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Virginia Lynch, MSN, RN, FAAN, truly is America's pioneer of forensic
nursing. She didn't invent it, of course, but she did give it a name years
before the International Association of Forensic Nurses formed in 1992
and the American Nurses Association recognized it as a specialty in 1995.
Emergency room and other nurses long have been expected to identify,
document and preserve legal evidence in cases of rape, domestic violence
and other injuries suffered as the result of a crime or suspected crime,
Lynch said. They've been expected to do it without formal forensic training
and in a medical community where the prevailing philosophy is "we're
here to save lives, not collect evidence." During two years of independent study at the Southwestern Institute of
Forensic Sciences in Dallas, Lynch became increasingly interested in Alberta,
Canada's successful use of RNs as death team investigators, which began
in 1975. She said that in her studies, from 1982 to 1984, she was learning
what other RNs should know but weren't taught in nursing programs. "I came to realize there should be a discipline of forensic nursing
that involved the sexual assault nurse, the death investigator, the legal
nurse consultant, the clinical forensic nurse and the emergency department,
the psychiatric nurse and nursing attorneys. They were all practicing
in unique areas and they didn't have a label. What I did was bring them
together under an umbrella," she said. "I wrote the very first
master's degree program to forensic nursing, basically for myself,"
at the University of Texas-Arlington. Today Lynch is director of forensic nursing and forensic health science
at Beth-el College of Nursing, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs.
She said it's an exciting privilege to develop concepts, roles, titles,
language and terminology, and set the standards for a young but growing
field. Lynch's expertise in establishing forensic nursing programs often has
taken her abroad: to Zimbabwe, El Salvador, Honduras, Costa Rica and Wales.
She's been a visiting scholar in Bangkok, Thailand; Shanghai, China; Singapore,
Malaysia; Brunei; and Australia. Among the lessons Lynch imparts to graduate-level RNs at Beth-el, particularly
those who aspire to follow in her footsteps and deal with the most negative
aspects of human life as a death investigator, is that "first you
must be an excellent clinician, because that's what sets you apart from
being a police officer. If you want to be a police officer, be a criminal
justice major." "First and foremost, I'm a nurse," Lynch said, but one educated
in criminalistics, scientific evaluation, and the psycho-social and legal
aspects of patients and the deceased."The role I've developed is
that of a forensic specialist in nursing, not a nursing specialist in
criminal justice." That's a distinction important to families who lost loved ones in the
attacks of Sept. 11. Communication and compassion "Human consolation is not an objective of criminal investigation.
But it is of nursing," Lynch said. "It's one of the things we
do best." Forensic nurses, as part of a death investigation team, are able to speak
medical language and interpret physicians' notes and medical records in
ways that police officers cannot. Nurses are adept at taking death notifications off the doorstep, Lynch
said. "We're taught to reach out and touch," and are prepared
to offer on-the-spot grief counseling. "We are the only discipline
that brings this gift of communication and compassion to the science."
©NurseWeek Publishing
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