Sat.May 27, 2023 - Fri.Jun 02, 2023

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No – Travel Nursing Is Not a Specialty

Emerging RN Leader

By Rose O. Sherman, EdD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN When did travel nursing become a specialty? It is a question that leaders now ask themselves. Consider the story a CNO colleague shared with me: I was casually chatting with the dad of one of my son’s friends while I was picking him up last weekend. He […] The post No – Travel Nursing Is Not a Specialty appeared first on Emerging Nurse Leader.

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Use This 5-Step Approach To Market Your Small NP Practice Effectively

Nurse Practitioners in Business

What do you do to market your NP-Practice effectively? Before we answer that question, though, let’s get one thing out in the open… Too many small business owners believe they don’t need to market their business. But that’s a dangerous belief! I am here to tell you that marketing is essential, no matter the type or size of business, if you want to stay in and grow your business.

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Realities & Life

Life of a Nurse

Best-laid plans survive until they’re acted upon, and all kinds of crap can occur. Not to be overly pessimistic, but my last blog entry has been challenging to bring fully to reality due to all that stuff of life. I related my intention to improve my fitness and intrinsic strength of my core due to a nurse’s back pain; indeed, I have reached that age where it’s not maintenance.

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Where do pronouns go on a resume?

New Thing Nurse

Where do pronouns go on a resume? By. Sarah K. Wells, MSN, RN, CEN, CNL A person’s pronouns can never be assumed. It is important to ask what pronouns people use when speaking to them at work. This can be difficult during job applications. Most online job application software do not have a space for pronouns, and pronouns are important. A resume can help fix that.

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Fertility Benefits for Every Age: A HR Roadmap from Gen Z to Baby Boomers

Speaker: Lauri Armstrong, SHRM-SCP - Sr. Director, People Operations at Carrot Fertility

Today’s workforce includes multiple generations of employees all looking for something different from their benefits package. While meeting these disparate needs can be challenging, a comprehensive fertility benefit can support everyone from junior staffers learning about their fertility health to senior leadership managing menopause and low testosterone symptoms.

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'You can't be what you don't see': How DNPs of Color is amplifying diverse voices in nursing leadership

Becker's Hospital Review

When Danielle McCamey, DNP, CRNP, founded DNPs of Color in 2020, she wanted to create an organization that could move the needle in terms of diversity, equity and inclusion in healthcare — not just offer more lip service to reiterate the challenges affecting patients in marginalized communities.

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If Florence Nightingale gave a graduation speech

American Nurse

The months of May and June are a time for graduation. In the United States, commencement ceremonies are a very lucrative enterprise, from the rentals of halls and regalia, travel, gifts, hotel, astronomical fees for star keynote speakers (a quick internet search: Bill Clinton charges at least $250,000 per speaking engagement), and many other miscellaneous expenses.

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Building Hobbies Outside Your Nursing Career

Daily Nurse

Nurses are hardworking, dedicated, and caring toward their patients, and many nurses spend their free time focusing on household duties or family responsibilities. However, making time for hobbies that fuel your passions and boost relaxation is essential for creativity and recovery from overwhelming workdays. If you want to start a hobby but need help figuring out where to begin, keep reading for tips from other nurses who learned to use their hobbies as self-care.

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The Hidden Crisis: Unveiling the Mental Health Struggles of Teen Boys

Amercan Journal of Nursing

In today’s world, teenage boys are facing a crisis that often goes unnoticed: their mental health. Anxiety, depression, despair, and even suicidal thoughts plague young boys and young men alike. Shockingly, teenage boys and young men in the United States are more than twice as likely, and sometimes up to four times as likely , to die by suicide compared to their female counterparts.

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PROACT Xa: Apixaban Is Not a Safe Warfarin Substitute With Mechanical Aortic Valve

Consult QD

Use of apixaban for stroke prevention in patients with an On-X mechanical aortic valve leads to a significantly higher rate of valve thrombosis and valve-related thromboembolic events compared with use of warfarin. This finding from PROACT Xa — a multicenter prospective randomized trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of the factor Xa inhibitor in this setting — prompted early termination of the trial in September 2022.

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The Intersection of Nursing and Justice

Minority Nurse

When we reflect on nursing, we don’t always consider the concept of justice. We may think about patients, patient care, medications, interventions, and hospitals, but justice might seem like the purview of lawyers, legislators, activists, human service agencies, and non-profit organizations. However, nursing and justice are more closely related than we think; thus, linking them in our consciousness is an important consideration.

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Why Menopause Should Matter to Today’s Employers

Speaker: Julie B. Chavez - VP, Strategy & Alliances at Carrot

An estimated 1.1 billion women worldwide will have experienced menopause by 2025. Symptoms like hot flashes, fatigue, and anxiety can be incredibly disruptive — and last for years. But despite its massive impact, little is being done to support those going through menopause in the workplace. In a recent survey, 70% of respondents said they have considered changing their employment to better manage symptoms — perhaps because only 8% received significant support from their employer related to meno

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Lori Smith, Michigan’s Longest-serving Flight Nurse, Retires After 34-year Career

Daily Nurse

Lori A. Smith is like a prayer answered from above, spending the last 34 years descending in her FlightCare helicopter onto some of the most critical emergency response scenes across mid-Michigan. Smith, the longest-serving flight nurse among Michigan’s seven air medical transport programs, recently retired, ending a professional experience that launched when George H.W.

