Category Archives: General

World Kindness Day

Too many times we hear of people committing suicide because someone cyber or in-person bullied them. To me those bullies are COWARDS!! They have other issues themselves that are not resolved. Let today be the start of a new wave to be kind to others. There is too much bullying regarding race, socioeconomic status, marital status, gender identity, and a new one health bullying over mandates.


“The National Centre Against Bullying defines bullying as an ongoing and deliberate misuse of power in relationships through repeated verbal, physical, and/or social behavior that intends to cause physical, social, and/or psychological harm. It can involve Bullying is an ongoing and deliberate misuse of power in relationships through repeated verbal, physical, and/or social behavior that intends to cause physical, social, and/or psychological harm. It can involve an individual or a group misusing their power, or perceived power, over one or more persons who feel unable to stop it from happening.”

Pres. Joe Biden urges unvaccinated Americans to get vaccinated: “We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin and your refusal has cost all of us.” http://abcn.ws/3BULUX6 Wowwhether I believe in vaccines or not is irrelevant, but as a healthcare provider myself I have to respect when a patient tells me, Ms. Rosie, I do not want to get vaccinated. It is a person’s personal choice. We can agree to disagree but that is the same as when I want to help my patients to quit smoking because they will develop lung or other types of cancer, or stop drinking so that they do not end up on a liver transplant list.

In today’s world, healthy people choose to do to their bodies as they please, and although some may disapprove, no mandates on their careers or privileges are taken away ( ex breast augmentation, butt lifts, transgender surgery, abortion). So why not allow autonomy in today’s world for people to choose what they inject into their bodies. Legal marijuana is a thing right? We may or may not agree with that, but no one is forcing anyone to use this as their treatment for pain.

So today let us spread kindness and respect. I say this also to our leaders in Washington, allow people to make their own choices, your political mandates will turn voters away from you. I will also leave this with you, if you are in a car accident and taken to a hospital and it is a matter of life and death and the only person who has the specialty for your type of injury is unvaccinated, will you refuse to help? I don’t think so, because at that point you are so incapacitated that no one is going to care if the person saving your life is vaccinated, they will only care that they took the hypocritical oath that they are to follow.

In 2020 a new hypocritical oath for physicians came out and it states

“The new oath asks physicians to eliminate their personal biases, combat disinformation to improve health literacy, and be an ally to minorities and other underserved groups in society. It is illegal for a physician to refuse services based on race, ethnicity, gender, religion, or sexual orientation.

For nurses, they have taken the Nightingale Pledge

“I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly, to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug.”

The new version also adds

“I will hold in confidence all personal matters coming to my knowledge. I will not permit consideration of religion, nationality, race, or social standing to intervene between my duty and my patient. I will maintain the utmost respect for human life. I make these promises solemnly, freely, and upon my honor.”

So today as you go about your day, remember the things that are important to you with your healthcare and how it would make you feel if someone took those healthcare decisions away. For Example diet, do you really need to eat that piece of chocolate cake when you are overweight, diabetic, with high blood pressure? Sounds kind of harsh for someone to say that right? But people do and not with grace I might add.

Watch this video made by Ikeahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yx6UgfQreYY

Caring for Patients Through our Comfort

With so much fear happening right now as a result of COVID-19, there are many patients that are in fear of dying and asking for prayer.  In some hospitals, many staff will be more concerned with their agenda and not the patient’s thoughts or concerns.  Our own beliefs as a nurse can impact a patient in many ways.  For instance, if you find yourself in a Christian Hospital where praying is okay with a patient and encouraged, and you feel comfortable asking the patient if they would like to pray, then you would do that.  Now in the same situation, if you are a nurse that is not very religious but work in a Christian Hospital and a patient asks you to pray with them, it can be very awkward for the nurse.  The nurse can let the patient know that she will stay there as the patient prays and a warm touch of the nurse’s hand on the patient’s hand can be all the comfort that the patient needed (DeNisco & Barker, 2012).  However, many staff will be fearful to do this because of COVID-19.  But remember even through a mask, gown, gloves, and a face shield, we as nurses and healthcare givers can still provide someone that is afraid that warm and caring support and a smile that will let them know we care.

