role the leader must have enthusiasm, energy, and commitment, be able to inspire, and listen to others. I have always been a “leader” more than a follower. I enjoy decision making and advocacy as well as owning processes.
She said that to become a registered Kenyan nurse, one can attend a technical school, a two-year college to earn an associate’s degree or attend a four-year college to earn a bachelor’s degree in nursing. The last step to becoming a registered nurse is to take and pass the Kenya National Council Licensing Exam. Once this exam is passed, the student is officially being registered as a Kenya nurse. She also told me how one can make a good Kenyan nurse by sayingNursing is a good career choice for people who want to make a difference in the lives of other people and who want a stable career that pays well. People, who enjoy science, want a flexible schedule and the opportunity for advancement will find that nursing meets all of these criteria”.
She stated that the hardest part about being a nurse in Kenya is treating people with limited access to health care is the hardest part in Kenya. I see people who have mistreated their health for a long time not because they didn’t care or didn’t know there was something wrong, but because they couldn’t afford the care they needed because of poverty.  I find that very sad. I try to be very cognizant of the costs of the prescriptions I write.
Kenyan nurses are facing, she said that “In Kenya there is manpower shortage in all health facilities. There is one nurse in almost half the dispensaries, and nearly half the health centers are staffed by less than three nurses and they serve almost 3000 people a day and yet the payments are low”.
She also talked about the working environment of a Kenyan nurse she said that “The working environment of a Kenyan nurse varies, depending on the type of nurse and the place of employment. However, it is very typical of a nurse to work long hours at odd times. It isn't uncommon for a nurse to work a 12hour shift, have a day off, and then back on for another long day/night. The environment can be hectic and high-pressure, as nurses are depended on to make quick decisions, and care for the sick and injured. Sometimes when caring for someone with an infectious disease, the nurse's work environment can be dangerous”.
I asked her what types of nursing specialties they have in Kenya. “In Kenya we actually have Emergency room, Pediatrics, Forensics, and Mental Health. This are just a few of the many specialties open to nurses. Nursing specialties exist for nearly every major illness, population group and life situation requiring medical care”.
Most of Kenyan nurses work in poor conditions, uncomfortable healthcare facilities. Home health and public health nurses travel to patients’ homes, schools, community centers, and other sites. Nurses may spend considerable time walking and standing. Patients in hospitals and nursing care facilities require 24-hour care; consequently, nurses in these institutions may work nights, weekends, and holidays.
            Kenyan Nursing has its hazards, especially in hospitals, nursing care facilities, and clinics, in all three of which nurses may care for individuals with infectious diseases. Nurses must observe rigid standardized guidelines to guard against disease and other dangers, such as those posed by radiation, accidental needle sticks and chemicals used to sterilize instruments. In addition, they are vulnerable to back injury when moving patients, shocks from electrical equipment, and hazards posed by compressed gases.