Most Web sites
provide information without evoking emotion.
The Virtual
Nurses' Memorial is an exception. This site, established by
nurses Marnie Hancock, Bob McCarthy and Naja McKenzie, is a memorial
to nurses who have died "in the line of nursing duty."
This beautifully
done tribute to nurses who have given their lives for their patients
and their profession lists nurses who were victims of war or who
died as a result of accidents, assaults, medical transport crashes,
violent acts of patients, diseases or latex allergies.
At the site,
visitors can submit the names of nurses who have died in the line
of duty.
Workplace
violence
The Nurse
Advocate site is dedicated to the recognition and resolution
of workplace violence experienced by nurses, and offers support
to those who have experienced violence and a remembrance of those
who have died.
The site includes
news stories, online videos, a verbal abuse survey, a survey tool
and ideas on violence prevention.
Numerous stories
about nurses' feelings and experiences with workplace violence
involving patients, staff members and managers are presented,
and the site provides an area for nurses to discuss their experiences,
share resources and network.
Male nurses
The American
Assembly for Men in Nursing was developed to provide a framework
for nurses to meet to discuss and influence the factors that affect
men as nurses.
The site offers
membership and convention information, including calls for abstracts
and a men's health issues forum.
The objectives
of the assembly include: encouraging men of all ages to become
nurses, supporting men who are nurses to continue to grow professionally
and advocating for continued research, education and dissemination
of information about men's health issues, men in nursing and nursing
knowledge at local and national levels.
Cerebral
matters
The
Brain Connection offers insight into the brain and how it
works. Explore the site to find basic brain information, online
courses, learning resources and brain facts.
Especially
useful for preparing in-services, lectures or patient education
are the extensive animation features, which illustrate the brain's
lobes, language fundamentals, how hearing and speaking occur in
relation to the brain, speech sounds, brain plasticity and the
stages of language development.
An image gallery
of the anatomy of the brain allows users to download the images
into PowerPoint presentations. The site also offers online professional
development courses designed for learning about learning.
Digital
detection
Computer technology is everywhere-mammography now is being enhanced
with the use of ImageChecker, a new computer-aided device that
helps radiologists detect breast cancer. About 200 sites in the
United States offer this new technology.
ImageChecker
works by feeding the X-ray from a traditional mammogram into a
processing unit, which converts the film into a digital image
that can be read by a computer. The radiologist reads the mammogram
and views and evaluates the additional digital images that the
highly sensitive computer has marked as suspicious.