Archive for the ‘Nurse Shortage’ Category

Nurses Travel……

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Well, I am truly and fully retired this time…..unless you count the six cases I’m working as a legal consultant, and an occasional MDS assignment, and then of course there’s the three days a week spent with our new grand daughter while her engineer/Mother does what she can to keep her career on track.

Time for some serious coulda, shoulda, woulda reflection.

I am only too aware of the opportunities I passed up in my nursing career by never taking advantage of the travel packages that were offered to me during my thirty “active” years.

As much as I truly love travelling,  I might have seen a large part of our world…..very early,  before I married and started my family;  or much later after the kids were grown and gone.

The Travel Nurse experience is even better now than it was thirty years ago;  and it wasn’t at all bad even then.

I hope you will spend some time on this section of our web site.  Learn what opportunities may be best suited to your situation.  AND THEN SEE THE WORLD.

Here’s a good place to start: http://www.medicalrag.com/get-out-of-the-rut-with-travel-nursing-jobs/

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Nursing is Recession Proof

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Just in case you missed it…..

Forbes recently released their latest employment findings.  While the rest of the world may be looking for work, the health care industry continues to grow at a rather astounding rate, adding more new jobs during the latest recession than any other sector.  And leading the pack?  Again and Still?  The most in-demand career choice is Registered Nursing.

Congratulations to those of you already licensed in the field……and yet another boost to all of you who may be considering nursing as your career of choice.

The future for nurses is bright;  and getting brighter every day.

Just thought you’d want to know.

Till next time,

Gayle

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The New Face of Nursing……

Monday, December 14th, 2009
The following was taken from an article cited by a GoogleAlert dealing with the nurse shortage, world wide.The ramifications of this article will affect all nurses; those already in practice and those of you who aspire to a nursing career.

I have never been a big fan of any union of any kind; but in reading the article and doing a bit of follow up,  I have to admit that they make some very valid points.  Especially in the areas of nurse safety.

I advise you to read this entire article and to decide for yourself:

Two Prominent Massachusetts Nurse Activists Assume Leadership Role In Newly Formed RN Super Union

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Monday, 14 December 2009
To standing cheers, delegates to the founding convention of the National Nurses United (NNU) this week unanimously endorsed the selection of Karen Higgins, RN of Weymouth and Beth Piknick, RN of Hyannis to serve as co-president and vice president of the largest union and professional organization of registered nurses in U.S. history. Higgins and Piknick, who are both past presidents of the Massachusetts Nurses Association, will serve a two-year term, which began with the founding convention of the NNU held Dec. 7 – 8 in Phoenix, AZ.
“The promise of the future has arrived,” said Karen Higgins, an RN from Massachusetts, and one of three newly elected presidents of the NNU, “with all the unlimited potential, creativity, vision, and power represented by the delegates in the room, and the 150,000 members of the founding organizations……………
The rest of the article can be found at this address:

http://www.auto-mobi.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=11466&Itemid=50

Please check back and add your comments.

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Electronic Charting in Your Future?

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Ok, I’ll admit it.  With a new grandbaby to spoil, Christmas to prepare for, and this ongoing adjustment to retirement, I totally missed the recent article/press release from the UAB Hospital and the Cerner Corporation.

The entire article should still be available in the Google section at the bottom of the pages on our sister website:  NurseCrisis.com.

Thanks to a reader in Mobile, Alabama for bringing it to my attention.  This same reader wanted to know what had happened to this blog.

Just a quick note to let you know that we’re back. Maybe not on a daily basis; but certainly several times a week.

The website grows based on the questions that come in.  The same will be true of the blog.  Please send your comments and questions to either:   info@nursecrisis.com

Back to the Cerner Corporation’s solution to the nurse shortage.  They make the point that by having a patient’s monitors hooked up to a centralized EMR (electronic medical record) we nurses will be relieved of hours and hours of paperwork.  Errors will be minimized,  the patients will be safer…..everybody wins.


So what is the reality?

As of Dec. 2nd, 2009,   the UAB Hospital System Reclaimed More Than 93,000 Nursing Hours by Connecting Medical Devices to Its Electronic Medical Record.

Does anyone believe that those 93,000 hours will be used to enable the same number of nurses to provide more personalized care to the same number of patients?

Or is more realistic to expect the corporate bean counters to figure out a way to reduce their nursing expense (fewer nurses);  or will they simply increase the nurse/patient ratio?

Many of you are already working under this “new and improved” system. Won’t you please share with us the effects most noticeable to you in your career?

I accept my status as a “cyber-dinosaur”,  and now even a retired “dinosaur”.

My objectivity went out the window over twenty-five years ago when the corporations stepped in and changed our health care system forever.

It’s difficult to recall any change that occurred during that time that offered more to the staff than to the corporate “bottom line”.

Till next time,

Gayle

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