What do nurses do? Let me count the ways…

Once upon a time, two women in their late sixties met at church and soon became friends. Letty is now 76 and Martha 74. Martha is a widow and moved to Letty’s small town after her retirement and the death of her husband to be near her children.

Last week, Letty sent me this email, in narrative form. As a retired nurse educator, I immediately recognized a “clinical vignette” that I most certainly would use if I were still teaching nursing. In my module on therapeutic communication, I would ask the students to identify and analyze the RN’s “nursing interventions” that made a significant difference in Martha’s experience of having a CT scan. The vignette could also serve as an insight into the needs and friendships of older persons.

See what you think.

I spent the morning with Martha at the hospital – she needed a CT scan and just wanted me along – again made me aware of what it is to be a widow! I could go back into the area where she was “prepped” for it. We sat in chairs side by side, and the nurse, an RN, offered us warm blankets while she did what she had to do, and then Martha had to drink some barium. When the nurse brought out the four bottles, Martha right away said, “I can’t do that.”

 And I said, “Too bad it isn’t flavored like I did with the Go Lightly with Crystal Light.” 

 Immediately, the nurse said, “I can get that!” And off she went for a package of fruit flavoring and came back and mixed some in the first bottle.  

 Martha took a sip and said, “I can do that.” Over the hour she got three bottles down – and that was it. As the nurse kept chatting with us, Martha kept sipping, and then it was time to go for the scan. Later the tech told her they got great pictures! What a relief. Martha doesn’t like to drink much, so this much fluid really was hard to do.

 The nurse was most patient with Martha’s request, and told her how to just sip away. On a scale of 1-10, she was a 10.  I told her about you saying nurses don’t get near the credit for all they do, and I think she used a phrase similar to what you wrote or Marianna [my friend at nursingstories.org] wrote! The RN is normally an ICU nurse, but said she does this to keep her sane!   

 She was everything you’d want in a nurse under these circumstances – Martha was a bit nervous about it, and her BP was high, and the nurse just calmly said, “It is okay. Just check it on your own sometime.”

 Martha has always had a great BP, but lately it has been high, so her doctor suggested she go to the same place, at the same time of day, to monitor it for a couple of weeks. The nurse told her the same thing. Martha is on some low dose of a BP medication until she sees her doctor again next week. It has been good where she has gone to test it lately. I think she just was more anxious when she saw all she had to drink.

 Another case of being a widow and how it is to do these things alone! She hates to ask for help but knows I am always willing to be there. Her daughters would have to take off from work, and they have done that when she asks, but she feels that isn’t nice for them. She could have gone alone, but was concerned about how she might feel afterwards, and that was before she knew she would have to drink that stuff!  

 She took me out for a late breakfast – a place we went to once in a while when we used to live nearby. So a pleasant ending to it all.

 Heartwarming, right?  How would you feel in Martha’s situation?

Can you see why Letty rated the nurse as a “10”? Offering warm blankets, getting the flavoring, giving instructions how to sip, chatting for distraction, being patient, being calm…

No doubt, as you read this story, your own experiences crowded your mind. Know that you have a right, as a patient, to be treated in all encounters with competence, respect, and compassion.

Thanks to Letty (not her real name), one of my sisters, for permission to print her story about her morning with her friend Martha (not her real name).  “Letty” had no idea that she’d given me such good material to show the holistic care of a nurse!

Caring Lessons in the Nursing Classroom

Nursing faculty: Are you planning textbooks for your fall courses?

I invite you to consider Caring Lessons: A Nursing Professor’s Journey of Faith and Self  as a good choice for a recommended or required reading in courses related to career development. Caring Lessons chronicles my forty years in nursing, from diploma to PhD and nurse’s aide to professor.

“I had no idea” is a frequent response I’ve had to the book. The rigor of our educational process amazes readers. And the versatility of our career options. And our ability to juggle career, advanced schooling, and parenthood.

Backing up a bit, as a newly published author nearly two years ago, the first nursing dean I contacted was Dr. Sue Dunn, Chairperson of the Nursing Program at Hope College in Holland, Michigan. When I told her I was driving through and would like to discuss my new book with her, she immediately suggested meeting in a cozy restaurant near the college.

Her first words to me were: “I love your book.” Since that day, she has been a faithful supporter, inviting me to present on her campus and using Caring Lessons as a text for a nursing course.  Afterwards she emailed me:

My students loved the book and found the study guide questions helpful in stimulating deeper thinking about how aspects of the book may apply to themselves as nursing students and future nurses. I would definitely recommend the book for other nursing programs.

Susan Dunn, PhD, RN
Chairperson and Associate Professor
Hope College Nursing Department
35 East 12th St
Holland MI  49423

Thank you so much, Dr. Dunn, for your encouragement and for giving me permission to add your words to this site. And for planning to use Caring Lessons as a required text again this fall!

If you have questions, you may contact me at caringlessons@aol.com. For a review copy, contact rhonda@bringitoncommunications.com.

