
Courtesy
of Hospice of Michigan
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| "it
is better for someone to go on to the service before
they're on their last breath so we can provide them
with the opportunity to experience life," said
Bonnie Topper (left), RN, Hospice of Michigan. |
When people discover that Yolanda Segura, RN, works
at Texas Children's Cancer Center, they often tell her
she must have the hardest job in the world.
"I hear that all the time, but it's not as morbid
as you'd think it would be," said Segura, who has
worked on the oncology unit at Texas Children's Hospital
for 10 years.
One patient suffered a relapse of leukemia when she
was 17. The girl endured a round of chemotherapy that
sent her into remission. Next, she underwent a bone
marrow transplant, but she developed complications that
kept her in the hospital for months.
Segura met the girl when she started coming in for
checkups, which started as weekly visits that gradually
dropped off to annual trips. These days, the young woman
is back on the cancer unit, this time on the other side
of the needle-working as a nurses assistant, Segura
said.
"Working with chronic kids, you get to see outcomes,"
Segura said. "It's very rewarding to know I am
making a difference in somebody's life and to see them
overcome the disease."
Medical advances in leukemia treatment mean that more
of Segura's patients leave the hospital and go on to
send their high school graduation invitations, wedding
and even baby announcements.
She and other nurses who work with chronically ill
patients are on the cusp of an evolving field. Science
has added years to the lives of people who have diseases
including leukemia, lung cancer, diabetes and HIV. For
nurses, these medical developments mean they need to
provide even more-and often complicated-services for
their patients.
Joan Schneider, RN, works with HIV patients at Sister
Mary Philippa Health Center in San Francisco's St. Mary's
Medical Center. She has seen a turnaround in the ability
to treat her people since the mid-1990s, when antiretroviral
therapy became available.
"It's pleasant to see patients do well as opposed
to being admitted to the hospital and going downhill
and losing them," she said. Instead of watching
her patients die, Schneider sees them getting older
and becoming prone to the same diseases as the rest
of the aging population, such as high blood pressure.
A patient on antiretroviral medications-the drug cocktails
prescribed to people with HIV who have low T-cell counts-is
treated no differently than any other patient facing
newly diagnosed illnesses, she said.
The only medical difference between her patients and
those who do not have HIV, she said, is that the clinic
is extra vigilant in checking for potential problems
in its patients who have a low T-cell count, such as
giving biannual Pap smears to women to check for cervical
dysplasia, for example.
Because Schneider's patients get well, they require
more help with social service issues. The nurses work
with social workers to help clients make the transition
back into healthy living, which includes getting off
disability payments, locating new housing or finding
psychiatric resources.
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