Season 1 Episode 31
Headlines say “policy change,” but the real story is what happens at the bedside when nursing is cut out of “professional degree” status. We dig into how limiting loan access for graduate nursing threatens the workforce pipeline, from advanced practice roles in rural clinics to educators who train the next generation. When funding disappears, access shrinks, burnout accelerates, and patients wait longer for the care they deserve.
From there, we turn to a gut-punch: a laboring mother delayed at triage. Minutes matter in labor and delivery, and slow intake mixed with dismissive listening puts families at risk. We talk candidly about maternal health disparities faced by Black women—higher mortality, undertreated postpartum depression, and the harm of not being believed. The fix starts with fast-track triage, standardized escalation, bias-aware practice, and strong aftercare that screens and supports beyond discharge.
We also tackle a perennial debate: should nurses wake sleeping patients for pain meds? The answer lives in nursing judgment. Staying ahead of pain often shortens recovery and length of stay, but sedation risk is real. We share a practical framework for safe dosing, clear protocols, and the difference between sleep and concerning lethargy. Finally, we call out a policy that requires three CNAs for a Hoyer lift—safer on paper, unworkable on short-staffed floors. Real safety means staffing that matches policy, reliable equipment, and a culture that protects backs and careers.
If you care about stronger staffing, safer births, and humane pain control, you’re in the right place. Listen, share with a colleague who needs this conversation, and drop your stories or solutions in the comments. Subscribe and leave a review to help more clinicians find the show.
https://linktr.ee/WakandaRN
Published on 4 weeks, 1 day ago
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