About One DNP

I earned my "terminal practice" degree in nursing from the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center in a journey of excitement and challenge. It inspired me to advocate for an all encompassing clinical credential rather than continuing the hodgepodge of nonsensical initials. I hope these entries will provide entertainment and insight into the Doctor of Nursing Practice experience, which will soon be the entry standard for all advanced practice nurses.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Thoughts on the ANA Social Media Policy Draft

Three cheers for the ANA who developed a task force late last year to help write some rules and regulations for nurses to refer to in the uncertain environment of social networking. We are on par with other health care disciplines in the scramble to determine the implications of potential boundary violation of both patient and provider before the lawyers carve out a new specialty branch of practice. I think this is an overall great start (even though it is a direct crib from the AMA's policy) but I would like to see some more specific and supportive language.  Naturally, this nurse has plenty of public comment which is lovingly provided alongside each of the following provisions in glorious technicolor!

APRIL 25, 2011
FOR PUBLIC COMMENT (click to add your 2 cents)
PRINCIPLES: SOCIAL NETWORKING AND THE NURSE (click for the full document)

Background
Relying on an Action of the 2010 ANA House of Delegates, “Social Networking and the Nurse,” ANA staff, in consultation with the CNPE Practice and Regulation Workgroup and the ANA  Ethics Advisory Board, developed an outline of professional principles to guide nurses in their use of social media. The House of Delegates Action resolved that ANA “support the application of ANA’s foundational documents – the Code of Ethics for Nurses, Nursing’s Social Policy Statement, and Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice –to the use of social media.” The following provisions from these foundational documents helped to inform the draft principles for Social Networking and the Nurse.  Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements (ANA, 2001) – The Code of Ethics for Nurses is a seminal ANA document establishing ethical standards for the nursing profession. It provides a framework for nurses to use in ethical analysis and decision-making. Each of the nine provisions of the Code, along with select Interpretive Statements, provides guidance on the application of professional values and personal judgment in nurses’ use of social networking and media.


In addition to reliance on ANA’s three foundational documents, the draft principles for Social Networking and the Nurse also consider pertinent statutes and legal documents,  the experience of health professionals with social networking as reported in the media,  as well as the social media policies of other health care organizations.

Preface
Nurses who are currently practicing or preparing to enter the workforce have a professional obligation to understand the nature and consequences of participating in social networking of all types. The social network and the Internet provide an opportunity for unmatched knowledge exchange shared quickly among many people. There are many positive implications for nurses and nursing practice: it provides an opportunity for broad dissemination and discussion of nursing and health –related education and communication; it can nurture relationships and mentoring among developing professionals; and it provides a forum for collegial interchange and the development of an online professional presence. It also offers the profession a vehicle for educating the public on many nursing and public health matters. At the same time, information contained on a social network has the capacity to propagate itself, taking on a life of its own in cyberspace. Nurses must be aware that the social media venue is shared by their patients, and that unintended consequences of poor decision-making can breach a patient’s privacy, damage a patient’s trust in the individual nurse and the profession, and further damage a nurse’s professional and personal future. Inaccuracies become “fact” by mere repetition, which is a particular danger when discussing public health needs. Despite the feeling that comments, videos, photos, or other online materials may seem transient or “gated,” the nature of the Internet is that such materials are permanent and just about anyone can and will see these postings. Thus, it becomes essential for nurses to consider a number of guidelines when functioning within the “virtual” world of social media:

Principles
1. Patient privacy is a fundamental ethical and legal obligation of nurses. Nurses must observe standards of patient privacy and confidentiality at all times and in all environments, including online. Nurses must not transmit or place online individually identifiable patient information. The nurse’s primary commitment is to the patient and nurses are ethically required to practice with compassion and respect for the inherent dignity and worth of every individual. The key here is "identifiable" and I would like the ANA to include a statement addressing acceptable or exemplar generic comments. Reporting a bad day at work or mentioning difficulties with performing a particular procedure should not be grounds to call "breech!" Likewise, mentioning the good feelings that come from providing benefit that day should not be labeled inappropriate if are patients not "identifiable." 