Caring Lessons – Blog Tour Over – What Next?

I’m finished, ” I announced to my husband late last week. Always appearing a bit skeptical when I make such announcements, he said, “With me, or what?”

Of course, I had to say not with him, not with our fiftieth wedding anniversary coming up–I mean why would I trade down when we have a good thing going here–but I said, “With the active promoting of my book.” Then I gave him my rationale–it’s been over a year and a half of busyness–fun, but busy–and  I’m ready to go on with the next phase of my life.

So with the book blog tour over (thanks to all of you for your faithful following), and with five hundred (yes, that’s 500!) more postcards out, this time to nursing administrators in hospitals in the Midwest, I think we’ve covered much of the potential market for Caring Lessons.

at caribou, completing "my" assignment

I say “we” because I must again give credit to Amy Nagelkirk, my former student–a ’92 grad from Trinity Christian College–for staying on my case. Lots of promo things and lots of the hard work are thanks to her (and the friends she recruits to help her). With the second batch of five hundred post cards (the first batch went to schools of nursing), Amy “assigned” me only one hundred twenty. She and her friends have completed the rest, plus she did the search to find all the administrators’ names and hospitals in these states.

I also want to thank Dr. Sue Dunn, Dr. Patsy Ruchala, and Dr. Laurel Quinn, deans/directors  of the nursing programs, respectively, at Hope College in Holland, Michigan, University of Nevada-Reno, and Trinity Christian College in Palos Heights, IL. They helped promote Caring Lessons recently at the semiannual meeting of  AACN (American Association of Colleges of Nursing) for deans/directors in Washington DC.

So, what’s next? Another writer has stated my thoughts at this time about book promotion so well. I will reblog her essay on Wednesday.

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Final Stop

“You don’t need to be in the health care industry or education to like it,” writes Becky Povich, the tour host for this last stop, in her short and sweet review of Caring Lessons: A Professor’s Journey of Faith and Self.

Last week Wednesday, I introduced you to Becky’s blog, her prolific writing, and her audio clips. Remember “The Twist”? And last week she published my essay on Hot Fudge Friends on her blog.

Yesterday she told her readers her review of Caring Lessons was coming up, and today it’s posted. She is also offering a giveaway copy; readers who leave a comment through tomorrow will be eligible. Leave your comment and read Becky’s review here.

Mental Health Awareness Ribbon

Mental Health Awareness Ribbon

One more neat thing about Becky; her choice of quotes on her blog header gave me pause:

“Looking back you realize that a very special person passed briefly through your life – and it was you. It is not too late to find that person again.” Robert Brault.

Thanks, Becky, for taking part in my blog tour and for the privilege of getting to know you!

Wrapping up this tour, thank you readers for following along. I’ve gained new readers and new followers, especially internationally, and appreciate your support.

On behalf of all nurses and of those living with a mental illness, I urge you to consider a gift for that special caregiver in your life. National Nurses Week is May 6-12, and May is also Mental Health Month; mental health is a thread throughout Caring Lessons. Order here: Caring Lessons. All proceeds go to nursing scholarships at Trinity Christian College.

Coming: On 4/13, I’ll post a review of my own: Mary Osborne’s Nonna’s Book of Mysteries.

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Stop #13 – More about Mental Ilness

Bipolar Disorder

Bipolar Disorder

Chynna Laird gets it. She understands my passion for nursing and mental health nursing. In fact, it is her passion to help children and families living with special needs, “especially those living with Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) and bipolar disorder.”

Chynna is the tour host today for Caring Lessons. I can tell she “gets it” by the  sensitive review of my book that she is featuring now on one of her blogs.

Here’s a clip from her review: “…it is a beautifully written book. It’s honest, it’s ‘real’ and I most admire Lois for bringing awareness not only to the life of a nurse but also to things such as cancer, mental health as well as being strong enough to be everything we’re meant to be no matter how high the hurdles we face.” Read the entire review here.

I wish Chynna all the best in her multiple efforts at advocacy, education, and leadership for a most deserving segment of our population.

And, thank you, Chynna, for putting into writing a fact that we nurses know, but not everyone understands, that “… nurses aren’t just ‘doctor helpers’ who change bedpans and take our temperatures. They do so much more. And what they do matters so much.”

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Stop #12 – Changing Minds about Mental Ilness

Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia

“Changing Minds about Mental Illness” is a topic close to my heart. For a few reasons why, read my guest post on this tour’s site today. Also, please read this short essay to find out what you can do to help individuals living with mental illness and their families.

If  you’re a writer and interested in getting your book reviewed, “Mash” has a lot of information about book reviewers too. Plus she has a giveaway copy of my career memoir Caring Lessons: A Nursing Professor’s Journey of Faith and Self.

Have a blessed Easter. As you dye your Easter eggs, remember the real meaning of Easter!

Photo credit: Alaina Abplanalp Photography (www.flickr.com)

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Stop #11

Two in one day??? Yes, there are two blog tour stops today. The tour will be over a week from today, so savor this opportunity to discover the blogs of these varied and interesting book-loving women.

