Showing posts with label nursing shortages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nursing shortages. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2011

The National Patients' Report Card Gives Nurses an A+

WINNIPEG, MANITOBA--(Marketwire - June 16, 2011) - A new national poll shows that Canadian patients overwhelmingly approve of treatment they receive from the nation's nurses, despite the clearly visible nursing shortage in hospitals.

The poll, conducted by Vector Poll in early June for the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU) for its 30th Anniversary Biennial Convention being held in Winnipeg, showed that nurses get a great report card from their patients.

The National Patients' Report Card on Nurses found:

  • 88 % of respondents who saw a nurse the last time they needed health care said they were listened to carefully and had their questions answered;

Click on the "VIA" link for the full article.

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Monday, June 13, 2011

With nurse shortage looming, America needs shot in the arm - Washington Times

Saturday, May 7, 2011

During National Nurses Week, we should focus on nursing shortage | The Progressive

By Suzanne Gordon, May 6, 2011

May 6-12 is National Nurses Week. Don’t believe the hype that the nursing shortage is over.

After warning of a shortage for years, American hospitals now claim that we have plenty of nurses at the bedside.

Hospital administrators are essentially saying that the bad economy is coercing more nurses to stay on the job. Since some nurses’ husbands or wives have lost their jobs in other sectors, nurses are hanging on to their own jobs and delaying retirement.

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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Battle Hymn of the California Nurse, by Marilou Morgan RN

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You can find them at the bedside
With shot to kill the pain
You can find them passing bedpans
They do this without disdain
As they share with you compassion
Always hoping for your gain
There're dwindling away.
 

California Needs more nurses
HMO's have filled their Purses
Now were really in the Lurches..
We're dwindling away
 

She is working extra hours
He is working extra days
Tryin' to keep a nurse beside you
As you struggle thru this maze
If they had an extra minute
They would take a coffee break
Like other people do.
 

New York City Needs more nurses
HMO's have filled their Purses
Now were really in the Lurches..
Where has the money gone?

We are told were are an item
Like the linen or the lights
We must work under conditions
Never mentioning our rights
If we try to buck the system
A New Grad will be your plight
so we keep hanging on.

Carolina Needs more nurses
HMO's have filled their Purses
Now were really in the Lurches
How long will this go on!

When you think about your nurses
Let your voices ring out clear
they are trying to protect you
From the system, and they fear
You will be in worse condition
from the shorgages we face
and it sould not be so...

Arizona Needs more nurses,
HMO's have filled their purses
Puts us really in the Lurches
and it should not be so!

Copywrite 1999
Marilou Morgan RN

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Friday, March 11, 2011

Safe Staffing Saves Lives - ANA's National Campaign to Solve the Nurse Staffing Crisis

Nurses everywhere rank staffing as their biggest problem. Research shows it is a problem – for patients: Insufficient nurse staffing is linked with poorer patient outcomes, lengthened hospital stays and increased chance of patient death.

ANA’s Solution to Staffing

ANA advocates solving the problem by requiring hospitals to set nurse staffing plans for each hospital unit based on changing conditions:

  • Patient acuity (severity of illness)
  • Patient numbers
  • Nurse skills and experience
  • Support staff
  • Technology

Click on the "via" link for the rest of the article.

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Sincerely,

Andrew Lopez, RN
Nursefriendly, Inc. A New Jersey Corporation.
38 Tattersall Drive, Mantua New Jersey 08051
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Friday, February 18, 2011

Community colleges make push for state lawmakers to allow them to offer some four-year programs | MLive.com

Registered nurse Stephanie Palmer wants to earn a bachelor’s degree in nursing, but she’d like to do it at Jackson Community College.

It’s close to her home and less expensive than a four-year college. Plus JCC offers greater scheduling flexibility for working parents like her, said Palmer, 35, of Michigan Center.

That can’t happen under current state law.

But officials from JCC and other community colleges on Friday lobbied state lawmakers to allow traditionally two-year colleges to offer a handful of four-year programs, saying it will help the state’s economy by making it easier for people to prepare for good, in-demand jobs. The House and Senate community colleges subcommittees was holding a joint session on JCC’s Summit Township campus.

The House last year passed legislation to allow community colleges to offer bachelor’s degree programs in four majors, including nursing. The legislation stalled in the Senate. It is expected to be considered again this year.

Click on the "via" link to read the rest of the article.

This would work nicely with the push for more BSN prepared nurses.

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Sunday, December 26, 2010

Jonas Center Quantifies Impact of Nursing Faculty Shortage | All Sites Nursing News

The shortage of nurse educators could affect the care of millions of patients, according to estimates by the Jonas Center for Nursing Excellence.

Each nurse educator position left unfilled could impact healthcare for 3.6 million patients, according to the report. Schools with baccalaureate nursing programs have about 900 faculty vacancies, with thousands more likely to arise in the next 15 years.

Darlene Curley, RN, MS, executive director of the Jonas Center for Nursing Excellence, and Christine Kovner, RN, PhD, FAAN, professor at New York University College of Nursing, developed a formula to measure the impact of nursing faculty vacancies on patients. They considered the average number of students taught by one faculty member and the number of patients cared for by a typical RN. They note that their estimates are conservative.

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Andrew Lopez, RN
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856-415-9617, (fax) 415-9618

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Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Nurse Recruitment and Retention: Can New Nursing Grads Find Work?

When I was speaking at a hospital, talking to recently recruited nurses, I heard their frustrations in not being able to work in the area of their choice.

Indeed, where once nursing grads could essentially get their first choices and select from several attractive job opportunities, some looking to enter our profession have had to settle for a position different from their goals.