2. Nurses who interact with patients on social media must observe ethically prescribed patient –nurse professional boundaries. The precepts guiding nurses in these matters are no different online than they are in person. Does this refer to professional social networks such as those run by the CDC or Mayo Clinic or those which have private encryption such as the telemed/psych services at the VA? This provision needs to differentiate between personal and professional persona. Public social media outlets provide no guarantee of privacy, therefore engaging with a provider on a social network implies that the client understands confidentiality cannot be guaranteed. Just as a consumer cannot ask a provider a medical question on a talk-show or radio program and expect it to constitute a through and private assessment, the same is true for social media outlets. The client cannot ask the nurse a healthcare related question then accuse the provider of a violation if the provider answers the question or cry "patient abandonment" if they do not acknowledge the interaction - label it the "call-in clause." If a nurse chooses to maintain a professional site, a statement regarding privacy, who is allowed in the network, and reminder that members can see other members participation should be clearly noted so everyone knows what they are getting into if they choose to join, for example, a Facebook page or twitter feed. The ANA might consider creating example statements that nurses could post as an FYI to fellow networkers. For example, these are from my professional and personal facebook page (suggestions for improvement are welcome!): 


***Social Media Policy Statement: While Jing Acupuncture/OneDNP is a health care provider, this page is for entertainment, advocacy, and education by a private citizen - not diagnosis, treatment, and advice from a professional. All interactions on this social networking site are open to anyone who has the good fortune to visit this page. Visiting or "liking" this page does not constitute or imply a therapeutic relationship and is not bound by confidentiality, practice acts, or codes.


***The ANA's new social media policy recommends providers uphold our code of ethics by maintaining professional boundaries online. I am currently not accepting friend requests from current patients who have visited Jing in the past 3 years. To stay in touch professionally, "Like" my page at http://www.facebook.com/JingAcupuncture or follow me at http://www.twitter.com/JingAcupuncture 
My Social Media Policy Statement: While I am health care provider, I use Facebook as a private citizen for entertainment, advocacy, and education - I do not diagnosis, treat, or provide medical advice in any professional capacity whatsoever. All interactions on this social networking site are open to anyone with access to this page including "friends," random hackers, and administrators. "Friending" me does not constitute or imply a therapeutic relationship and is not bound by confidentiality, practice acts, or codes. (And yes, this necessity is ridiculous!)

3. Nurses should take advantage of privacy settings available on many social networking sites in their personal online activities, and seek to separate their personal and professional sites and information online.  I would also like to see the sanctity of provider privacy addressed in relation to self-care.  Curiosity about the personal lives of providers is natural, yet a patient may be able to gain access to a nurse's social network in spite of him/her taking reasonable privacy precautions. In such instances, the nurse should not be held to standards over-and-above those of maintaining privacy and confidentiality in good faith and be free to express personal opinions without fear of professional consequence. Many nursing associations recommend avoiding personal relationships of any kind with a patient after discharged from care for 6 months to 5 years to never -  virtual, "friending" patients does constitute a personal relationship that can have consequences in the 3-D world.  Having a general guideline for the nurse to fall back on would help lessen the potential feelings of personal rejection for clients who want to keep in touch. I feel the ANA should not condone any hiring practice that requires an applicant to allow the potential employer access to their social networking sites, and there should be words to that effect. Support from state boards, organizations, associations, and accrediting bodies would help protect the personal/professional buffer while preventing multiple guidelines that may conflict with each other. 

4. Use of privacy setting and separation of personal and professional information online does not guarantee, however, that information will not bleed through or be repeated in less protected forums. Therefore, it is prudent for the nurse to evaluate all his or her postings with the potential for patient, colleague, or employer viewing in mind. Online content and behavior has the potential to either enhance or undermine not only the individual nurse’s career, but also the nursing profession. This provision may be necessary because, as Voltaire said, "common sense is not so common," however it creates a culture of second guessing one's actions, lays the field wide open for unnecessary scrutiny into the life of a private citizen who works in public service, and implies that a nurse can never be "off-duty." Any implication that the ANA would support employers, accreditation bodies, or state boards taking punitive measures against employees for posting political, religious, social or other opinions as a private citizen demonstrates a distressing lack of advocacy. Ditto for supporting employer social media policies that allow a company to govern any aspect of personal online activity of employees and use it as part of an evaluation process. It is one thing to ask yourself if your post passes the "mother" or "headline" test, it is another to fear the thought police and think your license or job is in jeopardy when off the clock.

5. Nurses who view content posted by a colleague that is unprofessional or that potentially violates ethical or legal obligations should first bring the questionable content to the attention of the individual, so that the individual can take appropriate action. If the posting is egregious enough or if the individual does not remove the posting, the nurse has the obligation to report the matter to supervisors or other authorities. This is in keeping with what occurs in the real world, however, the lateral violence potential here is unlimited. I can envision managers or coworkers stalking social networking sites in search of dirt they can use against an unpopular peer. I do think there is a better likelihood of a peer confronting a peer online than in person because it seems less like a scolding and more like an FYI. 