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Patient Comfort Is Trauma-Informed Care

Gebauer Company

Time has always been a precious resource in the healthcare industry. With staffing shortages and waves of COVID and other illnesses, time seems to be at even more of a premium. When pediatricians and pediatric nurses speed through appointments, patients’ fears may increase, their cooperation may be impaired, and they may even experience more discomfort.

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Avoiding Medical Jargon to Improve Communication, Reduce Ambiguity

Consult QD

Courtney Genovese, RN, recalls standing at the bedside of a man whose physician was explaining a new diagnosis. The patient, whose face grew increasingly confused and concerned as the doctor spoke, eventually turned to Genovese and plaintively asked, “You’ll explain it to me later, right?” As the manager of Care Management at Cleveland Clinic Hillcrest Hospital , Genovese is frequently asked to help with complex cases when patients and their families are struggling to understand what providers a

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Mammograms at 40? Breast Cancer Screening Guidelines Spark Fresh Debate

American Nurse

While physicians mostly applauded a government-appointed panel’s recommendation that women get routine mammography screening for breast cancer starting at age 40, down from 50, not everyone approves. Some doctors and researchers who are invested in a more individualized approach to finding troublesome tumors are skeptical, raising questions about the data and the reasoning behind the U.S.

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Maximizing Your Benefits Strategy: Reframing the Way We View Fertility

Speaker: Lizzie Wright - Director of Customer Success at Carrot Fertility

Employee expectations around benefits and workplace support have evolved in step with the growing need for fertility and family-forming care. As HR professionals, it is our job to ensure employees have a comprehensive understanding of the benefits our organizations offer and how they can utilize them. Before educating employees, we first need to understand the rising healthcare costs and the financial burden of fertility care.

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How Orbis is Using AI in Cybersight Program 

Daily Nurse

Artificial intelligence (AI) holds significant potential in nursing education to create more sophisticated and complex simulations that help nursing students develop critical thinking skills and prepare them for real-world patient care situations. However, as with any new technology, it also presents concerns and controversies about its use in nursing education.

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On The Yellow Brick Road To Nurse Business Ownership

Empowered Nurses

We nurses are passionate and dedicated to our patients with a unique set of skills and genuine desire to make a difference. Sometimes, we get a whisper, a nudge or even a hit over the head that there is just something more for us. For nurses dreaming of taking their career to new heights and becoming business owners, the journey may seem as daunting as Dorothy’s quest to find the Wizard of Oz.

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‘Alarming’ new research on vaping risks

Nursing Review

A recent report on the chemical composition of 17 e-liquid vapes has uncovered alarming nicotine levels and other toxic chemicals, such as arsenic and formaldehyde. The QLD Health and Environment Committee began the tests after mounting concerns that flavoured vapes, such as Strawberry Watermelon Ice and Summer Breeze, were enticing children. As the Australian government is taking steps to strengthen controls on smoking and vaping , nurses are to play a crucial role in educating the public about

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 The Perils of Being a Hero

The Gypsy Nurse

Over the past few years, nurses have been described as heroes for the care they provided during the COVID-19 pandemic and the care they continue to provide under difficult working conditions. While it is the highest honor to be referred to as a hero, it can be a dangerous sentiment. My nine-year-old is enthralled with comic books and the Marvel Universe, and as a result, I have also become quite familiar with heroes and superheroes.

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Leveling the Playing Field: How HR Can Equitably Improve Health Outcomes Through Fertility Benefits

Speaker: Julie B. Chavez - VP, Strategy & Alliances at Carrot

As HR and total rewards professionals, we are often seeking opportunities to foster a better sense of community and belonging amongst employees - ensuring that all employees have an equitable opportunity to receive fertility treatments is one of the many ways this can be achieved. Fertility benefits make it possible for employees to access treatments like IVF.

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ENA Names Cam Brandt 2023 Judith C. Kelleher Award Recipient

Daily Nurse

The Emergency Nurse Association (ENA) named longtime emergency nurse and educator Cam Brandt, MS, RN, CEN, CPEN, the recipient of the 2023 Judith C. Kelleher Award, the ENA’s most prestigious honor. Driven by a passion for caring for children, as well as teaching and mentoring ED nurses, Brandt’s impact could be felt in the emergency departments where she worked and across the emergency nursing community through continual contributions as an ENA leader in Texas and key volunteer with many of the

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Improving Guard Safety In The Security Industry

Celayix

Do you work in the security industry ? Do you ever worry about your guard safety while they are out working in the field? There are so many unsettling questions concerning your frontline workers, and, ironically, their safety issues often remain unspoken. Over the years, we’ve seen an increasing need for safety for security guards due to the risks involved in their work.

