Military Environmental Exposures: Recommended Reading in AJN’s November Issue

The November issue of AJN is now live.

What should nurses know about caring for people who have been exposed to potentially harmful agents—such as air pollutants, chemicals, radiation, warfare agents, and materials containing asbestos and lead—during military service? Read “Military Environmental Exposures” to find out.

Our November CE article, “Recognizing Transfusion-Associated Circulatory Overload,” reviews the most current definitions of this adverse transfusion reaction and outlines its characteristics and management.

“What Health Care Staff Who Experienced Assisted Patient Falls Can Teach Us: Implications for Fall and Fall Injury Risk,” presents qualitative findings from a QI project aimed at improving guidance for staff on the risks of assisting falling patients.

“Nursing Research, Step by Step: Sample Size Planning in Quantitative Nursing Research,” one in a series on clinical research by nurses, describes how to determine an appropriate sample size for a quantitative research project, and introduces the concepts of error, power, and effect size.

In “Optimizing Blood Culture Collection Volumes,” the authors discuss a QI project they conducted to understand the causes of underfilled and overfilled blood cultures obtained by nurses and PCTs and to reduce their incidence.

See also […]

2023-10-26T11:59:45-04:00October 26th, 2023|Nursing|0 Comments

PTSD and Falls: For the Elderly, a Lost Sense of Safety and Control

Jack lowers his head and presses his temples with his thumbs. He whispers, “Am I going crazy?”

In the weeks after his fall and trip to the emergency department, something has gone painfully awry. He’s been having episodes of anxiety when transferring from bed to chair as well as difficulty sleeping. His once unflappable optimism has been blunted by intrusive memories and ruminations about the fall and a sense of foreboding about the future.

Psychological Aftereffects of a Fall

Though he sustained no serious injury and had been quickly returned to the assisted living facility where he lives, the fall has left him with symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Most health care professionals are unaware that falls in the elderly can cause posttraumatic stress symptomatology, acute stress disorder, even PTSD. Indeed, in some settings falls occur frequently enough to insulate nurses and other medical staff from the awareness of how terrifying such an event can be or how it can undermine one’s sense of safety and control, particularly when it results in injury and/or invasive medical treatment.

Although Jack was under hospice care at the time of his fall, the facility sent him to the hospital because of its policy on ruling out head injury. Most hospices and facilities have protocols governing their response to falls. These typically […]

2017-07-19T07:34:30-04:00July 19th, 2017|Nursing|2 Comments

AJN in November: Skin Tears, Veteran Women’s Mental Health, Supporting Family Caregivers, More

The November issue of AJN is now live. Here are some articles we’d like to bring to your attention.

ajn1116-cover-onlineCE Feature: Preventing, Assessing, and Managing Skin Tears: A Clinical Review

Although skin tears are common, particularly among older adults and neonates, they are often inadequately documented and poorly managed, resulting in complications, extended hospital stays, and negative patient outcomes. In this article, the first in a series on wound care in collaboration with the World Council of Enterostomal Therapists, the authors describe the complications that developed in an elderly patient whose skin tear was improperly dressed and discuss best practices for preventing, assessing, documenting, and managing skin tears.

CE Feature: “Veteran Women: Mental Health–Related Consequences of Military Service

The last two decades have seen increasing numbers of women entering all branches of the U.S. armed forces. Many are exposed to traumatic events that place them at higher risk for mental health conditions. It’s essential for all nurses to be knowledgeable about the mental health issues commonly seen in this population. The author of this article reviews research confirming that both active-duty and veteran women are at increased risk for postdeployment mental health problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder, military sexual trauma, and suicide—and also addresses the nursing practice […]

2016-11-21T13:00:52-05:00October 28th, 2016|Nursing|0 Comments

As the VA Regroups and Recruits, The Words of Nurses Who Served

By Amanda Anderson, a critical care nurse and graduate student in New York City who is currently doing a graduate placement at AJN two days a week. The AJN articles linked to in this post will be free until the end of December.

Vietnam Women's Memorial, courtesy of Kay Schwebke Vietnam Women’s Memorial, courtesy of Kay Schwebke

A scandal earlier this year about suppressed data related to long wait times for appointments tainted the credibility of the Department of Veterans Affairs. On this Veterans Day week, the new secretary of Veterans Affairs has been using incentives and promises of culture change to promote new hiring initiatives for physicians and nurses. The focus as always should be on the removal of the barriers many veterans face in obtaining timely, high quality care. Naturally, a number of these veterans are nurses themselves.

To commemorate those who have bravely cared for our country, and who deserve the best of care in return, we’ve compiled a few quotations from nurse veterans who’ve written for or been quoted in AJN about their experiences in successive conflicts through the decades. Thank you for all your service, and for what you carry daily—as nurses, veterans, and patients.

World War II
“I remember walking through cities leveled by bombs, looking at the hollow eyes and haunted faces of a devastated […]

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