Tuesday, April 28, 2009

What I Treasure Most in Nursing

  • This essay earned me a Nursing Spectrum CEU Gift Card from Citrus Valley Health Partners-- as of May 22, 2009


This is my entry for "Nurses's Week 2009." Citrus Valley Health Partners have this essay contest. My essay skills would seem to be a little rusty, and it needs some polishing. Joining the essay contest for nurses week may sharpen those skills. - as of May 10, 2009

The contest has a prompt on "What You Treasure Most in Nursing."

What I Treasure Most in Nursing

The looming economic crisis would seem to be eroding this country's resources. Treasures maybe hard to find in the times of foreclosures, bankruptcy and recession. However, I believe that nursing is a profession with intrinsic and indispensable treasures. What I treasure most about nursing is its resiliency to deliver compassionate caring despite obstacles and changes.

Some people might view that nursing is a profession exempted from recession and depression. Ostensibly, this argument can be valid. However, one may find that the nursing profession is also suffering from the economic downturn as manifested by the frozen hiring of nurses. Such situation could result to under-staffing and overworked nurses. In this regard, one may mistake the profession's exemption from economic recession and depression to the nursing profession's resiliency. Resiliency is the adaptation to any adversity. This is one of the things I treasure most about nursing. Despite the hurdles of under-staffing and fatigue, nurses try to adapt to deliver the optimal nursing care with compassion.

Another instance where the nursing profession exhibits resiliency is on the realm of laws and technology. Legal issues seem to bombard the nursing profession. Corporate compliance and HIPAA are some of the issues. In this regard, the nursing profession seem to address these issues with resiliency, and still provide compassionate caring to patients. Information technology is seemingly becoming an aspect in the delivery of health care. Nursing is not an exception. For instance, nurses used the Meditech software for charting. They also used Computer-On-Wheels for medication administration. Initially, some people find technology to be cumbersome and an obstacle to nursing care. However, the nursing profession is resilient to any changes. Moreover, the integration of technology and nursing has greatly improved in the last decade. Since the nursing profession is resilient to the changes in health trends, the intrinsic and indispensable facet which is compassionate caring seems to remain the same.

I would reiterate that the basic component of nursing is compassionate caring. Arguably, the nursing profession is resilient to changes, and this basic component seemed to have never been lost. Changes would include economic decline, financial instability, technology and legal issues. I could have mentioned changes in nursing ethics, Sentinel Events ( Medication and Drug Injuries), Nursing malpractice, Safe staffing issues and many more. Nurses can say: "Bring on the changes, " and the nursing profession would still remain resilient to deliver optimal nursing care under the banner of compassionate caring. With all the adversity and changes, compassionate caring is one of the most basic components of nursing, and it would never go out of style. As Lexie Saige asserts: "A nurse is compassion in scrubs." A nurse is the personification of compassionate caring. Hence, this is what I treasure most about the nursing profession: its resiliency to deliver compassionate caring despite obstacles and changes.