No matter how you
slice nursing-by specialty, workplace, geography, gender, heritage,
ethnicity or eclectic interest-there likely is a professional organization
for you, a place where RNs can find support and cohesiveness in a highly
fractured profession.
Organizations range
from a few hundred members in highly specialized groups, such as the
Pediatric Endocrinology Nursing Society, to 65,000 members in the all-encompassing
American Association of Critical-Care Nurses. Sigma Theta Tau, the international
nursing honor society that promotes standards and scholarship, dwarfs
all with 300,000 members in 90 countries.
Associations are
for "forward-thinking" RNs interested in staying on top of
the profession, said Ann Motayar, director of the career services center
at Kent State University in Ohio. "It's a critical part of maintaining
and developing professional status," she said.
Practice-based
organizations can be as specific as the Developmental Disabilities Nurses
Association, for those who work with the developmentally disabled. In
conjunction with the National League for Nursing, it confers the CDDN
credential: certified developmental disabilities nurse.
By workplace, there
is the American Association of Office Nurses, the Association of Camp
Nurses, the National Association of School Nurses and a refinement of
that, the National Association of School Nurses for the Deaf.
Geographically,
RNs support each other in city- and county-based organizations such
as the Greater Cleveland Nurses Association and the King County (Wash.)
Nurses Association. For men, there is the American Assembly for Men
in Nursing.
By heritage and
ethnicity, consider the National Black Nurses Association, the National
Association of Hispanic Nurses and the Aboriginal Nurses Association
of Canada.
For those who don't
get enough of nursing on the job, there's even an American Association
for the History of Nursing. Executive Secretary Janet Fickeissen, MSN,
RN, describes it as composed of RNs, academicians, historians, librarians
and collectors who share a passion for nursing history.
Some organizations,
for instance the 325-member Pediatric Endocrinology Nursing Society,
offer members research grants and scholarships for academic study and
continuing education. Others make available group insurance rates and
discounts on career-related purchases such as uniforms and supplies.
But typically what draws RNs to organizations are the intangibles: information,
education, camaraderie and credibility.
The Association
of Nurses in AIDS Care fairly represents what nursing professional organizations
do, why they are born and the extent to which they grow.
Twelve RNs from
around the country got together in 1987 and created ANAC, after realizing
they were doing similar work and had similar concerns. Today, it has
2,100 members united by what association general counsel Katherine Wilson,
JD, calls "a resounding need for support-mental, emotional and
physical-considering the risks in caring for HIV-positive patients and
the taboo of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. Nurses do so much
of the patient care, so much of the one-on-one," Wilson said.
ANAC provides members
with a network of RNs, physicians, social workers, pharmacists and other
health care professionals who deal with AIDS. It is at the forefront
of issues and developments with a bimonthly newsletter, international
journal and Web site. It also has a distinguished lecturer program for
community organizations as well as its chapters.
To further careers,
ANAC produces its own continuing education courses that apply toward
licensure renewal requirements. Education, verified by testing, also
leads to the specialty credential ACRN: AIDS certified registered nurse,
said Adele Webb, Ph.D., RN, interim executive director. "When you
go to look for a position, that's a credential they look for."
Still another benefit
of nursing professional organizations is that they allow RNs to speak
out on professionwide issues with authority that they would not enjoy
as individuals.
"We've positioned
ourselves as the voice of critical care nurses in the legislative arena,"
developing public policy on issues such as staffing requirements and
the nursing shortage, said Kris Pleimann, marketing and communications
specialist for the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
What began in 1969
as an organization for cardiovascular nurses has grown to 65,000 members-the
largest specialty nursing organization in the world, Pleimann said.
"Critical care isn't just in the hospital anymore," she said,
mentioning patients who are acutely ill at home and in telemetry and
step-down units. "We're really for anyone who takes care of patients
who are critically and acutely ill."
AACN also confers
the specialty credential CCNS, certified critical nurse specialist,
which carries continuing education requirements and renewal at three-year
intervals.
"Our educational
resources are probably our biggest selling point," Pleimann said.
"We offer an annual conference called the National Teaching Institute
and Critical Care Exposition, which is attended annually by anywhere
from 5,000 to 6,000 nurses." It features continuing education programs
as well as an exposition of technology, techniques and merchandise for
critical care nurses, she said.
Equally important,
though, is that the conference is "a time for [nurses] to reconnect
with members of their profession, to really be renewed," Pleimann
said. "There's a lot of networking, a lot of feel-good programs.
They are just re-energized at the conference."
Joining a professional
organization, in nursing or any other field, speaks volumes about commitment
to a profession, Pleimann said. "It shows a sense of pride. A lot
of people go through life and kind of say, 'This is just a job.' But
by belonging to an association it takes it a step further. It says,
'I'm really interested in networking and continuing to challenge myself
and grow educationally.' By belonging to an organization, you're sort
of saying, 'I'm part of this group and I'm proud of it.' "
A
slice of nursing life
Aboriginal
Nurses Association of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario
American Assembly
for Men in Nursing, Latham, N.Y.
American Association for
the History of Nursing, Lanoka Harbor, N.J.
American Association of Critical-Care
Nurses, Aliso Viejo, Calif.
American Association of Office
Nurses, Montvale, N.J.
Association of Camp
Nurses, Bemidji, Minn.
Association of Nurses
in AIDS Care, Akron, Ohio
Developmental Disabilities
Nurses Association, Blaine, Wash.
Greater Cleveland
Nurses Association, Cleveland
King County Nurses Association,
Seattle
National Association
of Hispanic Nurses, Washington, D.C.
National Association of School Nurses,
Scarborough, Maine,
and Castle Rock, Colo.
National Association of
School Nurses for the Deaf, Vancouver, Wash.
National Black Nurses Association,
Silver Spring, Md.
Pediatric Endocrinology Nursing
Society, Gaithersburg, Md.