Wise new grads will take this job, giving the best care possible as team player. When the recession ends and cut backs are eased, they can transfer into their position of choice.

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Andrew Lopez, RN
Nursefriendly, Inc. A New Jersey Corporation.
38 Tattersall Drive, Mantua New Jersey 08051
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856-415-9617, (fax) 415-9618

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Monday, December 6, 2010

Health reform will bring need for more nurses in Oklahoma | NewsOK.com

More Oklahomans could soon hear: “The nurse will see you now.”

The prescription for hospitals and doctors' offices, which will get even busier as health care reform brings millions more people to their doorsteps, may be highly trained nurses with greater authority.

Those nurses should practice to the full extent of their education and be full partners with doctors as health care reform collides with an aging population and a reduction in primary care doctors, according to the Institute of Medicine and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

“This is such a historic, monumental prescription for change,” said Marvel Williams, the dean of the nursing school at Oklahoma City University.

“I know there will be some people out there among other health care professions, particularly, who are a bit nervous about the role nurses are expected to take, based on these recommendations.”

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Learn How Nursing Leadership Skills can Empower You American Sentinel University White Papers

There's a chronic problem in the nursing profession: a sense of powerlessness. It creates job dissatisfaction, stress, and burnout. It can lead to ineffective nursing that compromises patient safety or the nurse's role as patient advocate. And it's incompatible with today's increasing emphasis on multi-disciplinary care teams, where collaboration is key.

Fortunately, there's a positive trend toward workplace practices that empower nurses. And there are ways for staff nurses to learn to step up and become facilitators of change.

Learn how you can start empowering yourself to effect change - and better patient outcomes - even if you're not in a management position. In this paper, "Powerlessness is Bad Practice: Any Nurse can be a Facilitator of Change," Catherine Garner, DrPH, MSN, MPA, RN, FAAN, Provost and Dean of Health and Nursing Sciences at American Sentinel University, outlines:

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Nurses Share Stories From The Health Care Frontlines - Health - Madison Magazine News Story - WISC Madison

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By Brennan Nardi
Madison Magazine

Wilma Rohweder

Wilma Rohweder was just seventeen years old when polio struck. Her dream was to become a nurse, but when she fell ill, her mother began to worry.

“She tried to talk me out of it,” Rohweder recalls. “I wouldn’t listen to her.”

Two years later, she packed her bags and moved to Des Moines, Iowa, where she literally earned her stripes—one for each of her three years in nursing school. At graduation, each woman—no men in the field yet—received a beret with a wide black stripe to signify her status as a registered nurse. Today one of Rohweder’s caps is on display in the UW–Madison School of Nursing.

It was the beginning of World War II, and a shortage of wartime nurses led to the creation of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. For fifteen dollars a month, the eager and precocious Rohweder signed on as a cadet. Rightly so, she is extremely proud of her honorable service to the profession—sixty-four years and counting.

Rohweder has spent the majority of her career in ophthalmology. However, when her husband of sixty-two years, Dwayne, was starting out, his jobs with the county extension office took him all over the state of Iowa, so Rohweder accepted whatever nursing positions were available. The couple moved a dozen times in the first few years of their marriage, but wherever they landed, Rohweder always found work. The hospital urology department, a school nurse, an operating room supervisor—whatever it was, she loved every minute of it.

“I never missed a day in nursing,” she says. And that includes a two-and-a-half-year stint in Brazil in the late 1960s, where her husband, who had since earned a Ph.D. in agronomy and moved the family to Madison, was sent to develop a graduate program. There she worked as a consulate nurse, helping procure safe, sterilized needles and administering gamma globulin shots to boost immunity to diseases that today are prevented with vaccines.

Her specialized skills and training in diseases and disorders of the eye made her a perfect fit for her current work as a volunteer for Dean Foundation’s BSP Free Clinic for under- and uninsured patients seeking specialty health care. She assisted the clinic in the planning and launching of its ophthalmology services, and colleagues say her help is critical on days when volunteer doctors see patients with glaucoma, macular degeneration and other eye-related disorders.

“She does the best charting ever,” says BSP office manager Kathy Williams. “We love Wilma and hope she continues to provide TLC and share her knowledge with all of us at BSP for many more years.”

Peggy Weber

It’s difficult to write about Peggy Weber’s impact on patients, survivors and their families without drawing on symbolism and cliché. But it’s just so easy—and honestly, so fitting—to describe her as “an angel from heaven,” “a pillar of faith,” “the Mother Theresa of Madison,” or, in the kind words of someone whom Peggy has supported through several family tragedies, “the pot of gold at the end of everyone’s rainbow.” When life is a struggle, or when the worst happens and it’s time to say goodbye to our loved ones, cliché is comforting—and it’s a simple, beautiful way to articulate Weber’s deeply genuine commitment to everyone she cares for.

And if a record twenty-three nominations for “Madison’s Favorite Nurse” doesn’t reflect the depth and breadth of her work, a walk through St. Mary’s Hospital, where Weber was educated and where she has spent most of her forty-one-year career, or a visit to Sunday Mass at St. Patrick’s in Cottage Grove certainly does.

Weber jokes about it but it’s true—after it began to take too long to make her way out of church every week, her husband switched from waiting patiently in the car to bringing along the Sunday paper to giving up and taking a separate vehicle. But Peggy doesn’t mind; it’s simply the nature of her work. “Nursing is such an art and science,” she says. “It’s the art of relationships,” adding, “Most nurses—we’re wired to do this.”

