The sixth part of this webinar series focused on the unique role of NPs in mitigating burn-out in the clinical setting. The presentation included an interactive conversation on the NP role and how NPs are supporting and creating cultures of resiliency within a care team.
Presented by:
The Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency webinar series is produced by the Pennsylvania Action Coalition (PA-AC), in partnership with the Pennsylvania Organization of Nurse Leaders (PONL) and the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium (NNCC).
Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency Webinar Series
With the dramatic growth of the Latino older adult population, Alzheimer’s poses a serious threat to the health and economic well-being of the Latino community. In fact, by 2030, nearly 40% of Americans living with Alzheimer's will be Latino or African American.
This webinar provided an overview of the latest science related to health disparities in Alzheimer’s impacting Latino families, including lagging detection and inaccessible research. Health and advocacy experts discussed opportunities for promoting culturally tailored brain health education in communities and in healthcare practices. The webinar culminated in a call to action related to filling brain health knowledge gaps among Latino-serving providers who work on the frontlines of the growing Alzheimer’s crisis in underserved communities.
Presented by:
The Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency webinar series is produced by the Pennsylvania Action Coalition (PA-AC), in partnership with the Pennsylvania Organization of Nurse Leaders (PONL) and the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium (NNCC).
Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency Webinar Series
Register for Part Six: The Unique Role of the NP to Mitigate Burn-Out in the Clinical Setting scheduled Wednesday, August 12, 2020, 3:00 pm ET
In this episode, we learn how nurses play a key role in helping families develop safe sleep practices for their babies to prevent SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) and SUID (Sudden Unexpected Infant Death). We speak to Devon George, who has a nursing background and is the Director of Education Outreach at Cribs for Kids. This Pittsburgh based organization has been a national leader in the effort to promote and institute safe sleep practices, along with creating systems to provide families in need with free or low-cost portable cribs.
Visit Cribs for Kids to learn more about their efforts and to access educational materials.
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The third webinar in this series included interactive presentations and a panel discussion on the following:
The Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency webinar series is produced by the Pennsylvania Action Coalition (PA-AC), in partnership with the Pennsylvania Organization of Nurse Leaders (PONL) and the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium (NNCC).
Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency Webinar Series
In this special episode, we speak to Ana Pichardo, a recent BSN graduate from LaSalle University and a full-time certified Spanish-speaking medical interpreter at Temple University Hospital in North Philadelphia.
Ana shares with us the impact the pandemic has had on her family, nursing education, her work as an interpreter, and the way it has shifted her approach to health care. Specifically, health care workers and institutions need to recognize racism as a public health crisis in order to eliminate the health care inequalities occurring every day.
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The second part of this webinar series focuses on strategies for nurse managers to use in supporting their nursing workforce in developing moral resiliency. This presentation included an interactive conversation on how to navigate emotional, personal, and logistical struggles, and strategies to employ as a nurse manager to institutionalize a culture of resiliency. This webinar was led by Cynda Hylton Rushton PhD, RN, FAAN, Anne and George L. Bunting Professor of Clinical Ethics, Berman Institute of Bioethics/School of Nursing, and Professor of Nursing and Pediatrics at Johns Hopkins University.
The Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency webinar series is produced by the Pennsylvania Action Coalition (PA-AC), in partnership with the Pennsylvania Organization of Nurse Leaders (PONL) and the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium (NNCC).
Institutionalizing a Culture of Moral Resiliency Webinar Series
This story is the second of two episodes that focus on refugee healthcare and how nurses are improving their healthcare experience. In this episode, we travel to Lancaster, Pennsylvania to get a first-hand look at the city’s system for delivering care to refugees and how community stakeholders collaborate to address public health issues among refugees. We also learn about the challenges and rewards of delivering care to refugees and hear from nurses about the enormity of the responsibility they feel to deliver effective, culturally congruent care to patients who have endured so much.
For more information about the Lancaster community health centers mentioned in this episode, please visit the links below:
Community Health at Penn Medicine, Lancaster General Health
Lancaster Health Center
Lancaster County Refugee & Immigrant Coalition
We are occasionally coordinating our coverage with the Amplify Nursing podcast and will release related episodes around the same time. Each of our shows will cover the same topic but from various perspectives to give a full view of the issue at hand. Amplify Nursing is produced by the University of Pennsylvania's School of Nursing and explores nurses leading the way in nursing science, policy, and innovation.
Make sure to listen, subscribe, and rate At the Core of Care and Amplify Nursing so you won't miss our coordinated coverage.
In this episode, Amplify Nursing speaks with Dr. Laura Vargas and Dr. Adriana Perez, two scholars whose research focuses on Latinx immigrant populations in the US. They discuss the challenges our immigrant communities face during this pandemic, how health and healthcare disparities in the Latinx immigrant communities are being magnified, and what needs to happen moving forward to start to solve the complex issues both during and after the pandemic.