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NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 05: A general view of atmosphere during American Heart Association's Hands-Only CPR Campaign Launch on June 5, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for American Heart Association)

NEW YORK, NY – JUNE 05: A general view of atmosphere during American Heart Association’s Hands-Only CPR Campaign Launch on June 5, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for American Heart Association)

Barbara Glickstein interviews Tom Maimone, who shares his story. When Tom Maimone collapsed from cardiac arrest during a jog in Palm Beach, Florida, Tom Elowson came to the rescue, performing hands-only CPR to the tune of the Bee Gee’s “Stayin’ Alive,” as he had learned to do on the Today Show from Matt Lauer. Now the American Heart Association has a Hands-Only CPR Mobile Tour, where actress Jennifer Coolidge teaches people the technique of hands-on CPR performed to the beat of “Stayin’ Alive.” Tune in to Healthstyles at wxmrfm.com or wbai.org to hear our interview with Tom Maimone, or listen here. And make sure to check out the Official 2012 Hands-Only CPR Instructional Video!

[caption id="attachment_10088" align="alignleft" width="300"] NEW YORK, NY

CHMP Senior Fellow Nancy Cabelus, DNP, MSN, RN, is an international forensic nurse consultant currently working with Physicians for Human Rights on a program addressing sexual violence in conflict zones in central and east Africa.

nancy-cabelusI have been working for the past couple of weeks in Kenya as a forensic consultant for Physicians for Human Rights (PHR).  PHR’s program on sexual violence in conflict zones hosted a training workshop in Eldoret, one of the largest towns in Kenya. Participants in the workshop represented a cross section of medical- legal professionals and members of civil society who work with sexual violence.  Survivors of sexual violence face many barriers to justice due to weak infrastructures of medical and legal systems. Barriers to justice identified by the training participants include a lack of training of both medical and legal professionals. More specifically, there is an omission of evidence collection and documentation that could lead to better outcomes in a court of law. Corruption also plays a part. In cases of defilement (sexual assault against a child under 18 years of age) the child victim’s family is offered money by the offender rather than facing a guilty charge and a 40- year prison sentence if convicted by a court of law. Doctors report that there is also tampering of hospital medical records. Next of kin to sexual offenders may be working in local hospitals. These hospital workers will ask the doctor to write a favorable medical evaluation rather than document the true medical findings.  Sometimes, medical records mysteriously disappear. Steps have been taken by government hospital officials to ensure that records are kept locked and only designated persons have keys. False testimony in court creates another barrier to justice and frequently witnesses request to be paid for their testimony.

Sexual violence is a daily occurrence in Kenya. Many do not report the incidents because they do not trust the police or the criminal justice system. As a forensic expert on sexual violence in Kenya, I hear these reports and cringe. Allowing a perpetrator to pay off the victims, victim’s families, or witnesses further damages the criminal justice system and also provides the perpetrator with opportunity to re-offend.

CHMP Senior Fellow Nancy Cabelus, DNP, MSN,

Joy Jacobson is the CHMP’s poet-in-resdence. Follow her on Twitter: @joyjaco 

Senior fellow Jim Stubenrauch and I are offering, as a part of the CHMP’s program in Narrative Writing for Health Care Professionals, a weekend of writing for nurses. We’re cosponsoring the conference with the Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing and through them will be able to offer 16.5 continuing nursing education credits. The weekend will be open to nurses, nursing faculty, nurse researchers, and nursing students, giving them an opportunity to explore the power of narrative writing. We’ll write, read aloud, and create what we hope will be an ongoing community of new and experienced writers.

Our goals? Giving nurses new appreciation for their individual and collective voices and new tools for sustaining a writing practice—regardless of whether their writing is scholarly or creative. The cost for the weekend will be $675.

Click here for a detailed brochure and click here to register (under Course Category/Program on the left, click on NURSING and the course description for Telling Stories, Discovering Voice: A Writing Weekend for Nurses/SEMTSDV should appear; click on Show Detail & Register on the right* ).

Over three days, participants will work on writing stories that hold particular meaning for them. We’ll offer them one-on-one coaching sessions, as well as the option of submitting their writing for publication on this blog.

Karen Roush, MS, RN, will provide a keynote address and discussion. She brings extensive experience as a writer, teacher, and nurse to the Scholar’s Voice, where she helps health professionals, particularly nurses, become skilled, confident writers. She is the clinical managing editor of the American Journal of Nursing and a Mary Clark Rockefeller Fellow and PhD candidate in the College of Nursing at New York University. She has had numerous publications, including books, articles in scholarly journals, essays, and poems.

Special rates for attendees have been secured at New York Thompson LES, located at 190 Allen Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, not far from the Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing, where the weekend will take place.*

In addition to writing workshops, we will review the elements of a “healing narrative,” explore the role of narrative in medicine and nursing, and discuss social media as a public-health tool.

Please note that information about registration and hotel accommodations has been updated from an earlier version of this post.

Joy Jacobson is the CHMP's poet-in-resdence. Follow