That ability to communicate, to connect with people during their most difficult and painful times, is a strength that she has nurtured and grown into a remarkable outreach arm for St. Mary’s, including an ongoing support program called Kids Can Cope that she founded in 1985, the Parish Nurse program started in 1997 and the cancer survivors group she facilitates once a month at St. Patrick’s. “Sometimes I walk into work and I don’t know what’s happening,” Peggy says of her job as a Parish Nurse and Parish Nurse Program coordinator. “I immediately have to relate to [patients and families] and build their trust.” It’s that trust, she says, that helps us work through the frightening experience of death and dying. “The more they can replace that fear with trust, the more calm they’ll be.”

For Peggy, that trust she builds with people extends beyond the walls of hospital and church—and for as long as God intends.

“I go to almost every wake and funeral I can because it helps me and it helps them. I don’t abandon people. They can find me,” she says, with a steely look in her eyes that tells me she means it absolutely and without condition. “They can find me.”

For all of this strength, knowledge, warmth and compassion, Peggy very humbly credits the Sisters of St. Mary, thirty years of experience in the field of psychiatry and two very special nurse mentors, Carol Viviani and Barbara Komoroske, among others. For her faith and spirituality, she thanks her German Lutheran father and Roman Catholic mother.

“I grew up with an incredible spirit in my home,” she says.

Today, Peggy’s incredible spirit is evident in her own home where she, along with her husband Jim, is blessed with four children and soon-to-be eleven grandchildren.

“So what’s next?” I ask her.

“What else?” she answers back. “When you love what you do and it’s the most favorite thing you do, why would you want to quit?”

Mary Saur

Mary Saur was a bright young college student at UW–Oshkosh with a keen interest in science. But it was the late 1960s, and her career options were limited. “At that time it was nursing or teaching,” she says.

Nursing won out in part because she had a role model in the field: her aunt, an idol and mentor. Saur eventually transferred to UW–Madison, earned her RN license, married and moved to Milwaukee. A year and a half later she made her way back to Madison, and settled in to start a family. At the time—1974—the natural childbirth movement was sweeping across the country. Preparing for their first child, Saur and her husband, Ed, decided to enroll in a Lamaze class.

“It was something for us that was truly a bonding, growth experience,” she says.

On the professional side, the class got Saur thinking about a nursing career in labor and delivery. Over the next few years she’d have two more children and teach Lamaze classes. In 1984, she returned to full-time nursing. When Madison General and Methodist hospitals merged in 1987 to become Meriter Hospital, Saur helped develop the childbirth classes and continued to teach until the late 1990s. Over the course of her career, she figures she’s taught some two thousand couples.

Saur, a staff nurse, is frequently assigned to Meriter Birthing Center’s triage unit, where labor patients are screened and evaluated. And while the one thing that’s certain about her job is uncertainty, “My hope for the day is that I’ll have a birth with somebody,” she says.

It’s in this role as support and advocate for mom and her loved ones that Saur thrives. “Communication is key to meeting one’s needs, and being at the bedside with them the nurse can often be that conduit,” she says.

“I remember one time a woman wanting to stand to have her baby. This is no big deal now, but it was out of the norm then and the doctor came in and said, ‘Mary, she needs to lie back.’ Well it was not going to happen—this woman was where she wanted to be so we did end up delivering the baby with her standing above us in the birthing bed.”

Saur feels richly rewarded by her career and is thankful for the “fantastic nurses” she works with as well as the many families who’ve given her the opportunity to share in their most intimate and special moments.

“I love to see my ‘babies’ whether they are two weeks old or in their twenties and thirties and to hear how their lives are,” says Saur. “How lucky can I get?”

Shelley Bazala

Sometimes our parents’ love of what they do for a living influences our own career paths. For Shelley Bazala, it was a more serendipitous route.

“My mom was a nurse,” says Bazala. “So I discounted it.”

She decided she was more interested in social work and pharmacy. But somewhere along the way, the light bulb turned on.

“It hit me that nursing combined both of them.”

Three kids, seven grandkids and more than thirty-five years later, Bazala has enjoyed a successful and fulfilling career in behavioral health as a nurse providing direct patient care and now as a nurse supervisor for Meriter Hospital’s alcohol and drug treatment program, NewStart.

Not only is she a skilled RN, her colleagues say she brings out the best in everyone, she’s an invaluable advocate for patients and families, and in general, “You feel better when Shelley is around.”

Bazala is equally effusive about her co-workers. “I am blessed with a wonderful, competent staff,” she says. “We help people be accepting of where they’re at, offer them hope.”

In a field where the illness has the added disadvantage of societal stigma, Bazala’s calm leadership style, particularly when a patient is in crisis, and her compassion for the person behind the addiction is a winning combination.

"Systems can be overwhelming. Access to services can be challenging,” she says. And to top it all off, “They’re being judged.”

“Lack of understanding and knowledge among health care providers themselves about substance use and addiction can be a barrier for the person in need of help,” Bazala says. “Attitudes, in both health care and society at large, compound the embarrassment/guilt/shame/anger that may be present for the person in need of help.”

Her daunting task? “We try to educate and support the health care provider as well as meet the patient’s needs and intervene in a timely manner.” In today’s world, that means treating the whole patient and acknowledging the physical as well as the environmental issues surrounding addiction.

“Seeing how someone regains their life is a true ‘high,’” she says.

Zach Southard

Zach Southard easily recalls the man whose grateful parents wrote a letter nominating him to be one of “Madison’s Favorite Nurses.” “This is about as young a patient as we’d ever see,” he says.

Southard also remembers the moment a year ago when the father of his twenty-year-old patient, who’d just returned from surgery to repair a congenital hole in his heart, had to step out of the room. Hot and lightheaded, he was overcome by the shock of seeing his own son so weak and tethered to countless tubes and machines.