References

DeNisco, S. M., & Barker, A. M. (2012). Theory-based advanced nursing practice. Advanced practice nursing: Evolving roles for the transformation of the profession (2nd ed., pp. 5-18). [Vital Source Bookshelf]. Retrieved from https://campus.capella.edu/web/library/home

 

Compassion Comes from the Heart

As nurses, we have the ability to use compassion and genuinely want the best for our patients.  We understand our patients and want to help them find the best treatment that will help them.  There are also nurses and doctors who do not exercise cultural competence in what the patient’s beliefs and wishes are.  As nurses, we have to validate our patients’ feelings of fear of not being able to provide for their families.   Many hospitals have case managers who focus on the hospital losing money and allow patients to treat at their facility but if they do not have insurance, they are very quick to send them elsewhere.  Many times when this happens, these case managers that are gatekeepers, are not thinking of the patient’s safety.

Social workers and nurse case managers are the peacemakers in these delicate situations, involving patient advocacy.    A good nurse case manager will identify the problem right away and diffuse it so that the focus is back on the patient.   Sometimes our culture in America imposes our beliefs on others thinking that they have to accept a specific method of treatment, but the reality is patients have a choice.  If a choice is explained well to someone, they will make the right decision.  We as healthcare providers have to explain things to the patient and family to help them understand and make an informed decision.

The skill that the staff needs to learn about caring for patients from other cultures is to remember that we as healthcare providers have to be sensitive to someone’s beliefs or culture.  Just because they do things differently does not mean it is wrong, it is just different.  We as healthcare providers have to be respectful (Barr & Dowding, 2012).

Cultural expectations were seen in my previous job while I was the manager of a team of nurses and social workers.  There was a manager from England and then there was myself,  of Hispanic background.   The majority of my team was from a different culture.   There was a nurse on my team who was great, but she spoke with a thick island accent, however her patients loved her.  The other manager like myself was from England. During a case presentation, the other manager stated how hard it was to understand her and she should not present again.  I stated that was not a fair statement because she presented cases and her skills and case were valid.   The other manager did not reply to my statement verbally but she made herself known by challenging everything I said in the future.  It is instances like this that discourage people from staying in jobs.

References

Barr, J., & Dowding, L. (2012). What makes a leader? Leadership in healthcare (2nd ed., pp. 32-44). [Vital Source Bookshelf]. http://dx.doi.org/ Retrieved from

Leadership Styles and Organizational Changes

In my previous employment, I went through some challenging issues that started at the leadership level.  I was a manager of case managers at the time.  The role of the professional nurse when implementing a change is to identify that there is a need for a change (Rubenfeld & Scheffer, 2014).  Once the need for a change is identified by the nurse, the next step is to implement a change in behaviors efficiently and with quality. When identifying the area specifically that needs the change, nurses need to be deliberate in stating the purpose of the change.  When speaking to the target group about making the change, it is important to keep their attention span with non-lecturing phrases.  As nurses, we are not always in our comfort zone to explain why changes need to be implemented.  We should be prepared to explain why this change is needed and what improvements these changes will make.

Generally, people will always be resistant to change.  But as professional nurses, our focus is to build trust and credibility.  The goal is to acknowledge that the change is coming and that you empathize with the feelings of the upcoming change (Rubenfeld & Scheffer, 2014).

Where I used to work, they were very involved with ACHA (Agency for Healthcare Administration), because we held a state contract.  Evidenced-based nursing was in a sense required as far as the patient care when our case managers were managing a case.  However on the same note, although our case managers were not performing hands-on care, they were required to know about all their diagnoses and treatments.  We had social workers and nurses alike seeing the same types of members.  The issue with nurses and social workers seeing the same types of patients is that the social worker is not able to use his/her critical thinking skills in their area of expertise.   They were required to assist members who had complex medical issues for instance, on a ventilator or more complex medical problems.   A suggestion was made when I arrived at my workplace to utilize the social workers in conjunction with the nurses to manage the social aspects of the patients, however, the decision was denied.  It was noted that ACHA is not paying the company to rethink how cases were managed and by whom because it was not hands-on care, it was case management.

There was very little nursing involved in my job role, it was primarily reports and meetings to talk about reports and how to fix these reports.  It was an ideal job for someone that had an interest in the perfection of numbers and statistics.  Every other day, there was a new change that was being implemented. We often questioned why there was a change, but what we were told was that the change was immediate and mandatory.  For the staff case managers, these changes were difficult because the staff was in the field.  They may receive an email about something that needed to be changed as soon as possible, however, they may have just returned home at 4:30 or 5pm in the afternoon looking forward to the end of their day.  When the case managers check their emails,  they find deadlines on multiple items due.  These changes affect the staff because they have to work after hours to get the work completed timely. This kind of change caused many good nurses and social workers to resign.

