On Monday, the same day that Massachusetts implemented a law to ban mandatory overtime for nurses, while limiting nurses hours to no more than 12 in a 2…
Hundreds of UMass Memorial Medical Center Nurses to Picket Nov. 8 to Call for Safer Staffing to Ensure Quality Care
When: Thursday, November 8, 2012
Time: &nbs…
MNA’s Annual “Transitions Program” for Nursing Students & Faculty
files/file/Transitions flyer 009 EV (3).pdf…
An Answer to the Question – “What is the Union Going to Do About This?” We Are Going to Stand Up for Our Practice and Patients on Nov. 8th!
"What is the Union going to do about this?"
I am asked this question often by nurses who are worried, angry and frustrated by…
Common Flu Q&A for 2012
Q. Is the Flu Vaccine mandatory?
A. Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) regulations require all licensed MA healthcare facilities, as a conditio…
Mandatory OT for RNs banned! Click here for complete info & violation reporting form
A Law to Ban the Dangerous Practice of Mandatory Overtime Went Into Effect on November 5th
Click here to report a violation of the law, which the MNA will be s…
MNA/NNU Issues Call for Supplies for Those Impacted by Hurricane Sandy In New York City
MNA/NNU Main Street Campaign of Giving: Hurricane Sandy Relief Effort
The MNA/NNU, as part of our Main Street campaign to support those i…
Nurses Held State House Press Conference Today on New Law to Ban Mandatory Overtime for Nurses that Goes Into Effect on Monday, Nov. 5, 2012
Follow this link to view a video from the event: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rRlUcjA88s&feature=youtu.be
BOSTON, Mass — Representatives f…
What is a Magnet Hospital?
You may have heard of Magnet hospitals; you may even be fortunate enough to work in one. For those of you who may not be familiar with Magnet designation, here is why the distinction matters. What is the Magnet Recognition Program? The Magnet Recognition Program was created by the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) to distinguish nursing excellence, innovation and quality patient care. Organizations applying for this coveted status must undergo rigorous examination before being awarded this prestigious designation. What… Continue reading
Addicted to Helping People
A new book focusing on American nurses is nominally a book of portraits, intended for coffee tables. But a doctor writing in the New York Times, Abigal Zuker, found the the narrative to be the most affecting part, hitting her “in the solar plexus.”
For example, she appreciated the observation of a hospice nurse named Jason Short in rural Kentucky who has had a number of jobs, including auto mechanic and commercial trucker. He turned to nursing when the economy went under. This pragmatic decision turned into something more, and Mr. Short says he’s a nurse for good. “Once you get a taste for helping people, it’s kind of addictive,” he says in the book, called “The American Nurse.”
The book tells the stories of 75 nurses. Some of them wanted to be nurses from when they were very young, while others took Mr. Short’s more pragmatic approach. All of the nurses profiled exhibit the same “surprised gratitude,” according to Dr. Zuker.
The nurses profiled come from many different health care settings from many different places in America, ranging from large academic institutions like Johns Hopkins to very small places like the Villa Loretto Nursing Home in Mount Calvary, Wisconsin. There are administrators, home health care workers, emergency room nurses, military nurses, and much more.
All describe unique professional paths in short first-person essays culled from video interviews conducted by the photographer Carolyn Jones. Their faces beam out from the book in Ms. Jones’s black-and-white headshots, a few posing with a favorite patient or with their work tools — a medevac helicopter, a stack of prosthetic limbs or a couple of goats.
But even the best photographs are too static to capture people who never stop moving once they get to work. For a real idea of what goes on in their lives, you have to listen to them talk.
Here is Mary Helen Barletti, an intensive care nurse in the Bronx: “My whole life I’ve marched to a the beat of a different drummer. I used to have purple hair, which I’d blow-dry straight up. I wore tight jeans, high heels and — God forgive me — fur (now I am an animal rights activist). My patients loved it. They said I was like sunshine coming into their room.”
Says Judy Ramsay, a pediatric nurse in Chicago: “For twelve years I took care of children who would never get better. People ask how I could do it, but it was the most fulfilling job of my life. We couldn’t cure these kids, but we could give them a better hour or even a better minute of life. All we wanted to do was make their day a little brighter.”
Says Brad Henderson, a nursing student in Wyoming: “I decided to be a nurse because taking care of patients interested me. Once I started, nursing just grabbed me and made me grow up.”
Says Amanda Owen, a wound care nurse at Johns Hopkins: “My nickname here is ‘Pus Princess.’ I don’t talk about my work at cocktail parties.”
John Barbe, a hospice nurse in Florida, sums it up: “When I am out in the community and get asked what I do for a living, I say that I work at Tidewell Hospice, and there’s complete silence. You can hear the crickets chirping. It doesn’t matter because I love what I do; I can’t stay away from this place.”