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Crit Care Nurse 2008 Jun; 28(3): 12-15

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Editorial

Readers Request Their Own Critical Care Nurse

If you were critically ill, which of your critical care nurse colleagues would you want assigned to your care ?

I posed this question to readers a few months ago1 to stimulate both thoughtful reflection as well as more than tacit recognition that some of us are truly fortunate to work with nurses who epitomize the best in our specialty area. The purpose of raising the question was to move beyond merely acknowledging that a peer is knowledgeable and/or skilled. Although acknowledgments of that nature surely need to be communicated more often than they are, the more immediate impetus was to personalize this distinction so that it reflected the critical care nurse into whose head, heart, and hands you would want your welfare placed.

In addition to that first question, the editorial also asked readers to explain why they requested that particular nurse and, lastly, which attribute of that nurse most influenced their selection. A copy of the "Request for Patient Assignment" appeared with the editorial. Readers then needed to go online to the Critical Care Nurse Web site to submit their request for participation in the survey by January 15 of this year. In addition, they could print a copy of their request so they could personally deliver it.

We received 29 sets of replies to these questions, suggesting that our December issue, which arrives in the midst of the annual holiday season, may not be the opportune time to solicit survey participation. Despite the limited number of participants, however, the respect and admiration revealed in their sentiments are at once touching (in case you thought no one noticed how well you do your critical care nurse thing), inspirational (in case you aspire to one day earn this level of applaud among your peers), and clear (in case you wondered whether the set of important attributes is readily identifiable).

We promised to publish selected results of the survey anonymously, so I’d like to share some of those thoughts here, beginning with the reasons why that particular critical care nurse was requested and then the attribute that most influenced the request for that nurse.

Why I Want Nancy, Joan, Amy, Jan, Liz, Elaine, etc, to Be My Critical Care Nurse

I invite you to read the following commentaries that explain why survey respondents requested the nurse they named. (Selected replies have been edited for anonymity and brevity. All comments received referred to female nurses.)

Which of This Critical Care Nurse’s Attributes Most Influenced the Request?

In an attempt to further narrow the list of attributes that contributed to selection of a particular nurse, we asked readers to identify the attribute that most influenced their request for that nurse. Although many respondents offered multiple rather than single replies, the frequency with which a particular attribute was mentioned was easy to discern.

Top 5 attributes that influenced request (in order of frequency):

Attributes mentioned twice:

Attributes mentioned once:

Although this information was afforded by a tiny sample of Critical Care Nurse readers, it rather strikingly provides a clear vision of what critical care nurses most want of "their nurse" should they ever enter the double doors of their own unit as a patient. Not surprisingly, they seek a caring, competent, compassionate nurse who will advocate for them at all times and under all circumstances, regardless of the weight of their own workload or of the patient’s final outcome. Those are the colleagues these readers admire. Those are the nurses they want assigned to their care. Be one of them.

Reference

  1. Alspach JG. If I am ever critically ill, I want _ to be my nurse. Crit Care Nurse. 2007;27(6):8, 11.[Free Full Text]
Grif Alspach, RN, MSN, EdD
Editor





This Article
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Right arrow Articles by Alspach, G.


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