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Deborah Washington, PhD, RN

Deborah Washington, PhD, RN

Narratives of Diversity, a one-day interactive conference and writing workshop focused on issues of diversity and marginalization in nurses’ personal, professional, and academic lives, will be held tomorrow, Tuesday, June 25, at Hunter College.  There are still a few spaces available, so you can register online or in person at the door. Walk-ins are encouraged to attend.

Participants will gain experience in using reflective writing as a way of processing emotionally charged events to reduce stress and burnout. CHMP poet-in-residence Joy Jacobson and senior fellow Jim Stubenrauch will guide participants through exercises involving prompted writing, reading, and sharing of stories concerning diversity and marginalization. We will also explore strategies for bringing a raised awareness of diversity and marginalization to one’s community, workplace, or school.

The keynote speaker will be Deborah Washington, PhD, RN, director of diversity for patient care services at Massachusetts General Hospital and a clinical instructor at the MGH Institute School of Nursing. In an interview, Dr. Washington said, “The advantage of working with a diverse workforce is that you work with people who understand specific cultures, beliefs, and attitudes. This translates into better patient care and a greater sense of satisfaction from patients and families with that care.”

All nurses—clinicians, faculty, researchers, administrators, and students—at all levels of writing skill and experience are welcome.

Narratives of Diversity will be held on Tuesday, June 25, from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM in the Faculty Dining Room at Hunter College (68th Street Campus), 695 Park Avenue, New York City. Participants will be awarded 7 CE contact hours. The cost is $165 (includes continental breakfast; lunch on your own); the cost for students (with valid ID) is $99. Group discounts are available at $125/person for groups of 6 or more from one institution.

Registration: By phone: 212.650.3850
On the Web: https://ceweb.hunter.cuny.edu/cers/CourseBrowse.aspx
Enter course code: NARDIV

[caption id="attachment_6383" align="alignleft" width="220"] Deborah Washington, PhD,

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The first thing you need to know is that Texas House member Jodi Laubenberg (R) sits on the  Public Health Committee.

The second, this quote by her was reported in the Daily Kos by Brainwrap.

This statement is dangerous and ill-informed.

Rep. Laubenberg contact any one of the thousands of registered professional nurses certified as a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner. S/he will inform you what occurs during this forensic examination. Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANE) are registered nurses who have completed specialized education and clinical preparation in the medical forensic care of the patient who has experienced sexual assault or abuse.

Rep. Jodi Laubenberg you are obligated to educate yourself  on the care of victims of sexual assault.

Until then, please remove yourself from further conversations about their care.

 

 

 

 

The first thing you need to know

This guest post is written by Ashly E Jordan, a DPH Candidate at the City University of New York.

Ashley JordanIt was a relatively small abscess at the base of Angel’s wrist. Angel lived in an abandoned building in Southwest Detroit. Angel was a long-term drug user.  Angel was a citizen, but had little schooling and was predominately non-English speaking. She was born in and grew up in Chicago. Angel came to the syringe exchange program where I was working, and presented with the abscess. We referred her to the nearest clinic, which in this impoverished neighborhood was almost an hour’s walk. Such abscesses are common in drug injectors and can generally be treated easily and inexpensively as an outpatient.  Angel did not have a car, and did not have bus fare. She did walk to the clinic, only to be turned away. While Angel had Illinois Medicaid, the clinic would not see her because they saw patients only with Michigan Medicaid. She had previous bad experiences with perceived discrimination and stigmatization in other care settings, and being turned away felt normal. She did not know she had other options. Angel was soon admitted to the hospital and was found to have an infection that had spread to her blood (she had “sepsis”). She required a month long hospitalization, and two surgeries on her arm before she was eventually released alive but with enormous permanent scars on her arm. Angel had health insurance and would be considered by many to have “health care access,” however due to multi-level barriers including stigmatization, lack of transportation, arcane insurance restrictions and regulations, to her own learned fatalism, Angel’s inexpensively and easily treatable abscess came to require a month-long hospital stay with both worse clinical outcomes and vastly greater societal expense.

This guest post is written by Ashly E Jordan, a DPH Candidate at the City University of New York.

Ashley JordanIt was a relatively small abscess at the base of Angel’s wrist. Angel lived in an abandoned building in Southwest Detroit. Angel was a long-term drug user.  Angel was a citizen, but had little schooling and was predominately non-English speaking. She was born in and grew up in Chicago. Angel came to the syringe exchange program where I was working, and presented with the abscess. We referred her to the nearest clinic, which in this impoverished neighborhood was almost an hour’s walk. Such abscesses are common in drug injectors and can generally be treated easily and inexpensively as an outpatient.  Angel did not have a car, and did not have bus fare. She did walk to the clinic, only to be turned away. While Angel had Illinois Medicaid, the clinic would not see her because they saw patients only with Michigan Medicaid. She had previous bad experiences with perceived discrimination and stigmatization in other care settings, and being turned away felt normal. She did not know she had other options. Angel was soon admitted to the hospital and was found to have an infection that had spread to her blood (she had “sepsis”). She required a month long hospitalization, and two surgeries on her arm before she was eventually released alive but with enormous permanent scars on her arm. Angel had health insurance and would be considered by many to have “health care access,” however due to multi-level barriers including stigmatization, lack of transportation, arcane insurance restrictions and regulations, to her own learned fatalism, Angel’s inexpensively and easily treatable abscess came to require a month-long hospital stay with both worse clinical outcomes and vastly greater societal expense.