The contribution Australian nurses can make

Posted on Jan 09, 2009 under xn--zqqs84h3is.com | edit
  • What contribution do Australian nurses make for the community towards enhancing family health and wellbeing, reducing factors that damage health and strengthening a family's ability for self-care and coping.


  • Well done shananigans this is most helpful. Cheers Tropical


  • Hello to help researchers, do you mean contribution of Australian nurses to the Australian community or U.S. community, private care contribution at nurse level, or government funded (free) from a 'policy' perspective as the nurses are acting on orders from the authorities. regards lot-ga


  • It is what contribution do Australian nurses make for the Australian community towards enhancing family health and well being. "Nurses are always there for you: Caring for families has been declared the theme for the 2002 by the International Council of Nurses [INC]] This will address reducing factors that damage health [eg education etc]and strengthening a family's ability for self-care and coping. http://www.icn.ch/indkit.htm is the ICN site and also The Australian Institute of Family Studies publications will provide a useful background at http://www.alfs.org.au


  • Hi tropical, The contribution of nurses within any society is undoubtedly a large and important one, below is part of a speech made by someone much more important than me who thinks the same thing. *** http://www.rcna.org.au/JohnStanhopeSpeech.html Speech for the Chief Minister Jon Stanhope at a breakfast for International Nurses Day, 7.00am Friday 10 May 2002, at Southern Cross Yacht Club, Mariner Place, Yarralumla Northern Territory Australia - On how nurses serve to enhance family health and well being: "The traditional family as we once knew it has changed dramatically over the last few decades. We now have single parent families, blended families, dual career families, same sex families, families with foster children and an increasing number of families without children. Families have changed in both their structure and function, and continue to change in response to societal trends and other pressures, including the ageing of the population, a decline in birth rates and family size, the changing and blurring of gender roles and technological advances. The effects of poverty and other difficult social, political and economic situations have also impacted severely on the family. And the most extreme end of poverty - homelessness - is a growing problem with grave health and social consequences such as vulnerability to illness, injury and disability. The themes of caring for displaced and refugee families are particularly poignant. We are all acutely aware of the devastation wrought on the families of refugees and the consequent adverse immediate and long term health effects. But regardless of these influences and of the shape and form of today’s family, it has proved to be a resilient institution that is very much alive and kicking. This is due in no small part to the vital role that nurses have played in the health and well-being of the family as a unit the world over. Family care is an inherent and vital part of the nursing role. Historically nurses cared for people at home within the context of the extended family. This concept was overtaken for some time by hospitalisation and specialisation. The return to community based and home care that we see today, and our enhanced understanding of the importance of family relationships in health and illness, is testament to the importance of family focused care." "The International Council of Nurses describes a nine star nurse - a description that recognises the many roles that nurses caring for families frequently play. This role may consist of: health educator; [this is a way that they reduce factors that damage health - shananigans-ga] care provider and supervisor; family advocate; case finder and epidemiologist; researcher; manager and coordinator; counsellor [this strengthen's the family's ability to cope, and teaches them how to deal with (eg) stress and grief 'for future reference'] ; consultant; and environmental modifier. Family care involves a continuum of care across the life span and includes health promotion, disease prevention and detection [and also educating families on how to prevent diseases themselves - eg getting children immunised, sunscreen to prevent skin cancer, breast self-examination - shananigans-ga], intervention, treatment and palliative care. Nurses are involved in all aspects of this care continuum." *** http://www.rcna.org.au/Chapters/ACT/other%20docs/IND%20Heathers%20presentation.html "Nurses always there for you : caring for families" Notes of address by Heather McGregor, ACT Community Advocate "We know that all that makes us feel good happens in families - apart from breathing air and eating food, we have a need to belong ... to a family. But families also provide the context for abuse, sexual and physical and financial - of children - older people - domestic violence - financial exploitation how do we juggle interests within families ? a purist rights based approach doesn't assist in the scenarios I outlined because if we care for families, whose rights do we protect ? thankfully ... my mandate is very clear - it is to make decisions in my client's best interests - to act in their best interests requires that I make decisions which maintain or enhance family relationships - and at the same time I must be concerned about safety, least intrusive interventions, most normalising, consistent with lifestyle - etc - and safety must be a primary concern (principles in guardianship law) My job is about trying to keep a focus on the interests of the patient with impaired decision making ability - they too, are entitled to quality nursing care, comfort and support, quality medical interventions, a second opinion, pain relief, and to die with dignity." Ms McGregor, it would seem, thinks that nurses best care for families by acknowledging that bad things can happen within families, and that the protection of the family unit above all else should not be the way to go. In this sense, for a nurse to 'strengthen a family's ability for self-care and coping' could mean that she encourage a battered woman to remove herself and her children from the 'family' situation. I think this is a valid point - 'caring for families' has to mean the individual members of the family, and not just 'enforcing Liberal Government ideas that the family unit should trump all else'. *** A piece of personal opinion: From the day a child is born, nurses help look after 'the family. Nurses in most cases teach women how to breast feed correctly, and sometimes even how to change a nappy. A nurse may even come home with the family for the first few days to ensure everything gets off to a smooth start. Moreover, throughout the child's development it is nurses who make sure they are gaining weight adequately, who immunise them, and who give stressed-out parents a shoulder to cry on. Nurses provide support to families when one of their members are in hospital, and they often come to schools to teach teenagers about reproductive and sexual health. Nurses care for the elderly, and provide palliative care for those in their last days, all the while providing support to family members who may not know how exactly to deal with the sickness or loss of a loved one. Nurses do a lot toward helping families stay strong, and I think they deserve more recognition for it. Search Terms: +nurses +contribution society family Australia role of nurses Australia family If you require clarification or further information, please do not hesitate to ask. Best wishes, shananigans-ga







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