“No matter how much you explain to them about what they’re going to see, it looks like mass chaos,” says Southard, a nurse clinician on the cardiac and thoracic surgery, heart and lung transplant team at UW Hospital and Clinics. “But from our standpoint it’s pretty organized.”

Southard enjoys breaking down the health of the patients and the care they’re receiving into bite-size pieces that people can digest, particularly at a frenetic time when emotions are high.

“I like the high-acuity, high-intensity stuff,” he says.

And he may come by it naturally. The UW–Madison grad’s father is a nurse on a post-anesthesia recovery unit in Appleton, and his younger brother, Sam, also a UW alum, followed in Southard’s footsteps—exactly. He works at the same hospital. On the same heart and vascular team.

Calm and competent, Southard says the job, which he landed right after graduation, comes with a steep learning curve.

“You don’t learn to be a nurse in nursing school,” he says. “Over time you learn far more than you ever could’ve imagined.”

To that end, he describes the mentoring and training on his unit as top-notch, and his colleagues as “the best part of this job.” He serves on his unit’s advisory council, which reviews cases, helps manage organization and protocol, and teases out best practices.

Best practices, for instance, like knowing that no two cases are ever alike.

“You learn very quickly that you can’t treat numbers,” says Southard. “You treat patients.”

Alyssa Hanekamp

Late last year, bacterial meningitis followed by a heart attack landed Laurie Gomoll-Koch in the hospital for six weeks. Not only did Alyssa Hanekamp provide expert medical care, she went above and beyond for her patient’s husband and two sons, including regular private updates to her youngest, who attended college four hours away.

“She is more than a nurse,” writes Gomoll-Koch in her nomination letter for “Madison’s Favorite Nurses.” “She was our lifeline.”

So it’s no surprise that this facet of nursing—compassionate care for both patient and family—is what drew Hanekamp to the field. She always wanted to be a doctor, but a passion for singing led her to a music major in college. On her mother’s advice to have a back-up plan, she enrolled in nursing courses at Blackhawk Technical College. During the course of her clinical work, she fell in love with bedside care.

“It’s the best part of my job,” she says.

Working at the St. Mary’s medical ICU unit for the last six years, Hanekamp says she’s never once regretted her decision to forego medical school—or singing—for a career in nursing.

“We work very closely with the doctors in intensive care and they allow us to use the knowledge that we have,” she says.

She also doesn’t feel like she’s missing out on family thanks to a schedule—common in her field—that allows for multiple days off at a time and an incredible support network of friends and family. Hanekamp is married with three young children and for now the lifestyle works. As it turns out, the intensive care environment suits her, too. “It’s your direct action that gets people through the good or the bad,” she says.

Inevitably, though, there will be those shifts that take their physical and emotional tolls, which is why she relishes the hour-long commute.

“Some days you just cry all the way home from work,” Hanekamp says. On both good days and bad, she is thankful for “the best co-workers you could ask for,” and for the opportunity to “change people’s lives.”

Says Hanekamp: “It’s the ones that we save, who get to walk out the door, that keep you coming back every day.”

Alyce Columbia

Alyce Columbia’s busy life and career have taken her across the state and the country, and the nursing positions she’s held in the field have been equally diverse. From independent and assisted living environments to caring for people with AIDS to her current work in intensive care, she’s pretty much seen it all.

“I like the patient population. I like to work with people,” says Columbia, a nurse care team leader for cardiac and thoracic surgery, and heart and lung transplant at UW Hospital and Clinics.

For the last seven years Columbia has worked with very sick people in “a very fast-paced place,” she says, where in any given week she and her team of sixty nurses might see multiple heart surgeries and one, two or even three sets of lung transplants. “The doctors, they’re all incredible,” she adds. “The things that happen here are phenomenal.” Columbia holds the nursing staff she leads and trains in the same high regard. “The caliber of the individuals who work there—amazing.”

The unit also equips patients with ventricular assisted devices/heart pumps while they await life-saving transplants. Columbia remembers one patient in particular, an eighteen-year-old teenager being treated for cardiomyopathy, a weakening of the heart muscle that can be fatal. “It’s the one that pulled my heartstrings,” she says. The man, young and poor, was in and out of the hospital, one scary episode after another. Eventually he was put on the VAD, waiting for an organ donation.

“It was his bridge to transplant,” says Columbia, recalling a hospitalization episode when she thought the man might die. Fortunately, his mother and younger sister were able to be there with him, but it was an evening shift, and the nights can be long and difficult when a patient is gravely ill. To ease the tension, Columbia brought in movies and popped popcorn. “We had a slumber party,” she says. Eventually, the patient received a heart transplant and went home to live his life. For Columbia, it makes her high-intensity, sixty-hour workweek worthwhile.

“When they come back after a period of time and they don’t look anything like they did when they came in, and you participated in that—that’s the reward.

Jodi Casper

Jodi Casper was just ten years old when an automobile accident sent her to the hospital for three weeks. She had a fractured femur, so her injured leg was suspended with all sorts of wires and weights. She spent six weeks inside a body cast and became way too familiar with reclining wheelchairs and walkers. Throughout the ordeal, the fifth grader had extra time on her hands to observe her surroundings—plus rack up plenty of interactions with the hospital staff.

“I came to appreciate what it meant to be a nurse,” says Casper. Afterward, she pretty much decided that was exactly what she wanted to do someday. “I never deviated from that—ever.”

Thanks to that chapter in her life, Casper also developed a strong empathy for patients and their health care experiences. When it came time to decide on a nursing specialty, she knew it would be one with an emphasis on bedside care. That, coupled with a fascination for “the miracle of birth,” as she puts it, eventually led her to labor and delivery.

