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| A
young lady visits her friendly neighbourhood
registered nurse at the SOMA Health Fair,
2003. Thanks to my fellow student volunteers
at the UCSF
Children's Health Hut for the photo
and the fun. |
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The
very first nursing podcast - about nursing,
for nurses and the public they serve.
My
plan is to eventually offer a new edition every
week on Friday, with a running time between
30 to 60 minutes (depending on the amount of
material I have that week). As it is taking
me a while to get the hang of organizing putting
each edition together, I may only be able to
do bi-weekly editions (or even monthly ones)
until the end of the summer.
Topics
routinely covered will include:
- Current
nursing and related health care news
- Nursing
research round-up
- An
editorial rant on a current issue (or two)
- An
interview with an interesting nursing figure
(or more)
I
will post a synopsis for each episode, including
relevant links, and citations for any journal
articles quoted, and these synopses will be
maintained in an archive.
Update:
I
have purchased a domain name for this podcast
and have been setting up and testing pages on
the server at my new ISP, Southwest
Cyberport. This project is moving permanently
to www.thenursingstation.org,
with this page only being kept as an archive
for the original episodes. For the most current
episode, click
here.
Future
plans include a separate domain for this podcast.
Also, the links for the .MP3 files will change
at some point - I have arranged for space on
a friend's server, as my own provider wants
an arm and a leg to increase by space allocation.
I will post a note when these changes occur,
and provide re-direction service.
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From NANDA
International:
Contribute
to the revolution in nursing diagnosis by submitting
to the International Journal of Nursing
Terminologies and Classifications.
As the official publication of NANDA
International, the International
Journal of Nursing Terminologies and Classifications
is leading the way in the worldwide effort to
develop standardized nursing languages and their
applications for nurses, educators, and administrators.
Editor Rose Mary Carroll-Johnson, MN, RN, is
actively seeking submission for peer review.
Submit your article or commentary reflecting
knowledge development related to:
- Nursing
terminology and classification for diagnoses
interventions, and outcomes
- Use
of nursing language in practice and education
- The
processes of clinical judgement and knowledge
presentation
- Use
of nursing language and classification in
research, practice, and education
To access complete submission guidelines click
here. While on the site, see what this unique
journal is all about by using the links on the
left to the free Sample Issue on Blackwell Synergy.
Be sure to sign up for our free eTOC service
after you finish reading the online content
so that you'll receive each new Table of Contents
as it publishes!
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Welcome
to
The Nursing Station
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Dear
Visitors:
It
has been more of a challenge than planned to
get this podcast running the way I had hoped.
Due to a hard drive failure, the second and
third episodes were not available to be uploaded
for several months. I finally salvaged the sound
files, and have been able to mount these episodes.
The
long delayed posting of the first podcast (due
mainly to illness on my part - sorry)
has finally occurred, thus officially launching
this endevour. The podcast was ready to put
together Friday May 6 as planned, and after
several false starts, server issues, and my
school schedule, it has finally been mixed and
is available for your listening pleasure. The
second edition was meant to be out May 13, but
of course I was still sick, then my friend Heather,
who I intended to interview the next week also
got sick, and thus could not be interviewed
until the next week. Therefore, things were
pushed things back to May 27, when I had to
leave town for several days, delaying it even
more. The second edition will be up soon, I'm
going to skip June 3 (making this more or less
bi-weekly for now) to give myself time to get
things together for the third edition. I will
get these glitches ironed out.
Comments
and suggestions are welcome. Links to a comment
dialogue box for each edition are at the bottom
of the program summary. You can post a general
comment about The Nursing Station by clicking
here:
Very
best regards to you all,
Scott.
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The
Nursing Station – Podcast Edition #1
 |
Click
to download (70 min, 48.2 MB) |
Date:
Friday, May 6, 2005
Description:
The inaugural edition of the first nursing podcast
on the net. News, research, commentary, and
an interview with the creator of The Nursing
Station.
Click
here to go to comments.
Contents:
Introduction
to the podcast, including its purpose and intended
audience.
Current
nursing and health care news:
Happy Nurses’ Week, “alcopops”,
political news, Cherry Ames, a nurse’s
thoughts on Nightingale and the Iraq war, Canadian
staffing issues, IV and BP Luer Lock alert,
ENA forms the Academy of Emergency Nursing,
retention vs. recruitment, AACN applauds AONE
support for BSN, get on a reality show to provide
nursing expertise
Arnie
Watch:
Next rallies, where the staffing issues sits
now, and some websites.
Research
Round-up:
Call for presentations by ASPMN, Evidence Based
Nursing conference, AACN practice alerts, evaluating
EBN as opposed to EB Medicine, benefits of drinking
questioned, Vit D and cancer, e-mail rots the
mind, prostate cancer treatment, episiotomies
add risk.
Research
focus:
Lang et al’s systematic review of nurse-patient
ratios.
Interview:
This week (due in part to when I could schedule
people to interview) I will be interviewing
myself – the developer of The Nursing
Station.
Commentary:
The power of impressions and the power of words.
Shift
Change:
My two most hated questions about being a nurse.
Next
edition: An interview with Heather
Horgan about juggling job and grad school, more
news and current research, and a commentary
in response to a letter to AJN about nurses
role in supporting queer teens.
Links:
I
love this quote:
“The
nursing station is often the hub of activity
in a hospital ward. It's like Mission Control:
it's where patient information is kept, where
monitoring devices are located, and where doctors
and visitors can make inquiries about what is
happening on the ward.”
The
implication, of course, is that it’s the
nurses who know what is going on.
***
National
Nurses Week 2005, May 6-12, with the theme Nurses:
Many Roles, One Profession.
***
Get
on TV (plus the Advocacy Center is a great
site)
***
Arnie
watch, including the
rather lame editorial supporting the gov entitled
“Nurse Ratchet” (how charming)
from the Orange County Register.
***
Call
for presentations for next year’s ASPMN
conference.
***
AACN
Practice Alerts (requires membership to
access).
Citations:
Lang
TA, Hodge M, Olson V, Romano PS, Kravitz RL.
Nurse-patient ratios: a systematic review
on the effects of nurse staffing on patient,
nurse employee, and hospital outcomes.
J Nurs Adm. 2004 Jul-Aug;34(7-8):326-37. Review.
PMID: 15303051 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Lavin
MA, Meyer G, Krieger M, McNary P, Carlson
J, Perry A, James D, Civitan T. Essential
differences between evidence-based nursing
and evidence-based medicine. Int J Nurs
Terminol Classif. 2002 Jul-Sep;13(3):101-6.
PMID: 12599512 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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