View this post on my blog: http://travelnursesuccess.com/the-campaign-for-a-national-nurse
Monday, August 9, 2010
The Campaign for a "National Nurse"
"Reprinted with permission. © 2010 HealthLeaders Media, www.healthleadersmedia.com." Rebecca Hendren, for HealthLeaders Media, August 3, 2010A grassroots campaign is underway to create an Office of the National Nurse. The initiative calls for a national nursing leader, similar in stature to the U.S. Surgeon General, who will serve as a figurehead for nurses around the country, and spearhead health prevention efforts.The movement has received much support, and there is legislation now in the U.S. House.I wondered what a national nurse would do and why supporters felt there should be one, so I spoke with Teri Mills, author of the original New York Times op-ed that first suggested the idea back in 2005.Turns out, America already sort of has a national nurse. There is a chief nurse officer at the U.S. Public Health Service, and Mills' proposal is to create an Office of the National Nurse and elevate this CNO to be officially known as "national nurse.""So few people even know the chief nursing officer exists," says Mills. "Even members of Congress do not know this position exists. We would like Congress to have this position be known as the national nurse."Mills is the president of the National Nursing Network Organization, which was founded to campaign for the national nurse initiative. She says the beauty of the position is that the framework already exists and a little effort could make the position a leader in health prevention, working with organizations such as the American Heart Association and National Kidney Association, to improve Americans' health.The chief nurse position is currently part time. Under the legislation, it would become a full time position, with a redefined focus for the bureaucracy that already exists. Mills understands the political realities she faces. "The country has a huge deficit," she says. "Now is not a time to be asking for new money or new bureaucracy. But we have a position already.""We have an incredible epidemic of chronic preventable conditions," adds Mills. Recent healthcare reform legislation includes "money for health promotion and prevention. But we need leadership. What is missing is the messenger."Mills argues that a National Nurse could provide leadership to the nation's 3.4 million nurses to deliver the message of prevention in multiple languages to every American by partnering and strengthening the work of existing groups, including the Office of the Surgeon General."Health education and promotion is the cornerstone of every nurse's practice," says Mills. "Nurses have a really good record in promoting health literacy. The national nurse could inspire and engage nurses to participate in health prevention."The grassroots campaign has been gathering momentum over the last few years. It does not employ professional lobbyists in Washington. Instead, it relies on support from nurses in the field who are slowly spreading the word and debating whether a national nurse can be a unifying voice for the profession. Mills encourages nurses to visit the website to learn more about what she believes a national nurse could accomplish.In the meantime, although the bill has 17 cosponsors, it will likely need another trip through Congress before it gets close to passing. The National Nursing Network Organization is soliciting input from across the healthcare spectrum to craft a bill with the best chance of success.Rebecca Hendren is an editor with HealthLeaders Media. She can be reached at
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archives
-
▼
2010
(2342)
-
►
July
(322)
- Top Of The List For Dropping Out Of High School - ...
- A Man's Desperate Quest for a Kidney Hits Cyberspa...
- States Continue Push For Extension Of Extra Medica...
- Restless Legs Syndrome Appears To Occur Within Fam...
- CDC Confirms Dengue-Fever in Florida
- Stimulus Money Funding Medical Training Courses fo...
- Average ED Wait Times Increase; Some Facilities Ma...
- Alzheimer's Foundation Of America And Second Wind ...
- Also In Global Health News: NIH And Rare Diseases;...
- HHS Awards $9 Million To Train Preventive Medicine...
- Improving Studies Of Cardiac Muscle With New Mathe...
- New Study Shows That U.S. Nurses Believe They Cons...
- Cancer On the Run But Not Conquered
- Health Care Industry And Professionals Respond To ...
- Face transplant recipient makes first public appea...
- Lean Thinking and Healthcare
- The Binky Fairy and Other Lies Parents Tell Kids
- AHRQ State Snapshots Expanded to Include New Data ...
- The Obesity Crisis Continues
- Survey Shows Need For Horse Safety Campaign
- HHS Awards States $88M For Home Visits Programs
- NPS Pharmaceuticals Announces Completion Of Patien...
- Repros Therapeutics Receives Investigational Revie...
- Hospital School Program Helps Demystify Cancer For...
- California's Whooping Cough Outbreak Worst in Half...
- Back pain? Alternative therapies may help
- New therapies slow vision loss in diabetics
- Contextual Errors Often Complicate Medical Care
- Study Links Zinc Nose Sprays, Loss of Smell
- New Method for Predicting IVF Success
- WHO Guidelines Call for Prompt HIV Testing and Tre...
- Low Vitamin D Levels Associated With Increased Ris...
- Drinking Alcohol Temporarily Heightens Stroke Risk...
- Mental Disorders, Substance Abuse Linked to Increa...
- HIV-Positive Women Who Want to Conceive Feel Stigm...
- Online University Schools in Nursing: South Univer...
- What It Takes to Make the Honor Roll of US News' B...
- Six Key Tips For Caregivers Navigating The System ...
- No Link Between Moderate Caffeine Consumption And ...
- Ob-Gyns Issue Less Restrictive VBAC Guidelines
- Vaginal births after C-section usually OK, docs sa...
- La Jolla Institute Teams With Dana-Farber And Wash...
- La Jolla Institute Teams With Dana-Farber And Wash...
- Black Parents Shocked to Give Birth to White Baby ...
- Senate Panel To Focus On Problems At Continuing Ca...
-
►
July
(322)


0 comments:
Post a Comment