How Research Starts: Choosing a Question That Passes the ‘So What’ Test

As an undergrad at the University of Michigan School of Nursing more than 40 years ago, I was among the few students who loved the required “research” course. I don’t know whether I looked forward to that class because I was an avid reader of Nancy Drew and saw research as detective work, or simply because nursing was so new to me that everything about it seemed exciting.

The main idea behind the course was that all nurses should be able to read and understand research reports. We didn’t get into the nuts and bolts of study design, complex statistics, or modeling, but we were expected to be able to analyze basic nursing research articles and to identify a study’s strengths and weaknesses.

This early experience didn’t lead me to pursue a career in research, but it left me with a respect for the research process and an interest in asking clinical questions.

Research basics explained.

Now, I have a chance to update my understanding of the field through AJN’s new series on research basics, Nursing Research, Step by Step. The first installment, “How Does Research Start?” is in the October issue of AJN. In this introduction to the subject, author Bernadette Capili makes it […]

November Issue Highlights: Family Presence During Resuscitation, Autism Spectrum Disorder, More

“I’m by no means a Pollyanna, but I believe incessant dwelling on the negatives doesn’t help any of us; we also need to examine the positives.”editor-in-chief Shawn Kennedy in her editorial “Finding Reasons to Be Thankful

The November issue of AJN is now live. Here are some highlights.

Original Research: Family Presence During Resuscitation: Medical–Surgical Nurses’ Perceptions, Self-Confidence, and Use of Invitations

“The sample of 51 medical–surgical nurses reported overall neutral perceptions of FPDR. Yet 63% had never invited family members to experience resuscitation.”

Autism Spectrum Disorder: The Nurse’s Role

The authors discuss epidemiology, screening, and diagnosis, as well as appropriate early actions nurses can take when this condition is suspected.

AJN Reports: The Politicization of COVID-19

How partisanship has contributed to the U.S. failure to control the spread of the disease.

[…]

2020-10-26T09:50:53-04:00October 26th, 2020|Nursing|0 Comments

Those Special Moments Nurses Sometimes Talk About

Before I became a nurse, I heard that nurses have special moments with their patients and families that they never forget, but I never truly understood what that meant.

My first neonatal code occurred about six months after I completed my orientation in the pediatric emergency department. I remember that shift being a particularly busy one. In the midst of the hustling and bustling of assessing and medicating patients and reevaluating and discharging them, I heard banging on the triage door and saw a mother and father wheeling in their baby carriage, frantically crying out that their baby Skye was blue in color.

By S.Hermann and F.Richter/Pixabay

I remember quickly removing her clothing and seeing how cyanotic she was, all while an electrocardiogram was being obtained and she was placed on the cardiac monitor. I recall hearing the doctors paging overhead for pediatric respiratory and anesthesiology to assist with resuscitation. Other team members included a CNA and a medical student who tried to relax the parents but were understandably not successful.

There were multiple unsuccessful attempts to obtain peripheral vascular access in Skye. I can still see the look of terror on Skye’s parents’ faces as the drill gun used to insert the intraosseous access whirled into baby Skye’s bone, then […]

2020-10-23T10:48:41-04:00October 23rd, 2020|family experience, Nursing, Patients, pediatrics|0 Comments

What Would It Have Helped to Know as a New Nurse?

An incomplete record of starting out as a nurse. 

When I think back on my first year as a nurse, I always say two things to myself: “I wish I had written more,” and “I wish someone had given me a more realistic how-to manual.” I try to remember patients from back then. What would I have shared, had I written about each one?

I was never not writing about something (sometimes what I wrote was published on this blog), but over time, as I moved away from bedside care and into administration, I wrote differently: policies and program plans, research protocols and systematic reviews. Although I rarely worked directly with patients anymore, their positive outcomes continued to motivate my every word.

I like to think my writing has grown with me. I’ve learned the power of the active voice; the structure required for the APA Writing Manual. 7th edition; and the deepening of understanding that comes from reading and reflection. But I will always wish for more writing—of any kind—from that first year. Even a scribble to jog my memory. This nursing birth of mine, like any birth, began my nursing life in a very specific way. I was challenged and tested, understood and got lost, and, tragically, […]

2023-01-30T10:34:04-05:00October 22nd, 2020|new nurses, Nursing, nursing career|0 Comments

Emergency in the ED: Treating Hemorrhagic Shock

Emergency nursing isn’t all drama and adrenaline.

As any ED nurse knows, most of what a nurse sees in the ED is not what would classify as real emergencies—the kind of exciting, life-threatening situations that might have actually been the reason they chose emergency nursing. That’s how it was for me, and getting hired as a new grad to work at New York City’s Bellevue Hospital, one of the country’s premier emergency services, was a dream come true.

However, I quickly learned that most of the people who came through our doors did not have exciting, life-threatening emergencies but rather the more humdrum “urgencies” of life—gastroenteritis, a sudden high fever, a small laceration that needed a few sutures, sprains, and minor fractures. Minor, comparatively speaking, but certainly not minor to the patient, and all requiring attentive care. (For a vivid and poignant inside view of emergency nursing today, see the photo essay in the September issue; the essay is based on Carolyn Jones’s new film, In Case of Emergency, to be released this week for Emergency Nurses Week.)

When the ED doors slam open.

But then there were those sudden life-or-death emergencies that raised everyone’s adrenaline levels—a patient bleeding out was one of the more dramatic scenes. They usually arrived […]

Go to Top