AJN Off the Charts: Eight Enduring Blog Posts from 2020

In a 2020 largely defined since early March in the health care field by the all-consuming COVID-19 pandemic, we published many powerful and timely posts on this blog.

Some of them were very much of the moment as writers tried to sort through the unknowns and knowns about this unfamiliar virus, address the crisis faced by nurses thrown up against it with inadequate evidence or material support, and raise their voices in favor of sane policies to bring some order out of seeming chaos and mixed messaging.

The most striking and wrenching of these may have been the first one below, a powerful post from last April by a young ICU nurse working under frightening conditions during the first bewildering surge of the virus. Reading it may remind us of just how disorienting the early days and months of this pandemic were for everyone, especially ED and ICU nurses.

Other authors share historical contexts that help us understand our current situation or timeless wisdom that nurses can apply now to staying inwardly whole and sane during the pandemic and later when the going gets tough in other ways.

There are many many other posts that could have gone on this list. If any of these resonate for you, we hope you’ll share them. If you’re not already familiar with this blog and like what you read, we hope you’ll consider subscribing (see the right-hand sidebar) to receive each new post as an email in your inbox. We publish two to three times a week.

 

A Few Notable Nurse Voices of 2018

A wealth of nursing voices.

I’m always amazed at the number of powerful, wise, courageous, funny nurse voices we have a chance to publish on this blog. Looking back over the past year, here are the links to a few posts by working nurses that stood out as worth another look.

Honoring the Moral Concerns of Caregivers Afraid of Giving Morphine

“‘I told her I’d take care of her,’ he whispers. ‘She took care of me. Now it’s my turn. I made her a promise. I don’t want to do the wrong thing.’”

A Day in the Emergency Room for a Nurse Who Loves Her Job

“I put my shoes on in the car like always. The shoes never go inside, as they bear remnants of the day before. I walk in to meet my tribe. We laugh off the previous day’s challenges as we start over.”

Comforting Our Patients: The Importance of Well-Chosen Words

“There’s seldom an opportunity to edit or revise on the floor of a nursing unit. Words cannot be unsaid.”

The School Nurse

“They march into my heart like little soldiers. There are lads and lassies, rich and poor, sporting bling and brawn.”

Reexamining Resilience

“I find that I have been so transformed by […]

Nursing Voices: The 10 Most-Read AJN Blog Posts of 2016

flickr creative commons/by you me

As the editor of this blog, I’m often amazed by the originality, honesty, and quality of the writing that comes to us from people who are, in many cases, not writers by trade. AJN Off the Charts publishes articles about professional issues, health policy and research, and clinical topics, as well as many nurse and patient stories. Here are ten popular posts from 2016 that you might have missed. Some of the authors of the posts listed here are regular contributors, some are AJN editors, some are first-time contributors; some are established scholars, some are new to the nursing profession.

If you like these posts, please consider subscribing to the blog (see the right sidebar) to receive new updates by email. It takes just a second, and all content at this blog is free.

The 10 most-read posts we published in 2016.*

What a Nurse Really Wants
“I just want some support. I just want to take care of my patients, and maybe get a lunch break on any given day. I just want to be heard.”

CDC Opioid-Prescribing Guideline for Chronic Pain: Concerns and Contexts
“These new guidelines cast a very wide net. Many patients with chronic pain will find themselves facing new […]

When Your Child Has a Scary Chronic Illness

By Jacob Molyneux, senior editor

It may be easier to live with a chronic illness than to have a child who has one. The June Reflections essay, “Seized,” is by a mother who eloquently evokes her struggle to accept her daughter’s epilepsy. She honestly confronts her own resistance to letting her daughter be a normal child—despite the terrifying episodes, the sense of helplessness she feels as a parent, the wish that she could always protect her daughter.

Here’s how it begins, but I hope you’ll click the link and read the entire essay.

It begins with a gurgle from deep in Daney’s throat: low, primal, guttural. In the next few seconds, her back will arch and her palms will turn up. Her 10-year-old self will twitch, then tremble, like she’s being electrocuted—and in a way, she is.


Bookmark and Share

Go to Top