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NurseWeek Features |
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Smoke-Free Zone |
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Nurses and patients tackle nicotine addiction
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Bloodless Survival |
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Surgical techniques to use when transfusion drops out of the equation |
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Many Points on the Compass of Care
For this special Nurses Week issue, we are featuring you, the nurses of America. You practice in all kinds of roles in diverse settings preventing disease and injury, teaching patients and families, and caring for the sick and dying. You probe the depth of the human condition — the strength and suffering of the body, mind, heart, and spirit.
Your understanding of science and your critical-thinking skills fuel your work, but you also know the power of human touch, a sympathetic ear, and an encouraging word. Most of all, you embody the American spirit of giving and caring at its finest. You shine in every corner of our country and our world — caring for children in the nation’s capital and the elderly in San Francisco. You practice in the EDs of Philly and the ORs of Minnesota. You conduct research in Atlanta and teach the next generation of nurses in Boston. And, you help save lives in the battlefields of far-flung lands. This is your career and your calling. As a nation, we’re grateful you answered that call.

Photo by Keith Weller
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Pediatric nursing is as diverse as the views represented in our nation’s Capitol. Peds nurses can encounter jaundiced newborns, toddlers with croup, and teenagers with meningitis all in a single day. Medical interventions may vary from patient to patient, but one thing remains the same when it comes to pediatric nursing—nurses like Jean Farley, RN, of HSC Pediatric Center in Washington, D.C., always provide the much-needed compassion and comfort sick children and worried parents so desperately need.

Photo by David Debalko Photography
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Nurses are a fundamental component of direct trauma care and the operation of trauma centers — the hospitals specially designated to care for the most critically ill patients. Trauma nurses Maureen Frye, RN (left); Maureen Small, RN; and Dean Nuss, RN, of Abington Memorial Hospital in Abington, Pa., are specially trained to manage patients’ physical conditions and emotional stress. These nurses must think and act quickly, whether tending to a single patient or managing mass casualties from a disaster scene.

Photo by Roly Rodriguez
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“It was a life-long dream to work for the Centers for Disease Control [in Atlanta],” says Capt. Joyce Goff, RN, BSN, MEd, MHL, a health education specialist in the National Immunization Program. “It is the utopia of a career. We help the world identify disease and do various things to control and prevent diseases. Who wouldn’t want to be part of that?”

Photo by Brian Snyder
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Programs to increase the interest in nursing as a career have been so successful that the other shortage — nursing faculty — is causing students to be turned away at some schools. At Regis College, Weston, Mass., Antoinette Hays, RN, PhD, is doing her part to make sure that doesn’t happen.

Photo by Terry Cockerham, Light & Bytes Inc.
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Nursing has such a deep impact on patients’ lives that RNs become forever entwined in the hearts and minds of those receiving nursing care. But touching someone’s life in a special way is not limited to nurses alone. Patients often affect nurses in equally profound ways as Stacey Ruby, RN (left), and her twin Tracey Greenwood, RN, discovered while caring for 2-year-old conjoined twins at Medical City at Dallas Hospital.
“I know we’re not supposed to become attached to our patients,” said Janet Doggett, RN, another member of Medical City’s nursing team, “but these little guys wrap their fists around your heart and they don’t let go.”

Photo courtesy of Charles Peworski
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From Gettysburg to Iwo Jima, from Vietnam to Iraq, American health care professionals have answered the call to serve during wartime. Weaponry and tactics change, but war’s effects are still devastating. The military relies on nurses to give competent care in stressful environments. When not on military duty, Marine Staff Sgt. Charles Peworski, RN, works as an RN house supervisor at Mayo Clinic Hospital in Phoenix, Ariz.
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