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3 ways the ANA is advocating for nurse reimbursement

Becker's Hospital Review

Nursing's economic value and the reimbursement of it has been neglected for decades, the American Nurses Association argues, and now it is pushing for key changes to restore how the profession is valued.

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How to Use Travel Nursing to Advance Your Career

The Gypsy Nurse

Onestaff Medical provided this article. Are you a nurse who may be getting burnt out dealing with the same-old, same-old at your current job? Do you have the desire to go out into the world to make a real difference and truly help those in need but are worried you may fall behind in your career? Fortunately, there are many ways to advance your career as a travel nurse.

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Staying Up-to-Date on the Latest Advances in Patient Care

Daily Nurse

Being a nurse is rarely a static experience as new technology, techniques, and standards regularly evolve and emerge to influence patient care. Understandably, it can be quite challenging to keep up with industry developments when nurses are already under pressure to meet the immediate needs of their patients and the priorities of the facilities where they work.

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Focus Groups Amplify the Voices of Black Congregants about Disparities in Clinical Trials

Consult QD

Much of the literature about addressing disparities in clinical trials focuses on logistical steps to breaking down barriers such as providing patients with transportation or childcare support. While those approaches are beneficial, Cleveland Clinic’s Taussig Cancer Community Outreach team found that addressing inequities also involves taking a step back and understanding how to foster deep relationships between clinicians and the community.

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Indiana nurse imposter charged for fraud, stealing nursing license

Becker's Hospital Review

An Indiana woman was charged with fraud and aggravated identity theft after she used a stolen licensed practical nurse license to obtain employment at three nursing homes.

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The Relentless School Nurse: 5 Steps to Claim the Title of Chief Wellness Officer (CWO) in Your Schools

The Relentless School Nurse

Creator: Fokusiert Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto Have you noticed newer educational titles in your school district that include Chief? I have seen the following titles: Chief of Talent, Chief of Schools, Chief of Staff, and many Deputy Chiefs too. What I have not seen is Chief Wellness Officer (CWO). That would be us, the school nurses; we are the CWO in each of our buildings.

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Cancer-Causing Ingredients Found in Many U.S. Food Products

Scrubs

If you compare the list of ingredients in many of the packaged foods sold in the U.S. to their counterparts in the U.K., you will notice a few striking differences. That’s because European nations have outlawed the sale and distribution of various artificial ingredients that have been known to increase the risk of cancer, including preservatives, chemicals, and food dyes used in pre-made baked goods, chips, sweets, and popular candies.

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Recommended Reading from the June Issue of AJN

Amercan Journal of Nursing

The June issue of AJN is now live. Here are some articles in this issue that we’d like to highlight. Note that some may be free only to subscribers. Initiating Virtual Nursing in General Inpatient Care This article describes how one hospital developed a virtual RN role for experienced nurses to support bedside RNs and patients on designated general care inpatient units.

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The Chronic Cough Conundrum

Consult QD

For patients with chronic cough — a cough that has been present for more than eight weeks — finding an answer to the simple question of ‘why am I coughing ,’ can be a frustrating challenge. Often times the journey involves bouncing from several different specialists trying to pinpoint a cause. Chronic cough can be related to several different conditions, so a multidisciplinary approach to diagnosis and treatment as well as strong communication between specialists is critical.

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Welcome to Pride Month

Johns Hopkins Nursing Magazine

Pride Month celebrates the diversity and vibrancy of the LGBTQ+ community and their impact on our nation through their contributions, activism, advocacy, and mutual community support. Pride month also calls on us to recognize the obstacles LGBTQ+ people have overcome for equal treatment and the barriers to opportunity, health, and freedom that continue today.

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Walking Your Dog Is More Dangerous Than You Might Think

Scrubs

Over the past 20 years, more than 422,000 adult Americans were admitted to the ER for injuries related to walking their dog, according to new research from John Hopkins University. Walking a dog on a leash can lead to fractured fingers, shoulder sprains, and severe head injuries. This usually happens when the dog suddenly pulls on the leash while it is wrapped around the person’s finger or wrist.

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6 Tips for Building Relationships in a New Job

Hospital Recruiting | Nursing

Starting a new job can is exciting, with new tasks, a new environment, and new people to get to know. As you navigate a new workplace and role, building relationships with your colleagues is essential both for your future professional success and your fulfillment in your new role. Building strong connections enhances your satisfaction with your new job and builds a support network that will help you succeed. 1.

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Mitochondria Transfer From Healthy Astrocytes Fuels Glioblastoma Tumorigenicity

Consult QD

Glioblastoma cells use mitochondria from the central nervous system (CNS) to grow and form more aggressive tumors, according to a new Cleveland Clinic-led investigation published in Nature Cancer. The research shows that it is common for healthy astrocytes ― a type of glial cell with important functions in the CNS ― to transfer their energy-producing organelles to glioblastoma cells.