Re-Released from May 14, 2010
Center for Innovation and Leadership in Education holding International Conference October 2015 for Well Being in Health Care Professions
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Norwood Hospital RNs and Supporters to Hold a “Help Nurses Care for the Community” Rally 4/1
Norwood Hospital RNs and Supporters to Hold a “Help Nurses Care for the Community” Rally 4/1
Massachusetts Nurses Association Press Release, 3/30/15
Contact Information | Media Center
MEDIA ADVISORY
Norwood Hospital RNs and Supporters to Hold a “Help Nurses Care for the Community” Rally on Wednesday, April 1
Residents, friends, patients, and community leaders
invited to join in to show their support
One area of great concern to the RNs is the low number of staff nurses who are available to care for community members who are admitted to the hospital. To make due, exhausted nurses often work hours beyond their shifts or work extra unscheduled shifts.
According to Kathy Reardon, RN, co-chair of the MNA bargaining unit at Norwood Hospital, “We are coming together with our friends and supporters in the community to say, be fair to those who care. This is our community hospital, it is a precious resource and it’s up to all of us to defend, protect and advance the quality of care and the mission of our hospital.”
Says Joe Cavanaugh, RN, “When I grew up next door in Westwood, nobody wanted to come to Norwood Hospital. That was years ago. We worked hard to make this a hospital to be proud of. I’m proud when friends ask me if I’m working in the E.R. tonight, because they’re going to bring their kid in. We want to make sure this keeps being a place we can be proud of.”
Joan Ballantyne, RN, co-chair of the MNA bargaining unit at the hospital, also commented on the relationship with the community. “We are holding this rally because the community needs to protect this hospital. We have to make sure it remains healthy and that we caregivers are capable of providing the best care.”
Hispanic Nurses Find New Book to Advocate for Their Profession, Says Healthcare Communications Specialist Candy Campbell
CONCORD, Calif., Nov. 25, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — Hispanic nurses have a new tool to advocate for their profession. With the book, “Mi Mama Es Una Enfermera” (ISBN: 0984238522), Healthcare Communication Specialist Candy Campbell, DNPc, RN, CNL, seeks to help show children what a rewarding profession nursing can be.
“Right now, per the 2012 Census Bureau estimates, only 3.6% of the 3 million US nurses are Hispanic, compared to 17% of the total population,” Campbell states. “However, according to the U.S. 2012 Bureau of Labor, there will be an additional 580,000 jobs in nursing by 2018. We need more nurses, across the board, for sure, ” adds Campbell, who holds an Assistant Professor post at University of San Francisco’s School of Nursing and Health Professions.
“As a profession, Hispanic nurses are a minority. America needs more nurses, and America needs more Hispanic nurses, ASAP! Hopefully, this book takes a small step in that direction,” Campbell says, “It would make a great gift to inspire children to a positive career choice of helping others as a nurse.”
She envisioned the original, English version of this book while searching for a baby-shower gift for one of her colleagues. “I was looking for a picture-book about the nursing profession that was informative, fun, and maybe had a little something special on each page, kind of like the classic, “Goodnight Moon.” Unfortunately, there just wasn’t anything available.”
Fortunately, Campbell, who also has an award-winning documentary film to her credit (Micropremature Babies: How Low Can You Go?), was used to creative challenges. “I started to complain about not being able to find such a book, when it hit me. Aha! Sounds like my next must-do project.”
“Mi Mama Es Una Enfermera” is a non-fiction book for ages 0-8, where children from many cultures are introduced to some of the important and exciting work nurses do through playful text and whimsical illustrations.
“It’s really cute, if I do say so,” quips the author, “thanks to some wonderful artwork by Michael Vincent Fusco, who patiently put up with my nitpicking. Readers, young and not-so-young, have been very enthusiastic about it. This Spanish version was suggested by a colleague, who said it would be a gift to the community.”
Curious readers can look into this delightful picture book on Amazon.com.
For more information, visit http://candycampbell.com or call 925-207-1376.
About Candy Campbell
Candy Campbell (also known as Candy the Nurse) is an author, filmmaker, actor, and speaker who specializes in healthcare communications. As a passionate proponent of maternal-child health and public health policy issues, she serves on the Editorial Advisory Board for two consumer magazines from the Association of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses (AWHONN), and volunteers as a public health advocate through the American Nurses’ Association of CA. An adjunct professor at CSU Eastbay, she also donates a portion of the proceeds of each of her books (and the film, Micropremature Babies: How Low Can You Go?) to the March of Dimes, for whom she serves as a media spokesperson in Northern CA.
National Rural Accountable Care Consortium Announces New Webinar: Rural Strategy: ACO’s or CIN’s?
Press Release:
NEVADA CITY, Calif., March 6, 2015 /PRNewswire/ – The National Rural Accountable Care Consortium is hosting a webinar to explore rural healthcare strategy with a discussion of Accountable Care Organizations (ACO’s) and Clinically Integrated Networks (CIN’s). The free webinar (http://www.nationalruralaco.com/events-webinar-aco-cin.shtml link no longer active) is scheduled for Tuesday, March 24, 2015 at 3 pm ET (12 noon PT). There is no charge to participate and pre-registration is not required. To join the webinar, log in via www.readytalk.com, 303.248.0285 , Participant Code 5004777.
National Rural Accountable Care Consortium Chief Transformation Officer and webinar leader Lynn Barr says that this webinar will provide much needed insight on this important topic for rural providers, laying the foundation for future population health payments.
Barr explains, “Rural providers are being asked to join Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) and Clinically Integrated Networks (CINs) at a record pace. However, many people are confused about whether they should join an ACO or a CIN. The reality is that most rural ACOs are CINs, which both provide a development platform to create a high value primary, tertiary and specialty network.”
She adds that the webinar (http://www.nationalruralaco.com/events-webinar-aco-cin.shtml link no longer active) will help rural providers better understand the difference between the two, and offer recommendations on how to approach these relationships.
ABOUT THE NATIONAL RURAL ACCOUNTABLE CARE CONSORTIUM
The Consortium is an affiliation of rural providers who are moving toward new models of care delivery that implement coordinated, patient-centered care to improve the quality of life for their communities and reduce avoidable healthcare spending. It provides educational resources and learning networks for existing ACO’s and future ACO applicants. Membership is open to all interested parties, at no cost or obligation. To learn more about the Consortium, visit http://www.NationalRuralACO.com.
MEDIA CONTACT:
Lynn Barr, MPH
Founder
National Rural Accountable Care Consortium
916.500.4777
Email
OR
Dianne Newton-Shaw
Placemaking Group on behalf of the Consortium
510.835.7900, ext. 206
Email
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