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Two for Tuesday

Morning Session


I woke up early this morning for a much needed workout and SVU reruns. The morning starts with a call to AAA, once again validating my 12-years of membership dues, and the discovery I can get $30 off my nightly hotel rate since I am at UT. Fabulous!

Our only class today was recapping and sharing some stories on our therapy experiences this semester. It solidified my love for the self-pay business model. No federal money means no federal rules . . . other than the usual ones we all have to abide by.

Afternoon Delights
Because I live by the notion that everywhere is Vegas if you have the right attitude, I have an amazing low back/hip massage, reflexology, and a facial at Rachel's Salon and Spa. As usual, I am given the royal treatment by both my therapist and the receptionist with promises to return on the next trip in August. I top the afternoon off with some awesome BBQ duck nachos and a drinkable Bulleit Bourbon Sidecar from Flight ("we don't have a cocktail menu, but we have a full bar" is my new sign to order Makers on the rocks).


Liquid Therapy
A group of us from class decide to end the semester in the traditional nursing fashion: drowning martinis, forking dessert, and discussing various clinical experiences involving genitalia.

We started out at Huey's - the hundreds of toothpicks shot in the ceiling via straw left me reasonably certain I was about to hear he "we have a full bar" line in answer to my cocktail menu questions. I was right. We decide to take a walk over to the sushi/Thai resturant after everyone fails in their attempt to spit hard enough to add to the decor.

Our new haunt, Bankock Ally, is appropriately named for the direction of the conversation. In the interest of professional courtesy and confidentiality, I will refrain from specifics. Sufficed to say, if you are a nurse you know what we talked about. If you are not a nurse, we discussed how awesome it is to work for cute doctors and be angels of mercy. And what serendipitous fortune! We are presented with the Two for Tuesday menu and toast to the fruits of our semester's labor. And to all a good night!

 

Monday, May 16, 2011

Fight, Flight, Freeze, or Caregive . . . . or Have a Cocktail: Kicking Back with Bowen's Family Systems

Got into Memphis at 8am courtesy of Delta (still the only direct flight to Memphis and a steal at $500 a ticket) and whisked off to the ever reliable Springhill Suites via Last Minute Transportation (superior service, as always).

Afternoon Funk

Nothing gets a trip started like a some sailors jammin' to "Ride Sally Ride" and a hot dog from a cart!

Individual Group and Family Therapy 2-6pm

Sylvia Landau gave an amazing presentation on Bowen's family systems theory. My new mantra: "I'm not being selfish, I'm fostering self-actualization." Seriously, I now have an explanation for why neither mom's Catholic or dad's Jewish guilt trips work on me and new rational for my relative lack of concern for doing what is expected. Of course, there is a fine line between ass and actualized, but it seems those who adopt a Machiavelli attitudes suffer fewer health issues and far more joy than those who take on the world's woes and feel compelled to do either everything for everybody or nothing for themselves. I must have had a self-care premonition since I already booked myself for a facial and reflexology at Rachel's for tomorrow afternoon! Some great points from the lecture:
  • Who we are is defined by the family gossip
  • You are just one bean in the soup
  • Active listening gives the patient permission to do their own work and trust themselves
  • Health is to become whole
  • Saying nice words does not negate the impact of scary thoughts
  • Get neutral, not guilty
  • Psychosis can be an adaptive coping response
  • Like matter, anxiety can neither be created or destroyed, rather it is projected and absorbed.
  • Be a friend, not a blood sucker
  • We run from reality as long as we can get away from it
  • The system will try and change you back
  • Cancers are cells in other systems' business 
  • Present mindfulness helps extinguish automatic role patterns and tolerate the familiar
  • Feel your emotions, but don't get too sentimental
To top it off, we received a copy of Caterpillars Chrysalis to Butterflies: Humans Change Through the Family Process which Dr. Landau was kind enough to sign for me. Interestingly, we share "All the Way" in common, although Fred and I prefer the James Darren version to Sinatra's.

I am working my way through nearby fancy-town dining and had a lovely chat with the bartender about cocktails, sake, and bourbon. May I suggest the Memphis Passion Martini, Shrimp Spring Rolls, Beet Salad, Creme Brulee, and the Memphis French Martini should you care to visit?! 

