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Having attended the National
Council State Board of Nursing annual convention this
month, I was once again reminded of the divisiveness
of the nursing profession and the importance for us,
at all levels of practice, to come together with a
united voice. I know that it seems an impossible
task, but I am a true believer that impossible tasks
are the ones we have chosen not to
make a priority for solution. As I sat in on
meetings I heard another group advocate that a BSN
should be the minimum requirement for "professional"
nursing (RNs). I heard another group say LPNs
should not be allowed to expand their scope of practice.
A committee report to the council suggested how CNAs
should be delegated to in nursing practice.
Finally, the worst of this divisiveness I saw was
when one state announced they had just opened a new
diploma school of nursing and the outbreak of emotional
responses was quite unprofessional to say the best.
As I looked at all the happenings, it occurred to
me that we risk yet another "turf battle"
in the near future as advanced practice nurses expand
in numbers. Will the next battle we see be these
APRNs fighting to keep RNs from expanding their roles
unless they obtain advanced degrees? Well if
our history continues unchecked, I'd be willing to
guarantee it will happen.
As noted above, at one
of the breakout sessions, a relatively new association
joined with the ANA and stated that the minimum education
level for a registered nurse must be a BSN.
I spoke with that organization's president after the
session ended, making a simple point. When organizations
make these blanket statements, without forwarding
a plan that addresses the concerns of the majority
of RNs who do not have a BSN, such agendas
can only be damaging to the profession. What
is your plan for ADNs, diploma nurses, LPNs, and nursing
assistants? Are they just to be swept under
the rug, or will they be given grants to continue
their education? More importantly, can any group
attain "professional" status, recognition
and pay without having a group or group that helps
them deliver service to their clients. All the
"professions" have individuals, not as well-trained
but capable and competent, who help deliver their
professional service to their clients. For example,
attorneys depend on para-legals, business executives
depend on executive assistants, and physicians depend
on physician assistants and nurse practitioners, and
the list goes on.
Some will tell you that
it's important to have laundry lists of what certain
levels of nurse can and cannot do within their "scope
of practice". In my opinion, this can do
nothing but hurt us as a profession. First of
all, we do it more to protect our "turf"
than to protect the public. Little if any research
backs the creation, validity, or necessarily of these
laundry lists. LPNs doing IV therapy!
Who would have ever thought. Well, if nursing
didn't progress, RNs would still not be taking blood
pressures, let alone doing IV therapy. We must
realize that we are in a dynamic and rapidly growing
industry. As knowledge and capabilities expand,
so too must the knowledge and capabilities of all
practitioners of nursing, regardless of their educational
level. Don't buy in to any group that tells
you a certain level of training is necessary to provide
a skilled service to patients in any setting.
Nursing schools at all levels train and educate their
graduates to meet minimum competency to begin practice.
It is with years of experience, ongoing education,
and dedication that we become experts in any facet
of our profession.
Yes, regulators must provide
nurses with a "scope of practice", but these
legal documents must be written to allow for our profession's
ever-expanding roles. Many states use broad
statements that meet these criteria and these scopes
of practice documents should be adopted by the NCBSN
as model regulations for all states. Let's not
set ourselves up to fail just when the need for nurses
will be its greatest since World War II.
Let me address briefly
the who, what, where, when, why and how of all this.
Who should
be involved in finding solutions to this problem? All nurses, RNs, LPNs, and CNAs should
be invited to become involved in addressing the issues
and creating a direction for the nursing profession.
I'm sure most would agree that registered nurse should
lead the way, but answers that are derived by exclusive
groups rather than inclusive groups will only continue
to divide our numbers and whittle down our ability
to determine our own fate.
What do we
need to do to effectively address these issues?
The answer, in my opinion is both obvious and simple.
A new council needs to be created, comprised of representatives
from all the major nursing associations and groups.
It would have members at all levels of the nursing
practice. Its members would serve as "ambassadors"
for their organization. Collectively they should
create recommendations and position papers that can
be taken back to their respective organizations with
strong recommendations for adoption.
Where do you
go to help make such positive and effective change
begin?
It is important for you to begin a dialogue with your
professional association and insist that nursing's
future be in the hands of front line nurses.
Talk with your colleagues and get a nursing running
nursing.
When do we
need to get started? As you might well imagine, the present
is the very best opportunity for nurses and nursing
to achieve every dream any of has ever had for our
profession. The good news is we have a window
of several years to get it all accomplished; however,
we cannot wait for the impending nursing crisis to
worsen to a point where lawmakers will take our professional
destiny out of our hands and put it in the hands of
the reactionary!
Why is this
important? Because regulation of nursing practice
is first and foremost a legislative matter, it is
important for nurses to end divisiveness and speak
with one voice so that we can be an effective lobby.
Currently we have too many associations, representing
too many sub-interests, often in total disagreement
with one another. The foundation for most of
this are "turf battles" I addressed earlier.
In order to be effective in lobbying both legislatures
and regulators, nursing must speak with a united voice.
How do you
get involved and make it all happen? First and foremost, you must get involved
with at least one of the major nursing associations.
The broader the representation of the association
the better and more likely that such initiatives can
be advance within the group. These initiatives
must be inclusive, not exclusive and they must create
a model of nursing practice that can be advanced on
a national basis. It must be an initiative endorsed
and embraced by the majority of nurses at all levels
of training and experience.
I know you may be thinking
that I believe in perfection (I would have used the
word utopia, but there is no need for nurses in utopia).
Well, maybe I dream that such a place could and should
exist; after all, I am a nurse. However; I also
understand reality. One reality that we must
all be aware of is a simple fact: a very small percentage
of nurses, many of whom have little or no recent clinical
nursing experience are guiding our profession.
They have supported a divisive environment created
in 1965, and they have failed to deliver what is best
for nurses, nursing, and the public at large.
We must all become more involved with our professional
associations, we must join our professional associations,
we must hold them accountable to our wishes.
Associations are nothing but micro-politics of democracy.
As long as we let the minority of nurses represent
the whole, the majority will always feel and be disenfranchised.
Make the associations work for you and your profession.
Join in, encourage your colleagues to join.
Become involved and speak-up for a solidarity among
all nurses, of all levels. There will always
be a need for nursing, let's make it one mighty and
powerful voice.
This is the first in a series of articles
that I will be publishing on this subject.
If you'd like to send me feedback, input, or your
own op-ed, please feel free to so. To e-mail
me
.
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