The Nobel Prize in Nursing

Nurses General Nursing

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The Nobel Prize in Nursing

December 8, 2006 -- Today The Baltimore Sun published "Nurses' achievements merit international recognition," an op-ed by Columbia University nursing professor Kristine Gebbie and Center for Nursing Advocacy executive director Sandy Summers. The op-ed argues that nurses deserve a Nobel Prize or comparable annual award because their leaders have long been at the forefront of health research and clinical practice. They have changed the world by reinventing health systems, pioneering new therapies, and improving community health, from AIDS treatment to neonatal care to pain management. Establishing such a prize would shine a light on the profession's life-saving achievements. It would also help show how important it is that nursing get the clinical and educational resources it needs to overcome the global nursing shortage. The publication of this piece is the culmination of significant effort by the Center. We thank The Baltimore Sun for its openness to new ideas on nursing, and its commitment to publishing the op-ed. And we urge you to read it, think about it, and show it to others. Thank you! See the op-ed...

http://tinyurl.com/yzy4lb

Specializes in Critical Care.
:confused: :confused: :confused:

What do people think our practice in the trenches is based on??? Every time we add information to the way we do a skill (ETOH based hand cleaner to hand washing techniques, for example) it was based on somebody taking the time to do a study, and publish the results in some mag-rag. What is the stuff about "ivory tower" nursing not being involved in the trenches????? Evidenced based is what nursing has been all about ever since the first healer woman stirred up a bark tea, and watched a fever come down. The trenches are the evidentiary proving grounds for the theory!!!

We are all on the same side.

I'm a HUGE fan of evidence based practices. THIS is what our 'core knowledge' should be based upon.

Nursing has well nigh over-embraced its caring art. It's time to focus on our science. Believe me, there will still be enough caring to go around. We don't need to sacrifice one for the other. So, why is our science still decidedly so hidden?

~faith,

Timothy.

Specializes in Vents, Telemetry, Home Care, Home infusion.

there are many awards in nursing:

international:

icn awards and fellowships

national scope:

ana awards program includes ana hall of fame + 13 other awards

fellowship in american academy of nursing

australian nursing awards 2006

state scope:

nightingale awards of pa

pa nursing foundation and pa nurses association awards

njsna: c.a.r.e. awards nomination form

new jersey governor's nursing merit awards

mna nursing awards

canada:state nursing excellence and commitment awards - nursing in victoria

just some of the awards i'm familar with....

having a nobel prize type award is necessary to honor and inspire others to conceive ideas out of the box that benefit mankind and could have global impact.

donna wong phd, rn, pnp, cpn, faan certainly is someone i'd like to see nominated for this type of award.

my pediatric education in 1981 was based on whaley & wong's essentials of pediatric nursing , a new textbook. well i've used that for the past 25 years consulting it for my children's various illnesses & later while summer camp rn. when i joined hospice in 1992, i was educated in wong baker faces pain rating scale and used it for the past 15 years. so my practice has certainly been influenced by donna wong while my patients benefited from her research. my impact may be on 100 persons.

just think of the hundreds of nurses each year who've been educated using her textbook and pain mangement scale + already practicing nurses who then care for patients = thousand's of persons each year affected by just one rn's nursing research.

that level of impact on public health certainly is deserving of award.

thank's donna!

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