She’s been a St. Mary’s Family Birth Center nurse since 2004, and her varied duties on a twelve-hour shift include labor and delivery support, postpartum and nursery care, and rotations through triage, which is equipped to handle a significant level of high-risk care.

“Our senses fluctuate like an ER,” Casper says. And as in an emergency room, no day is typical. “We really are on our toes.”

Casper’s smile widens when she talks about the women and families she’s cared for—and is quick to point out that each birth involves not one patient but two—both mother and baby (or babies, as is sometimes the case).

“I’ve always loved newborns,” she says. “To visualize that baby inside and the journey it went through—it’s just so surreal.”

Casper says the changes in technology—like 3-D ultrasounds and the hospital’s electronic records system—learning curves aside—have been mostly positive.

“I feel like I can focus more on the patient,” she says.

And, she says, her department benefits greatly from a diverse nursing staff that includes a wide range of ages and experience.

“We learn from older nurses the techniques to support the patient; younger nurses help with technology,” she says. “I love the people I work with.”

Patricia Peltier

Patricia Peltier is a people person. She thrives on the positive, meaningful connections she makes with others. For the patients and residents she cares for as an LPN at Capitol Lakes Retirement Community, her brand of care is often a blessing.

There’s the elderly man, an artist in his eighties, who lost his voice to cancer. His paintings hang on the walls around him, but before Peltier visits, he moves them around—a welcoming change of scenery for them both. Excited about the upcoming football season, the man was delighted when “Nurse Patti,” as she’s known to all, brought him a Packers hat and jersey.

“The little things,” Peltier says. “That’s what I like.”

But Peltier is being modest. In her twenty-three years in nursing, she’s seen and done a lot, and now she hopes to pursue an RN license, and perhaps teach someday, because she still has more to give. And as the saying goes, you get what you give. Fifteen years ago, Peltier was driving to work when she saw a car accident and arrived first on the scene. The car was totaled and the victim had suffered a severe head injury. She knew he didn’t have much time left, but she did everything she could to stabilize him while waiting for the paramedics. The man died at the hospital, but not before he was able to fulfill his final wish to donate his organs. The Red Cross later honored Peltier with a Good Samaritan Award, which she appreciates, but she insists she was only doing her job.

“I just did what I would want somebody to do for me in this situation,” she says.

For the last year and a half at Capitol Lakes, Peltier has been working with patients and residents in independent and assisted living environments, and in short- and long-term rehabilitation. In that role, she cares for people whose illnesses are progressing, as well as those on the road to recovery. No matter what situation she finds herself dealing with from day to day, Peltier loves providing the comfort and care each person needs and deserves. And she always does it with a dose of the very best medicine.

“Make them laugh,” she says. “Humor is the best thing.”

How We Did It

Last summer, Madison Magazine and WISC-TV3 asked the community to help us find and recognize practicing nurses in all areas of health care who go above and beyond the call of duty. The response was immediate and overwhelming: more than 150 e-mails, letters and phone calls from employers, peers, patients, friends and family who felt compelled to share their stories and experiences with the nursing community.

Editor Brennan Nardi and news anchor Charlotte Deleste pored over every nomination, then chose nine winners based on a variety of editorial critera, including nursing specialty (we were looking for a nice mixture of health care environments in which our nurses practiced), professional experience (from those just starting out in the field to accomplished veterans) and quality of the nominations (a compelling story or anecdote always helps).

To be chosen for this honor, winners must have been trained in a formal nursing program and all were vetted by the state Department of Regulation & Licensing.

Copyright 2010 by Madison Magazine. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

--

Any questions, please drop me a line.

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Sincerely,

Andrew Lopez, RN
Nursefriendly, Inc. A New Jersey Corporation.
38 Tattersall Drive, Mantua New Jersey 08051
http://www.nursefriendly.com info@nursefriendly.com ICQ #6116137
856-415-9617, (fax) 415-9618

150,000 + Nurse-Reviewed & Approved Nursing Links

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http://www.nursingexperts.com

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Our Newest Additions New Stuff, A to Z Nursing Links, Alphabetical Nursing

Our Newest Additions New Stuff, A to Z Nursing Links, Alphabetical Nursing:"Our Newest Additions New Stuff, It is our intent for this Alphabetical, A to Z index to be a comprehensive listing of Nursing-related resources on the Internet. It is indexed by Google and fully searchable. We'd ask that if you don't find what you are looking for, kindly contact us! If you are looking for a certain topic, it's likely you are not the only one. We will be adding to this index daily, be sure check back frequently."
http://www.nursinga2z.com/our.newest.additions.new.stuff.htm



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Uniforms, Scrubs, Nursing
Unions (Nursing), Organized Labor, Healthcare Unions
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Work At Home Opportunities
Sincerely,

Andrew Lopez, RN
Nursefriendly, Inc. A New Jersey Corporation.
38 Tattersall Drive, Mantua New Jersey 08051
http://www.nursefriendly.com info@nursefriendly.com ICQ #6116137, Facebook/Skype/Twitter-nursefriendly
856-415-9617, (fax) 415-9618

150,000 + Nurse-Reviewed & Approved Nursing Links

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Nurse Practitioners, Advanced Practice Nursing

Nurse Practitioners, Advanced Practice Nursing

The Shortcut URL To This Section Is: http://www.nursefriendly.com/np/

New!

