Sunday, April 20, 2014

I do Love this Profession and Always Want More for every Nurse

What Nursing can Mean Part II
Many nurses find themselves in this situation today. Patients are increasingly sicker when they come into the hospital, with greater demands in regards to their care and needs. Their potential to arrest or just begin the often agonizingly slow spiral towards the light is when they need nurses with the time to assess and re-assess their situation. Time that can make the difference with an experienced and astute nurse caring for this patient, this nurse can maybe delay or prevent a sentinel event from occurring. This nurse uses years of learning to know the signs that indicate a significant occurrence is heading towards this patient. Often it may just be a gut reaction, but the chance to head off disaster is in the hands of this nurse who knows the warning signs and what to do to keep the pending arrest at bay and turn the tide when provided the time to care for this patient in a safe and uncompromised manner. This is the time that many nurses rarely have in an age where staffing ratios have not changed for the better in well over a decade. Most facilities’ ratios are built on the budget and the decreasing number of nurses, not the increased acuity of the worsening patients’ health characteristics. Standards need to be set based on the patients’ level of illness and the increased workload that illness places on the nursing staff to give them the care they need and deserve.

Re-post and still True

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