Wednesday, October 3, 2018
A quick out and cheap blogger trick, but still
I gave a talk this week about the 5-year toboggan ride that Jeanne and I took, from her initial diagnosis of Mild Cognitive Impairment in 2010, through her decline from Alzheimer's to her death in January, 2016. It's a love story I will return to.
As luck always has it, the latest New Yorker features an article about dementia by Larissa MacFarquhar. In it, MacFarquhar explores a basic question - what does it mean to lie to someone with dementia?
I need to think about that one. In the meantime, you can watch a 5-minute video interview with the author here (pictured above, starts with a commercial), and find the article at the New Yorker website here.
Monday, October 1, 2018
Saturday, September 22, 2018
Wise words for the weekend
At the Cabot Theater, Beverly MA.
Her work at this exhibit changed my life...
More about Rachel Perry
More about SMFA at Tufts
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Uniquely nursing
One of the personal/professional highlights of my summer was the chance to attend a 'think tank for nurse activists' at UMass/Amherst, organized by Peggy Chin and colleagues. There, I met and worked with over 50 colleagues from across the US and Canada, joined together by the need to "do something" in our respective specialties.
Peggy and colleagues have also just launched nursology.net - "a web site for nurse scholars, developed and maintained by nurse scholars... a repository for resources about nursing conceptual models, grand theories, middle-range theories, and situation-specific theories, and associated methodologies."
Their timing could not be better.
Elaine has just started an 18-month RN-to-baccalaureate program, and one of her first assignments is to identify and describe the nursing theory that best expresses her own philosophy of nursing. As an AD graduate from 25 years ago, she's not familiar with the concept of formal nursing theory or philosophy as addressed in academia, though her practice is most certainly grounded in what Anne Kibrick calls "intelligent caring." Among her other skills and qualifications, she's board-certified in her specialty, and I'm writing this from a hotel room in Columbus, Ohio while she attends the annual scientific meeting of the Association for Vascular Access.
I took several courses before bailing on my grad school plans, including one on nursing theory, and though the subject first seemed unconnected from the real world for me, I soon dug in to the notion that all of us hang our practice on some theoretical framework, no matter how shaky.
The approach that made the most sense to me was 'Nursing as Caring,' a theory developed by Anne Boykin and Savina Schoenhofer. Here's a good overview, though it appears the blog is not currently maintained. **NOTE:link removed.
The core message behind the think tank and nursology is simple - nursing is a unique discipline that blends scientific understanding with an appreciation for humanism. We aren't assistant doctors, passive observers, expendable help, or "angels," though each of these views often seeps into the public's consciousness, or even our own.
As one example of the latter, Peggy and colleagues analyzed current nursing literature - articles in rigorous nursing journals - and found that a substantial portion of them did not cite other nurse authors or work. WTAF?!?
So, whether you're deep into academia, considering grad school or that undergraduate degree that was supposed to be the entry level for practice 50 years ago, check out nursology. I'm going to tell Elaine when she gets back from today's sessions.
Monday, September 17, 2018
At the museum...
The Mirror, 1978, lithograph
George Tooker, American, 1920-2011
Columbus Museum of Art
Museum purchase, Derby Funds
from the Phillip J. and Suzanne Schiller
Collection of American Social Commentary Art 1930-1970
from the Phillip J. and Suzanne Schiller
Collection of American Social Commentary Art 1930-1970
Friday, August 31, 2018
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Between Atul Gawande and the Barbecue
to get to this guy...
Keeping up with Jeanne - our walk with Alzheimer’s
Jerry Soucy, RN, CHPN is an expert nurse certified in palliative care and hospice. His clinical experience includes critical care, hemodialysis, and care at end of life. He was Jeanne’s primary caregiver through her decline and death. He practices at Death Nurse LLC, based in Concord, MA.
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