In Nursing, ‘Joy’ and ‘Work’ Are Not Mutually Exclusive

No shortage of workplace pressures.

Photo by Mark Thomas/Science Photo Library.

In virtually any health care setting today, nurses are under pressure to increase efficiencies, improve quality, and cut costs. The nonstop pressure to always do better comes in the midst of staff shortages, repeated changes in clinical protocols, struggles with EHRs that are incompatible with our workflow, and even concerns for our own physical safety. It’s no surprise that nursing turnover rates are increasing.

With all of this raining down on our heads, is it really possible to experience joy at work?

In “Finding Joy in the Workplace” in this month’s issue (free until May 7), Rose Sherman and Cynthia Blum tell us that it is. And, they argue, the work experience of nurses influences the quality of their interactions with patients:

If clinicians don’t feel hope, confidence, and psychological safety in their work, they can’t in turn offer these to their patients.

An evidence-based framework for improving joy.

The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) is known to most of us as an organization that focuses on patient safety issues like CLABSIs, surgical site infections, falls, and medication errors. But increasingly concerned about clinician burnout (which is, after all, a patient safety […]

2019-04-24T09:26:18-04:00April 24th, 2019|career, Nursing, wellness|0 Comments

Nurses Recognizing the Importance of Earth Day

Happy Earth Day!

In the midst of this climate crisis it is important to take some moments to celebrate the earth. I like to do so by hiking in the Camden Hills on the coast of Maine. Over the last year, many cities and states have taken the lead in addressing climate change. I know this firsthand, as I serve as mayor of a small city in Maine. In the last year, our city has installed free public electric vehicle chargers, turned on our third solar array and are now powering almost 90% of our municipal electricity with solar, and created a city climate change committee to study the effects of climate on our community.

The most pressing public health challenge of this century.

As nurses we intimately know the communities that we serve and are aware of the potential physical and mental health effects of environmental factors. As the most trusted health profession, our voice is important in communication related to health and climate change.

As the nation moves towards a transition to renewable energy, nurses can join the conversation to ensure that all people are supported and included. Nurses know the importance of considering health in policy making. This includes ensuring that the communities who have been historically left out of environmental policy […]

2019-04-22T08:22:51-04:00April 22nd, 2019|Nursing|0 Comments

Revisiting Evidence-Based Practice, and ‘Making Change Stick’

Do you ever wonder why nurses engage in practices that aren’t supported by evidence, while not implementing practices substantiated by a lot of evidence? In the past, nurses changed hospitalized patients’ IV dressings daily, even though no solid evidence supported this practice. When clinical trials finally explored how often to change IV dressings, results indicated that daily changes led to higher rates of phlebitis than did less frequent changes.

That’s the beginning of the first article in our first “step by step” series, Evidence-Based Practice, Step by Step, launched in November 2009. It won the Nursing Print Media Award for Nursing Excellence from Sigma Theta Tau International; the 12 articles in the series continue to be among the most highly viewed of any AJN articles online.

Nurses know about EBP, but changing practice is another thing.

The continued popularity of the articles made us wonder if the tenets of EBP were still not adequately known by nurses. So we asked the experts, and the result is our new series, EBP 2.0: Implementing and Sustaining Change.

Sharon Tucker, PhD, RN, FAAN, and Lynn Gallagher-Ford, PhD, RN, NE-BC, DPFNAP, FAAN, both  at the Helene Fuld Health Trust National Institute for Evidence-Based Practice in Nursing and Healthcare at the Ohio State University College […]

The ECRI Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns of 2019

A list grounded in data and expert opinion.

Atlantic Training/Wikimedia Commons

Each year, ECRI Institute creates a list of top 10 patient safety concerns in order “to support organizations in their efforts to proactively identify and respond to threats to patient safety.”

The list isn’t generated out of thin air. The ECRI Institute relies both on data regarding events and concerns and on expert judgment. Since 2009, ECRI and partner patient safety organizations “have received more than 2.8 million event reports.”

2019 Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns

  1. Diagnostic Stewardship and Test Result Management Using EHRs
  2. Antimicrobial Stewardship in Physician Practices and Aging Services
  3. Burnout and Its Impact on Patient Safety
  4. Patient Safety Concerns Involving Mobile Health
  5. Reducing Discomfort with Behavioral Health
  6. Detecting Changes in a Patient’s Condition
  7. Developing and Maintaining Skills
  8. Early Recognition of Sepsis across the Continuum
  9. Infections from Peripherally Inserted IV Lines
  10. Standardizing Safety Efforts across Large Health System

[…]

Are Your PCA Pumps Accurate, and Working?

Device malfunction happens.

After orthopedic surgery several years ago, I awoke in the PACU to find nurses working frantically on one side of my stretcher. Simultaneously, I realized that my leg hurt. A lot. And with another moment’s awareness—awake enough now for my nurse’s brain to begin to kick in—I understood that all of the activity concerned my PCA pump.

neeta lind/flickr creative commons

One of the nurses noticed that I was stirring. “Your pump has malfunctioned. We can’t get the replacement to work. A third pump is on the way. I’m so sorry!”

The scramble for a replacement, and then another, probably lasted less than five minutes, but it was a pretty wild ride. My deep breathing in an attempt to control the pain gave me something to focus on, but it was a pretty weak effort up against bone pain in the immediate post-op period. I’m grateful that my nurses—there were at least three involved at that point—regarded the pump failure as an emergency.

But operator errors are more common.

Needless to say, then, I was particularly interested in a new study that appears in this month’s AJN. In “Errors in Postoperative Administration of Intravenous Patient-Controlled Analgesia: A Retrospective Study,” Yoonyoung Lee and colleagues […]

Go to Top