 Hi everyone! So this is a vlog all about my training! I know! Very exciting! So this week I have two days of practice, so Monday and Friday I will be working half eight till half six my normal hours and then Tuesday Wednesday, today's Tuesday. I'm going to be doing baby immunizations training and this is part of the foundations of primary care course or fundamentals of primary care course. It's called different things in different places, but anyway yes! So all of our baby immunizations is now online, so we have to do online learning which I'm really annoyed about because I could have done this nine months ago when I first started. This is something I could have got on with and done and I could be well away doing babyims by now but because of COVID and the course was pushed back then we're just starting now but I'm literally logging on to my e-learning for healthcare which I always use to do the babyims training. I could have done this at the start so I'm a little bit miffed about that but do you know what? At least I'm getting on with it, I'm going to do it so I thought I would take you through it and show you how I learn and revise and make my notes whilst I'm training online and hopefully I'm going to stay as motivated as possible. So this screen here is my e-learning for healthcare package and this is the e-learning that I'm going to be doing today and tomorrow. So this is all about immunizations and vaccines which is handy because there's a new COVID vaccine coming out. So I am literally just going to start at the top national immunization policy and programs and then I'm going to work my way down this list. Every session you click on so if I click on the top one it's got different parts to it. If I go back and then click on the next one it's got those parts. If I go to that one oh god I've got a lot of work to do over the next two days oh god are these going to have everything inside it? It's nothing in that one that's a bonus oh no there was it's come up there's only one in that one thank god okay next one there's only one in that one HPV oh amazing okay so I have got a lot of work to do but hopefully it's going to be okay I'm going to get through all of this hopefully and get my certificates at the end and yeah and then I'll be able to book in some clinics with the other nurses and do the baby vaccines which I'm not looking forward to I'm not going to lie I do not want to be injecting babies and have them cry at me that's not fun to me um but yeah it is what it is and it's to protect the health of the future children and all that jazz so yeah here we go oh so this is a really interesting statistic that's on my first bit of e-learning this is from public health england and showing how vaccines actually work showing you the evidence so before vaccines the on the left hand side of this screen this is before vaccines were introduced so they're all the different types of diseases or illnesses whatever and that's how many people were infected by it um but now because there's a vaccine this is the right hand side as after the vaccine's been given so the difference between the 1940s 1950s 1960s 1990s up to today and now and look at those numbers one case then just look at those numbers it's amazing how reduced those numbers are that's massive reduction so it just shows you that actually vaccines are needed and this is why we vaccinate so at the end of every section that i'm showing you um we get an assessment and you have to get 80% or more to pass the assessment so right now i'm doing the immunology assessment and i'm on question two and there's an option for all of the above so i'm going with that one because if there's an option then i'm going to tick it let's face it the fingers crossed past this ready to submit this is what happens when you don't read a question right oops second attempt guys uh i haven't got high hopes for this one i'm not gonna lie oh third time lucky guys so i have finished my mandatory stuff on my immunizations and that is all the boring stuff so if i didn't make notes because it was all about kind of stuff that i already know like consent the legal stuff fridge temperatures so i didn't make notes so i didn't show you that part but however i've now moved on to disease specific so the first one we are going to go to is this what i'm going to do now is just go through each one for the information and then as i do that i'm going to make some notes so my first note i'm going to put the title which i cannot pronounce so i'm not going to say it out loud too much but i've wrote it down on my note so it's got to be done title done let's add some color to the title just to make it look pretty done next okay so organism so this is usually caused by bacterium oh what are these words bacterium coronet bacterium diphtheria and less commonly don't understand how to say these words guys anyway some some strains toxogenic strains of the bacteria produce a toxin it's only these strains that cause disease lovely history we do want to know so i'm going to put a little title because we need the stats to tell people and to tell the parents so i'm going to put history in an ice color i know it's going to be color coded history okay so disease of children well that's why we're vaccinating children and came rare in the uk following an introduction of mass immunization in 1942 oh so imms started in 1942 and then in 1941 there was approximately 50 000 notifications in england with 2 600 deaths this amounted to approximately one notification every 10 minutes and one death every three to four hours ouch so this is my final notes for the e-learning that i did and that is it i'm going to move on to the next one now says day two of e-learning i'm bored i'm at home i'm in pretty much the same clothes as i had on yesterday what is life with some extra ones i've done is hep b hpv and now i'm going on to influenza which i've already done the flu one but this is more targeted at the baby ones which i do not know so that's what i'm going to do right now so bored i'm nearly finished i'm just coming to the end now so i thought i would stop this video in here um i've got all of my notes and i'm going to make some little flashcards from them all i think about baby imms and vaccinations probably not today though but yeah i'm gonna sort something out but i've done my mandatory training so that is me hopefully going to be signed off for baby imms and start to be able to do them but basically yeah just like i've shown you i literally go through bit by bit and i document all of the important stuff in my notes and i use colors and subheadings little stars little bullet points just to make my notes that's how i do it um sometimes if i was doing like anatomy and physiology i might draw a little diagram or something at the side and then label it and then put some arrows and make notes at the side of it that sort of thing that's how i normally sort of do my note taking for amp um but yeah i hope that's been useful i feel like this has been really boring if i'm not going to lie so i'm really sorry if that's really bored you to death but i hope it helps a bit i don't know but now i am going to have a cup of tea to excuse this guys literally i'm learning from home we all have got our pyjamas on we've all not done our hair don't worry about it i'm gonna go and have a cup of tea now and just chill out for a bit because this is draining my soul i've no idea how all the student nurses are doing this how are you all doing this from home the motivation to do it is just it's not there i'm not gonna lie but it has to be done so i'm doing it um but yes i hope that you're all staying motivated and i'm sorry if you're not and i'm sorry if you're feeling really deflated right now with everything being online but you know what you've got this you can absolutely do it so go have a cup of tea have a coffee have a drink treat yourself to something nice keep yourself motivated and yeah i shall see you all next time