NursePractitionerBusinessOwner.com, Barbara Phillips, NP:"The NPBO is a private, members-only, resource website that gives you direct, searchable access to a wealth of information about exploring, starting, or growing your own practice or business. As a member, you'll receive 365 days of uninterrupted, 24-hour access to the Member-Only Area of our site."
NP Choice, LLC
1018 E. Wishkah, #216
Aberdeen, WA 98520
PHONE: 1-800-560-6473
http://www.nursepractitionerbusinessowner.com

Follow on: http://www.facebook.com/NursePractitionerBusiness
http://www.linkedin.com/in/barbaracphillipsnp http://npbusiness.org/
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Category: Career Alternatives For Nurses
Coaching (Personal and Professional)
Franchise Opportunities For Nurses
Nurse Practitioner NP Owned Businesses

Nurse Practitioners
Washington State, Nursing Entrepreneurs
Washington State Nurses

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Tribute to a Nurse Practitioner, by E.V. Stankowski RN:"High above the earth and moon
Where Angels dwell on high
There is a place in heaven's home,
A place called Rainbow Sky."

http://www.inspirationalnursing.com/np

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Patricia Crofts,RN, CPNP, Missouri Pediatric Nurse Practitioner
http://www.nursefriendly.com/croft/

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Maureen Hreha, RN, MSN, PNP, MA, Professor Nightengale Online:"Professor Nightengale Online is a collection of web-based streaming videos and interactive practice questions that have proven to be effective in reducing student anxiety and building test-taking confidence and skill."
Daniel Peters and Maureen Hreha, RN, MSN, PNP, MA
Daniel Peters Productions LLC
PO Box 691
Somerville NJ 08876
908-231-0676, email: info@professornightengale.com
http://www.professornightengale.com

Category: NCLEX® Examination Review Courses, http://www.nursefriendly.com/nclex/
New Jersey Nurse Entrepreneurs, http://www.nursingentrepreneurs.com/nj/
New Jersey Nurses, http://www.4nursing.com/nj/
Nursing Education, Educational, http://www.nursingentrepreneurs.com/education/
Standardized Test Preparation, http://www.nursefriendly.com/testing/

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Margie Latrella, RN, MSN, FNP-BC, Heartstrong, LLC, New Jersey Nurse Entrepreneurs:"Heartstrong is an educational and consulting business specializing in cardiovascular disease and prevention. Our services include community and professional seminars, and educational products/publications. Seminar topics include: nutrition, weight loss, exercise/fitness, stress relief, risk factors, diagnosis and management of heart disease/stroke/heart failure in women, alternative therapy in the treatment and prevention of heart disease. We can discuss special requests on other health and wellness topics and will customize programs for individual groups. We Want to Help People Live a Longer Healthier Life!"
Heartstrong, LLC
6-05 Saddle River Road #353
Fair Lawn, NJ 07410
Phone number: 888-343-2780 (extension 101)

E-mail Address: Margie@heart-strong.com

Homepage Address: www.heart-strong.com

http://www.nursingentrepreneurs.com/latrella

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Donna Maheady, Ed.D., ARNP, ExceptionalNurse.com:"A resource network for nurses and nursing students with disabilities. We provide links to disability related organizations, mentors, employment opportunities, financial aid, continuing education, books, equipment, legal issues, research, related articles as well as support and career counseling.
13019 Coastal Circle
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida 33410
Phone number: (561) 627-9872
http://www.nursingentrepreneurs.com/exceptional

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Constance A. Morrison MS, CNS, APRN, BC, PMH - NP, JD:"Attorney Constance A. Morrison is a health care consultant and trial lawyer. Her areas of law are personal injury, which includes medical and nursing malpractice; mental health litigation; and, defense of nurses in disciplinary hearings before the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Nursing. Combined with her Doctorate in Law, her Master's Degree in Forensic Nursing, She received her Post Master's Certificate in teaching Nursing Education and received her Advanced Post Master's Degree as a Nurse Practitioner, Psychiatry. Dr. Morrison is also a Nursing Educator."
E-Mail: camorrison@camorrison.com ~ or ~ Phone: 603.536.5016
http://www.camorrison.com/

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Nancy Nelson, MSN, FNP, New York Nurses, Pediatric

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Janice, Schroeder, BSN MSN CFNP, Family Nurse Practitioner, Wisconsin (WI) Nurses:
http://www.nursefriendly.com/schroeder

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Carolyn Strimike RN, MSN, CCRN, APNPC, APN-C, Heartstrong, LLC:"Heartstrong is an educational and consulting business specializing in cardiovascular disease and prevention. Our services include community and professional seminars, and educational products/publications. Seminar topics include: nutrition, weight loss, exercise/fitness, stress relief, risk factors, diagnosis and management of heart disease/stroke/heart failure in women, alternative therapy in the treatment and prevention of heart disease. We can discuss special requests on other health and wellness topics and will customize programs for individual groups. We Want to Help People Live a Longer Healthier Life!"
Heartstrong, LLC
6-05 Saddle River Rd #353
Fair Lawn, NJ 07410
Toll Free: 1-888-3HEART0 (Main)
1-888-343-2780 (Fax)
E-mail: info@heart-strong.com
http://www.heart-strong.com

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Nurses: On Our Own, by Karon White Gibson, Joysmith Catterson, Patricia Skalka, Joy S. Catterson:"Registered Nurses Karon White Gibson and Joy Smith Catterson started one of the nation's first Independent Nurse Practitioner offices in Chicago. The young, idealistic nurses expected to heal bumps and bruises, and ended up dealing with all that ails the human body and soul. The daring move was more controversial than they expected and impacted their lives in many ways. Their courageous, updated story details their adventures running and expanding their entreprenurial opportunities as Registered Professional Nurses."
AmericaNurse
P.O. Box 7717 Romeoville, IL 60446
kgrntvhealth@mymailstation.com, 815-773-4497
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0595143628/nursefriendly-20/

