Latest Message: 13 hours, 9 minutes ago
Please Login to shout..

Blog Tags

Nurse Blogs

For Nurses By Nurses

NurseKeith's Blog
NurseKeith Description:
I have been blogging since 2005, and maintain a blog at http://digitaldoorway.blogspot.com.

Here on NurseLinkUp I plan to post about nursing, healthcare, my own nursing practice, and the plethora of blogs and websites related to nurses and nursing.

Please stop by whenever you like!

I would like to announce that I was thoroughly shocked and humbled this week after learning that I was selected as the national winner of the Value Care, Value Nurses Blogger Scholarship. I applied along with many of my nurse blogger friends and colleagues, and never suspected that this honor would be bestowed upon me at this juncture in my blogging career.

Under the auspices of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), Value Care, Value Nurses is a national campaign to raise awareness by promoting nurses and nurse-based solutions to the current healthcare crisis in the United States. I will be posting several times per month on my blog---Digital Doorway ---about salient issues related to nursing, healthcare, healthcare reform, and the presidential election, and will actively seek out other bloggers writing about similar topics.

I will, of course, continue my usual postings on Digital Doorway about spirituality, Buddhism, and my own personal journey as a nurse and a patient with chronic illness, not to mention my regular postings here on Nurse LinkUp.

So, my gratitude to the SEIU and the team at Value Care, Value Nurses. I only hope that I can fulfill the expectations that are part and parcel of this stimulating process, and I hope that you, dear Readers, will follow my progress into these challenging and exciting sociopolitical waters.

Sleep and Its Discontents

Posted by: NurseKeith in Untagged  on

I recently underwent the second in a series of sleep studies in pursuit of treatment for relatively severe obstructive sleep apnea. Please click here to read my tale of woe , posted very recently on my personal blog, Digital Doorway.

Kids and Cholesterol

Posted by: NurseKeith in childrens health on

It's all over the news today. Kids should have their cholesterol tested and even begin taking statins as early as eight years old. The American Academy of Pediatrics  has made it clear---the apparent epidemic of childhood obesity is putting millions of children at risk of developing heart disease and diabetes and other conditions. From the Washington Post to The Wall Street Journal , major news outlets jumped on the story. It was breaking healthcare news, and the true meaning of these reports is sobering.

So, if one out of four---or even one out of three---American children is overweight or potentially obese, what does this say about our society? If many children have physical education only once a week, what message are we sending to our children about how we value exercise and fitness? When more and more foods are filled with sugar, high fructose corn syrup, and other additives that enhance flavor and increase caloric content, what are we saying about how we value our children's health? 

While I am anxious about giving statins to 8-year-olds (since there is no clinical data proving that these drugs are safe for children in the long term), we also must consider what it could mean to our society when people in their twenties and thirties begin to develop severe coronary artery disease and suffer MI's long before they should. We must also consider the cost to society in lost wages and productivity, increased disability, and increased burden on tax-payers as our citizens become sicker when they are younger. Early-onset diabetes and heart disease is expensive, and while we can't be sure of the safety of these drugs in children, we also don't want to see our children stricken with chronic disease, disabled before they reach their productive adult years. 

That said, jumping to pharmaceutical intervention should ultimately, in my mind, be a last resort. Dietary changes, exercise, and lifestyle changes must be urged before a child is given a medication that he or she may then need to take for many decades to come, with no notion of how these drugs may affect the liver and other organs over time. Children cannot make these changes alone, and it is, after all, their parents who buy the groceries and cook the meals. 

Cultural pressures, the media, advertisements, and the poor nutritional value of many processed foods all make feeding children well a difficult task. Children want to eat what they see on TV and what they see their peers eating, thus parents are caught between cultural and societal norms, the media, and children who don't know better. Many parents also eat poorly and are themselves clueless about nutrition, thus changing children's diets and lifestyles is even more difficult than it might seem.

These findings and recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics should be a wake-up call for American parents and healthcare providers. But I venture a guess that this issue will slowly fade from the headlines, only to emerge when yet another study confirms that Americans and their children are even less healthy than ever before.  

The news today was troubling, and I can only surmise that it will have to get considerably  worse before Americans wake up. Let's just hope they wake up soon.  


Vacation's End

Posted by: NurseKeith in Untagged  on

Well, all things must pass, and even vacations must come to an end. (sigh...)

 I wish all of those hard-working nurses out there a few days of respite like I was so blessed to recently have. It was the Labor Movement that introduced the concept of the weekend, but who, pray tell, do we thank for the concept of the vacation?

At any rate, while our European conterparts enjoy five or six weeks of vacation every year, we here in North America take what we can get. As a per diem nurse and consultant, I now pay my own taxes and plan my own (unpaid) time off, so for those of you who have paid vacations, spend that time wisely and enjoy!

-----

NurseKeith is a blogger, consultant, nurse and writer. Feel free to visit his blog, Digital Doorway.


A Brief Vacation....

Posted by: NurseKeith in Untagged  on

Yes, Dorothy, even nurses need a vacation, and while this nurse is not returning to Kansas, he is absconding with his wife to an undisclosed location where we happily honeymooned nineteen years ago.

More tales and adventures of nursing will follow after a brief period of rest, recovery, and leisure.

 Happy summer to all!

 NurseKeith


Polls

How do you like the new look?