Power of One Voice
Newly elected ANA president shares her thoughts about nursing-and her hope
By Kay Bensing, MA, RN
Advance For Nurses
When you throw your hat into the ring as a candidate for president of the American Nurses Association (ANA), it's not a decision you make on a whim. Why would you aspire to lead the profession now, as it grapples with the most critical national nursing shortage ever, when uniting 2.7 million nurses toward a common goal is no easier than it's ever been, and when the organization's membership is declining steadily? To take on these challenges, you would need a strong sense of self, proven leadership skills, years of experience and an understanding of the daily struggles of your colleagues. You would have to believe that you can rally the troops to have renewed pride in their profession, thus motivating them to get involved in issues that affect their patients, their practice and the future of nursing.
Expert in Public Policy Barbara A. Blakeney, MS, APRN,BC, ANP, elected ANA president in June, believes she is well suited for the job. Recently, ADVANCE posed a number of questions to the leader who represents the largest group of health care professionals in the country. She spoke candidly about the membership issue and how to attract more nurses to join their professional organization.
A practicing nurse for 32 years, Blakeney most recently served as director of health services for the homeless at the Boston Public Health Commission. Previously, she was the principal public health nurse for homeless services and addiction services at the Division of Public Health, Department of Health and Hospitals in Boston. Additionally, she was primary care nurse practitioner with Amherst (MA) Medical Associates and at Boston City Hospital. Blakeney, an expert in public health, health care policy and leadership development, has been active in ANA for years, serving on national committees and holding the offices of first and second vice president. She has received numerous awards for her leadership abilities and public health contributions from ANA, other nursing associations and community groups that she has served.
Seeking Common Ground:
In its annual listing of the top 100 most powerful people in health care today, Modern Healthcare recently ranked Blakeney No. 34 on the list. Then, after being on the job just a few weeks, she traveled to President Bush's recent economic summit in Waco, TX. There, she shared the spotlight with other experts in discussing implementation of the recently passed Nurse Reinvestment Act and key factors ANA believes will help to mitigate the shortage-access to academic opportunities, scholarship and loan repayment programs, plus scholarships for nurses who want to earn advanced degrees that would qualify them to teach. Asked which of her many transferable skills would be most helpful in her new position, Blakeney didn't hesitate for a moment.
While she credits her experience in providing population-based programs for those in need to be a plus, she sees her ability to bring people together as her strongest suit. "I always look for a common ground," she said. "Too often, we look at what's different in people, instead of looking at what we have in common." She explained that looking for similarities doesn't negate the need for diversity in nursing. "There's a lot of common ground in nursing. There are many issues that all of us have tremendous stakes in and I would like to see us focus on these. The reality is we have a galvanizing issue in front of us-the crisis in nurse staffing and the nursing shortage. We need to focus a great deal of our time to find short-term and long-term solutions to these problems."
The ANA:
A Generational Concern Addressing the subject of ANA's declining membership, Blakeney doesn't hedge. She believes that one of the reasons for nurses not joining their professional organization is generational. "I don't know that nursing organizations or any organizations in general have begun the process of refining their message and how they do business to attract younger members of our society. This is certainly an issue with nursing. "ANA is always interested in making sure our message is current and relevant. But to be relevant, you have to demonstrate it. If no one knows what you're doing, then you're irrelevant." Blakeney believes ANA needs to strengthen its communication ability with the state affiliates, then support them to do the same with their members. "We need to give people information that they can look at in a few minutes and then give them the resources where they can explore issues more deeply," she said. "Rethinking how we get information out to nurses is critical."
Broadest-Based Organization:
Another issue related to ANA's declining membership, according to the president, is that when nurses in specialty practice consider how much time and resources they have to devote to nursing organizations, they choose to support their specialty. "We want to continue to encourage nurses to support their specialty organization, but we also want people to recognize that the work of the profession as opposed to practice issues gets done in organizational frameworks. ANA is the broadest-based organization in the country, representing the broadest-based thinking on issues," Blakeney said. "It's great to support your specialty, but we want you to support your profession as a whole-and that means ANA," she concluded. Is it puzzling to Blakeney that only 6 percent of practicing nurses have gotten the message that ANA is their voice, speaking on behalf of their interests? "It is surprising, but it's also a recognition that nurses are struggling every day to do practice well, and at the end of the day they know in their hearts that they haven't been able to do the right thing for their patients," she reflected.
Short-Term Solutions:
In a recently published study, researcher Julie Sochalski, PhD, RN, documented that new nurses are leaving the profession much faster than their predecessors and men are leaving twice as fast as women. ANA's Nursing's Agenda for the Future is a comprehensive plan to develop long-term strategies that deal with the many facets of the problem. However, as the exodus of new nurses continues, does ANA have short-term solutions? "One of the short-term solutions that we need to continue to support and push is Magnet recognition," the highest recognition for nursing excellence awarded by the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC). "The number of hospitals applying for this recognition is skyrocketing these days. "We believe that hospitals that not only meet the ANCC guidelines but implement them as well are good places for nurses to work.
These facilities empower nurses and they have a significant say in how practice occurs. We know that turnover rates are lower in Magnet hospitals, and that the environment in general is better." Better Mentoring Programs Critical to retaining new graduate nurses is how young people are mentored, according to Blakeney. "This mentoring should not only be directed to new grads but to young people who are looking for second careers. We have an opportunity to build a new cadre of nurses who come from different disciplines. They have career skills and life experiences that make them valuable to the profession. "We have a variety of folks who might value a career in nursing. There are traditional and non-traditional students, and we need to focus on both groups simultaneously," she acknowledged.
Grading the Media:
Grading the media on its efforts to educate the public about nursing and the shortage, Blakeney candidly noted that to some extent media coverage of the shortage has been uneven. "In some cases, the experts that the media identifies are not the real experts-nurses," she said, adding that the so-called experts sometimes featured in coverage tend to speak only on the economic issues related to the shortage. "The bottom line is that when nurses look at what they need to practice well, you will hear the vast majority of them talking about their practice environment and the difficulties in it. "Sure, they'll be talking about money, but they're going to be talking about physicians who can sometimes be outrageous; how they have to deal with violence in the workplace; the reality of mandatory overtime; and being floated to clinical areas where their expertise is not where it should be to provide safe care."
The Invisible Nurse:
"Money has to do with attracting and retaining competent nurses. But the bottom line is if the nurse isn't there, it's almost like Jimmy Stewart in It's a Wonderful Life. His character had the opportunity to see what his life would have been like if he hadn't been there. If a nurse isn't at the bedside, then she doesn't see the ventilator patient getting into trouble and she can't fix it before it becomes an incident. "Much of what a nurse does is invisible, in that she prevents something from happening. Because she's at the bedside, incidents don't happen. We take this for granted. Take the nurse out of the equation, and things do happen," said Blakeney, who believes nurses need to educate the media about these reality-based issues.
The new ANA president praised the recent Johnson & Johnson marketing campaign that highlighted diversity in nursing. However, she believes that more community outreach programs that introduce junior and senior high school students to nursing and provide academic counseling are needed to fulfill this goal. High on Blakeney's wish list for ANA-sponsored programs is that district associations, within the state organizations, will take on projects that encourage young people to become nurses.
Power of One Voice:
"I would like to leave as my legacy what I call the power of one voice," she summarized. "This means one strong voice for nursing. It doesn't mean that we all agree and that we are all in lockstep. It means that our common ground is so powerful and so clearly recognized that we speak with one common voice. It means that we have a common frame of reference to address the problems nursing faces."........... http://www.advancefornurses.com/NWoe_1.html