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What is a Nurse Practitioner?:"A nurse practitioner (NP) is a registered nurse with advanced academic and clinical experience, which enables him or her to diagnose and manage most common and many chronic illnesses, either independently or as part of a health care team. A nurse practitioner provides some care previously offered only by physicians and in most states has the ability to prescribe medications. Working in collaboration with a physician, a nurse practitioner provides high-quality, cost-effective and individualized care for the lifespan of patient’s special needs."
American College of Nurse Practitioners
1111 19th Street, NW Suite 404
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-659-2190 * Fax: 202-659-2191
or email acnp@acnpweb.org
http://www.acnpweb.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=3479

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Groman Consulting Corporation:"GromanConsulting offers a full spectrum of advisory services for the medical-legal community. Our premier group of medical professionals provides unparalleled expert review and meticulous analytical support critical to building a strong scientific case. Our prime goal is to work collaboratively with our clients in a personalized manner to facilitate mutual understanding of the key issues. We are committed to providing sound, evidence-based scientific advice."
Groman Consulting Corporation
311 North Robertson Boulevard Suite 694 Beverly Hills, California 90212
Telephone (310) 339-9338 Email: Info@gromanconsulting.com
http://www.gromanconsulting.com/

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Elizabeth A. Paton, RN, MSN, CS, NP- C:"During my tenure as a Clinical Nurse Educator, I aided in the development of a lecture series for nurses who are involved in the care of pediatric patients. The programs that I assisted with were Pediatric Fundamentals, Pediatric Dermatology, Pediatric Emergencies, and Documentation. Each topic was covered in an eight-hour day."
Contact: beth@bethpaton.com
http://www.bethpaton.com/

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Greg Stocks CRNA REMT-P ARNP, Stocks & Associates Inc.:"Medical-Legal Consulting, Providing high quality, cost effective Legal Nurse Consulting Services based on 17 years clinical experience including Anesthesiology. Specializing in medical malpractice, product liability, toxic torts, workmans comp and much more. Expert in trauma and pre-hospital care. Academic background along with work in the private sector. Providing Nationwide Services."
Greg Stocks CRNA REMT-P ARNP
Atlanta, Ga.
E-mail GregSto@AOL.com
http://www.lawmedconsult.com/

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Wendy L. Wright, MS, ANP-BC, FNP-BC, FAANP Certified ANP, FNP, Fitzgerald Health Education Associates, Inc.:"Wendy L. Wright is a Senior Lecturer with Fitzgerald Health Education Associates, Inc., a national provider of NP Certification Preparation and ongoing continuing education for healthcare providers. She presents the Fitzgerald NP Certification Exam Review and Advanced Practice Update Course for Adult and Family. Ms. Wright is certified as both a Family and Adult Nurse Practitioner and is the owner of a family practice located in Amherst, NH. She is the recipient of Excellence in Research and Excellence in Clinical Practice awards, both from Simmons College, Boston, MA. She was chosen by the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners to receive the New Hampshire Excellence in Practice award and by her peers as the NH Nurse Practitioner of the Year. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners and a member of the New Hampshire Nurse Practitioner Association and Sigma Theta Tau."
Fitzgerald Health Education Associates, Inc.
85 Flagship Drive North Andover, MA 01845-6154
Voice: 800.927.5380 Fax: 978.794.2455 E-mail: home@fhea.com
http://fhea.com/faculty/w_wright.shtml

Categories:

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American Academy of Nurse Practitioners:"Formed in 1985, the Academy, as the only full service organization for nurse practitioners of all specialties, has steadily expanded services to meet its mission to: * Serve as a resource for nurse practitioners, their patients and other health care consumers * Promote excellence in practice, education and research * Provide legislative leadership * Advance health policy * Establish health care standards * Advocate for access to quality, cost effective health care"
National Administrative Office Association Services
P.O. Box 12846 Austin, Tx 78711
Phone: 512-442-4262 Fax: 512-442-6469 E-mail: admin@aanp.org
http://www.aanp.org/

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American College of Nurse Practitioners (ACNP):"Founded in 1993, the American College of Nurse Practitioners (ACNP) is a national non-profit membership organization headquartered in Washington, DC. The ACNP is focused on advocacy and keeping NPs current on legislative, regulatory and clinical practice issues that effect NPs in the rapidly changing health care arena. The College is the only membership directed organization for NPs - meaning the ACNP sets its annual agenda and policies based on the consensus of its members. Also, the ACNP offers the opportunity to join as individuals, and as state and national organization affiliates."
American College of Nurse Practitioners
1111 19th Street, NW Suite 404
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-659-2190 * Fax: 202-659-2191
or email acnp@acnpweb.org
http://www.acnpweb.org

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NP Central:"NP Central is committed to helping nurse practitioners achieve their potential. We provide a myriad of services. Looking for nurse practitioner jobs? The job board contains nurse practitioner jobs across the country."
http://www.nurse.net/index.shtml

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Virginia Council of Nurse Practitioners (VCNP):"The Virginia Council of Nurse Practitioners (VCNP), the statewide professional organization for all nurse practitioners (NPs) licensed in Virginia, and is a council of of the Virginia Nurses Association (VNA) Commission on Professional Practice. The organization of NPs in Virginia began a quarter century ago in the regional or local areas of the state. With the growth in the number of NPs throughout the state, Virginia NPs initially organized to become a Professional Practice Group of the VNA. In 1984, the VCNP became a council of the VNA, and as such has continued to grow in membership and in the services provided to its members. Membership now is over 1,300. Although there are other specialty NP groups, the VCNP offers an advantage for all NPs in Virginia because of its association with the VNA and the American Nurses Association (ANA) with their broad based membership and the resources available through these relationships.
Virginia Council of Nurse Practitioners
PO Box 11086
Richmond, VA 23230
804-565-6360
804-282-0090 fax
General and VCNP Membership Information: vcnp@societyhq.com
http://www.vcnp.net/