Lois and Marv by the barn of Marv's childhood. Family reunion, Prinsburg, MN, 2010

This afternoon’s blogger, Audry Feyer, is a woman after my own heart. She lives with a John Deere fanatic! I know the feeling. Just search “John Deere” on this site, and you’ll see that I live with one too. Audry writes  a “feel-good blog about life, motherhood, and the pursuit of following dreams…” I could have used her encouraging blog when I was a young mom who felt trapped in her house!

Stop by Audry’s blog and read her fun review of Caring Lessons. Read her hilarious story about panicking while in labor. As she tried to flee the OB unit, she learned to appreciate her nurse who brought her back to her senses.

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Stop #10 / Hot Fudge Friends

Lois and Marianna at the International Christian Retail Show, Atlanta, 7/11

Today, I’m all about being an older woman who wears purple, albeit with no red hat on my head, and who is thankful for my long-term friendship with Marianna, a person with whom I’ve walked many miles of fun and silliness and tanked in hard-to-fathom-at-the-time sorrows.

So for today’s Caring Lessons blog tour, when I read the host’s theme of older women and her pieces on nostalgia, I wrote a guest post on my friendship with Marianna and called it “Hot Fudge Friends.” Read it here.

The blog host today is Becky Povich. She says she didn’t start writing until she was almost fifty. You’d never know. She has oodles of upbeat stuff on her blog that will lighten your day. Take note of her list of publications on the sidebar. And, while you read, listen to your old favorites (on the sidebar-Music from the 1940s – 2011).  Remember Mr. Sandman? Moon River? Runaround Sue? Or better yet, The Twist? U-m-m-m. Love those sounds and memories.

Becky also has giveaways of Caring Lessons, both today and next Wednesday when she’ll post her review of my book. Just make a comment to be eligible.

Plus, plan ahead. National Nurses Week is just around the corner, May 6-12. It’s gift time! Also, May is Mental Health Month; mental health is a thread throughout Caring Lessons: A Nursing Professor’s Journey of Faith and Self. Buy a copy of Caring Lessons and help promote and support the profession of nursing. All proceeds go to nursing scholarships at Trinity Christian College.

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Stop #9 / Ten Things I Learned on My Way to Market

Are you almost finished writing your book? Are you dreading the thought of marketing? Do you need tips to save your sanity about how to handle your tub-full of books when they arrive?

I’m not the little piggie that went to market, but I am the piggie that stayed home and planned, down to minute details, for the debut of Caring Lessons. Actions  I took before I even left home for author events. Actions that  saved my sanity when the one thousand books arrived.

One thing I did was buy a roller bag to carry my books to readings. After years of writing, I didn’t want to pack my precious cargo in a klutzy picnic basket or a battered Macy’s bag. Other actions were even more basic, things you may never see in a marketing book.

Today, thanks to Cathy Stucker, marketing expert, among other things, you can read my “Ten Things I Learned on My Way to Market.“  Cathy has also featured a photo of me leaving our apartment for an early author event, raring to go with my jazzy JanSport roller bag.

Linger awhile on Cathy’s site, sellingbooks.com, and see the multitude of ways she can help you write, publish, and sell your book.  A vital place to find out everything you don’t know yet.

And now a reminder to plan ahead. National Nurses Week is just around the corner, May 6-12. It’s gift time! Also, May is Mental Health Month; mental health is a thread throughout Caring Lessons: A Nursing Professor’s Journey of Faith and Self. Buy a copy of Caring Lessons and help promote and support the profession of nursing. All proceeds go to nursing scholarships at Trinity Christian College.

Caring Lessons / WOW Blog Tour – Stop #8 – Giveaway Copies

Are you an empty nester? Are you trying to lose weight? These are just a few of the fun things that Pam Lofton, the host of this blog tour, writes about on her blog, Empty Nest.

Her review of Caring Lessons nails what my friend Marianna and I were hoping when we began writing our nursing memoirs: to let the general public know what goes into making a nurse! Here’s a quote from Pam:

“One of the most interesting things about this book is hearing about the field of nursing. All the study, hours, time, bloodsweatandtears that go into obtaining a nursing degree. But, even more than that, what makes a nurse.

Lois discusses how she learned that nursing is more than performing procedures. It’s so much more.

‘…it’s not necessarily just what we say to people, but how we act: how we listen, how we encourage, how we empathize, and how we show respect…” (from Caring Lessons page 115).’”

Pam has two giveaway copies of Caring Lessons.   Click to read her post, make a comment, and then wait to see if your name wins in the drawings for a free copy of Caring Lessons.

And now a reminder to plan ahead. National Nurses Week is just around the corner, May 6-12. It’s gift time! Also, May is Mental Health Month; mental health is a thread throughout Caring Lessons: A Nursing Professor’s Journey of Faith and Self. Buy a copy of Caring Lessons and help promote and support the profession of nursing. All proceeds go to nursing scholarships at Trinity Christian College.