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I had a wonderful
opportunity recently to work with a leading hospital system that
had convened nursing leaders from across its community to develop
a regional plan to address the shortage of nurses. The group I interacted
with included broad representation from both practice and education,
from all levels and diverse settings.
Nurses from
the local hospitals and schools of nursing agreed that their shortage
was worsening, largely because of an aging population of nurses
and declining class sizes of local nursing programs. It was exciting
to watch this community of diverse nursing leaders develop a plan
for nursing within their community.
I was impressed
that while there was significant diversity in opinion, there was
an overwhelming sense of respect, openness, compromise and collaboration.
There was no blaming, attacking or finger-pointing. It was clear
that the love and concern for nursing in this community exceeded
any individual agenda and the particular politics of any one leader.
I felt privileged to be in the room to witness this community of
nurses coming together.
This community
is not in California. This community is in a state that has more
than double the number of nurses per capita than California. It
also is important to note that this is a state where nursing is
highly unionized. Not once in the conversation did I hear anyone
blame another for the shortage or, even more ridiculous, claim there
was no shortage at all. In fact, when I mentioned the California
nurse per capita rate to this group, the nurses were aghast.
I tell this
story because it is a reminder to me of the often unrealized potential
that exists within the nursing community in California. We have
some of the most talented and innovative nurses in the country;
however, in California the political forces that affect nursing
seem to serve to splinter and divide as opposed to converge and
unite. While some nurses are actively involved in the issues, most
tend to go with the flow.
It's time for
the tide to turn and for nurses in this state to do some converging
and uniting. Let's assume accountability and take hold of our future.
In my mind, unifying nursing in California has become a paramount
issue. While others may try to convince you that "it"
is the fault of hospital executives, physicians, insurers, HMOs
or (fill in the blank), be honest-we must claim ownership of every
issue that confronts our profession today. It is we, and only we,
who own the solutions.
Let's prove
it to them all! Nurses in California can be effective agents for
constructive change. Let's focus our energy on strengthening interrelationships
within the profession, empowering nursing within our health systems
and improving the educational commitment to nursing. Most importantly,
let's demonstrate that nurses embrace the challenge for quality,
competency and compassion more than any conflict or particular brand
of politics.
What
do you think?
Email us at
editor@nurseweek.com
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