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Nursing Entrepreneurs, Nurse Practitioner Owned Businesses:

Advanced Practice Education Associates:"Advanced Practice Education Associates is an educational organization committed to helping nurse practitioners and nurse practitioner students advance professionally and educationally through review courses, continuing education programs, books, and other educational offerings."
APEA
103 Darwin Circle Lafayette, LA 70508
(800) 899-4502 (337) 981-0509 - Fax
Email: questions@apea.com
http://www.apea.com

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Nurse Practitioner as Entrepreneur, By Carolyn Zaumeyer:"Carolyn Zaumeyer, MSN, ARNP is a graduate of Florida International University and President and Owner of Women's Health Watch, Inc. Over seven years ago Carolyn ventured into independent nursing practice. When planning her new practice, she did a literature review and was unable to locate any resource material to guide the nurse practitioner in developing her practice. While she was putting together her new venture, she was also keeping detailed notes, hoping that eventually she would be able to help other nurse practitioners interested in independent practice. In 1995 she published the book, "The Nurse Practitioner as Entrepreneur: How to Establish and Operate an Independent Practice - a reference and resource manual." This book has enjoyed national sales over the years, and many universities and colleges have utilized it as a text. It is now available for sale at our Website, "The Nurse Practitioner as Entrepreneur". It continues to guide and instruct nurse practitioners on how to establish, organize, and operate an independent nursing practice. Email Carolyn."
Women's Health Watch, Inc.
1735 Union Valley Road W. Milford , NJ 07480
973 728-1323, 1-800-776-1519, whwcz@WORLDNET.ATT.NET
http://www.independentnp.com/

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Fitzgerald Health Education Associates, Inc.:"Fitzgerald Health Education Associates, Inc. is an NP-owned company dedicated to helping nurse practitioners, advanced practice and ambulatory care nurses achieve certification and to maintain professional competence by providing live continuing education seminars, web and computer based learning courses, audio/video learning modules and books."
Fitzgerald Health Education Associates, Inc.
85 Flagship Drive North Andover, MA 01845-6154
Voice: 800.927.5380 Fax: 978.794.2455 E-mail: home@fhea.com
http://www.fhea.com/

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Paradise Medical-Legal Consulting:"Only 2 in every 100 working registered nurses are nurse practitioners. You can enter the courtroom with a masters prepared family nurse practitioner with over 25 years of experience and a certificate in forensic nursing on your team! Health care services and provider practices are complex. As a result, weaknesses are difficult to identify. Paradise Medical-Legal Consulting provides consulting services to prosecuting and defense attorneys who are preparing medical/health care cases. Prepare strong cases, and don't be caught off guard."
Paradise Medical-Legal Consulting
PO Box 26079
Honolulu, HI 96825
Phone: 808-284-1113
Toll Free: 888-585-8155
Fax: 808-396-6844
Email: paradisemlc@verizon.net
http://www.ParadiseMLC.com

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Charter pilot learns networking herself crucial to making her company take off:"Rosevelt, a 55-year-old semi-retired nurse practitioner, still works part time, taking throat cultures and peering into ears for Kaiser Permanente when she isn't flying. The regular paycheck has made her entrepreneurial foray possible, she said, adding that she doesn't anticipate earning enough income from her service to quit her other job for several more years. Her long-term goal is to have her charter service support her."
Rose Air
503-675-ROSE (7673) Page: 503-904-8665 jr@roseair.com
http://www.roseair.com/Article.htm

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Acute Care Nurse Practitioner Program, Master of Science Program:"The ACNP is a Nurse Practitioner who is Master's prepared and focuses on the care of acutely ill patients with multiple complex problems. The ACNP has extensive experience and expertise in assessing and managing acutely ill patients that represent a variety of specialty populations, including critical care, emergency/trauma, cardiovascular, internal medicine, neurology and surgery."
School of Nursing, University of California San Francisco
School of Nursing Office of Student Affairs
2 Koret Way (Kirkham) #N319X San Francisco, CA 94143-0602
Tel: 415/476-1435 Fax: 415/476-9707
http://nurseweb.ucsf.edu/www/acnpweb2.htm

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Defining Nurse Practitioner Scope Of Practice:"Nurse Practitioners have demonstrated the ability to provide care to many underserved groups, such as children, women, migrant workers, the homeless, and the elderly in nontraditional settings, such as schools, work sites, and health departments. Although multiple studies have documented the high quality of care and cost-effectiveness of APNs, these nurses remain an under-utilized resource. 2 Schools of Nursing are investing significant resources for preparation of NPs and NPs are graduating in record numbers. Globally, there are increasing opportunities for nurses with advanced practice skills. It becomes imperative to resolve the scope of practice issues for NPs to gain the needed public support to expand their role to meet much needed primary care services. 3 Yet restrictive practice environments continue to limit their efficient use both nationally and internationally."
http://www.ispub.com/ostia/index.php?xmlFilePath=journals/ijanp/vol1n2/scope.xml
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What is a Nurse Practitioner?
http://www.acnpweb.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=3479

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Yahoo: Home: Health: Nursing: Nurse Practitioner:
http://dir.yahoo.com/health/nursing/nurse_practitioner/index.html

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