As nurses or leaders, we tend to fall into the routine of lecturing due to the pressures that we are under.  However, two of the six dimensions of dealing with complex dynamic changes are creativity and intuition.  As a leader we should not just teach our group something, we should implement a way to bring creativity into the change and use intuition to know how to speak to our group.  The best way to implement a change is to get the group to commit to doing the new change and develop a smart goal with them that will allow them to measure their own goals.

The leadership theory that most resembles mine is the coaching leadership style.  The coaching leadership style allows me to work closely with staff at different levels and empower them to meet their goals and gain confidence in their strengths.  By being confident, they can focus on themselves as they work on their weaknesses.  In my previous job, the leadership style seemed like a dictatorship; however, for the purpose of the discussion here, it will be stated as coercive.  My manager’s favorite phrase was, “I gave a directive and everyone needs to follow it, any questions, 1 second wait time, no, good.  It’s due by close of business.”  If questioned on how to juggle that with all the meetings and other directives, the reply was always as a manager make it happen.  My manager always reminded me that she did not take lunch or breaks and she had “no life!” For fun,  she read the ACHA contract that was 350 plus pages because reading any other book was pointless (Barr & Dowding, 2012).

References

Barr, J., & Dowding, L. (2012). What makes a leader? In Leadership in healthcare (2nd ed., pp. 13-31). [Vital Source Bookshelf]. Retrieved from https://campus.capella.edu/web/library/home

Rubenfeld, M. G., & Scheffer, B. (2014). Critical thinking and patient-centered care. In Critical thinking tactics for nurses: achieving the IOM competencies (3rd ed., pp. 155-180). [Vital Source Bookshelf]. Retrieved from https://campus.capella.edu/web/library/home

 

Portrait, Dog, Animal, Suit, Business, Woman, Bitch

 

What is Nursing in Today’s World

In the words of Florence Nightingale:

“Nursing is an art: and if it is to be made an art, it requires as exclusive a devotion, as hard a preparation as any painter’s or sculptor’s work; for what is the having to do with dead canvas or dead marble, compared with having to do with the living body, the temple of God’s spirit? It is one of the Fine Arts; I had almost said, the finest of Fine Arts.”

In today’s world, many people do not respect nurses and the work that they do.  There are many types of nurses in different fields.  I personally have had the privilege of working as a nurse in medical-surgical units, labor and delivery, legal nursing,  home care, case management, workman’s comp, and field nursing.  The experiences that I gained in working in all of these different areas of  nursing make me who I am today.

Through out the past month, these same nurses that did not receive any gratitude have now started to receive recognition, some negative and some positive.  Nursing as we know it has changed many lives.  We have had to adapt to the way that we reach out to our patients for their protection and ours through telehealth nursing.  For many patients, this has been a great thing because they can still talk with their nurse and their doctor.  I see clients in their home and doctor’s offices, but during the COVID-19 shelter in, I have had to reach out by telehealth to my clients in order to continue to provide the services that they need.

Many people have been so scared that they are losing sleep and feeling stress due to not working and how are they going to pay their bills.  Then there are the nurses that work frontline in the hospitals and doctor’s offices and the nurses that now have to see patients through telehealth measures.  One would think that those of us that have jobs still amidst this pandemic would be grateful and kind, but instead, for some people, it is causing stress and anxiety as a result of undisclosed fear.

Fear’s acronym that has been shared is false evidence appearing real.  In this case, though it is fear of the unknown.  Will there be work, will I get infected? Will my family be okay?  These are all questions that go through people’s minds.  What can we do as nurses?  Pray and ask God for that peace to be the light in the midst of darkness.  Second, understand that we can’t change the world and those that are in it; but we can change the way we look at it and how we handle circumstances.

A friend paid me the greatest compliment the other day, he said “Rosie Moore you followed The Great Physician! Bringing healing and hope to those in despair.  keep up the good work.  There is a crown waiting for you!”  So today know that every type of nurse is important whether in the frontline or via telehealth.  When COVID-19 is over, never forget what our country went through and the work that nurses and other healthcare workers did.

 

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