Saturday, May 14, 2011

On the Road Again

For once, it is me this time and not the husband. Being alone all of the time kind of sucks mental health wise - social media tools just don't have that interpersonal touch that makes you believe no man is an island. The good part is that I get to realistically try out some self-CBT before recommending a particular exercise to a client. I even managed for the first time in my post-secondary, oh hell, post-first grade education turn a paper in a whole 30ish hours before it was due.  I am still debating if taking on a an teaching gig was helpful or harmful to my overall development.  On one hand, it was a psych class and the 20 hours a week I spent on prep provided forced study time I may have otherwise neglected. On the other hand, I would not have flaked out on a few Blackboard discussions, could have delved deeper into the material, and, at least theoretically,  concluded my clinical hours without having to take an incomplete.

I love hindsight.

In these last few hours before I leave for Memphis, I have a final in assessment strategies, 2 SOAP notes, 1 Reflective Journal, and 1 process recording to do. When I get back, I also have roughly 90 hours of clinical time I need to log before August. Thankfully, my second clinical site came through so I should just get done before I have to start over again.

If I am not mistaken, the new deadline for the end of the world comes while I am in school. At least I get to go out listening to Elvis with a belly full of barbecue and a blueberry sidecar.

Until the road gets rolling  . . .

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Kiss My A!


Thankfully, my dissident spin on the assignment won back the points I should have lost by not following directions . . . I put it in a pdf instead of a word document. Hey, the syllabus said a policy brief should stand out!



Friday, April 15, 2011

Sweet! Presentation Uploaded and APNA Proposal Accepted!

I received awesome news today. Well, awesome in that I am going to get loaded with self-inflicted work! Here it is, straight from the APNA:

Thank you for submitting an abstract proposal for the APNA 25th Annual Conference, October 19-22, 2011 in Anaheim, CA . We are happy to inform you that your abstract has been accepted as a 45-minute concurrent session presentation. Congratulations!

The following is what we have listed for your session:
Title: Social Networking for Psychiatric and Mental Health NursesPresenter(s): Jaclyn Engelsher RN-BC, APRN, FNP-BC, DOM  Tanitha Moncier FNP              

Please email us by Wednesday, April 20th to confirm whether the above information is correct and if you will be participating as a concurrent session presenter. Please email any changes to your title or presenter(s) as soon as possible. This information will be printed in the registration brochure as written above, along with the Presentation Summary you entered during submission.

We will contact you in June with detailed instructions regarding conference registration (you will register online with a discount code which will be sent to only one presenter per session), presenter tips, presentation materials (slide presentations will be due September 1st), etc.

Thank you,
APNA Scholarly Review Committee

Woohoo, I'm going to Disneyland!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Direct from the Policy & Leadership Blackboard: Social Media Ethics

From couponing and microblogs to wikis and networking, social media is all the rage. MD personalities like Oz, Mercola, and Phil, not to mention high-profile facilities like Mayo and Cleveland are all over Facebook and Twitter dispensing health and wellness advice to the masses. Yet some physicians have had some difficulty adapting to the personal privacy and boundary issues of the new medium, which is surprising for a discipline trained to put beepers and unlisted phone numbers between patient and provider. A study on Twitter use among physicians reveled violations in patient privacy, use of derogatory, profane, and sexually explicit content, unsupported medical claims, and advice in contrast to standards of care (Chretien, Azar, & Kind, 2011). The AMA (2010) has created a policy statement on professionalism in the use of social media highlighting some on the unique personal and professional considerations as well as potential benefits of social media use.

But what about the nursing organizations and the individual (and decidedly non-phenomenon) nurse practitioner?  Despite it's own engagement in multiple mediums, all the ANA has advised is a generic call to follow the code of ethics (American Nurses Association, 2010),  specifically the sections on conflict of interest, accountability for judgement and action, professional growth and maintenance of competency, and preservation of integrity and  (American Nurses Association, 2001)."  Behavior online is not necessarily analogous to behavior in person or even over the phone. Should you "friend" patients, coworkers, or students, and if you do, are you responsible for knowing and responding to their posts? Imagine one of your patients posts suicidal statements on a social media site and you see it. Students may post negative comments on your class or violate the school honor code. Coworkers who begged you to cover when their child is sick may post pictures from Fiji the same day. While some scenarios seem like cut-and-dry common sense, others require professional guidance in terms of best practice.  Moreover, no precedent has been set in regard to liability, and there are plenty of legal considerations in terms of confidentiality, nonmaleficence, veracity, solicitation, and malpractice. 

I personally use social media extensively as a way to promote my business and the profession and plan to continue to do so. Carefully. I think it is important that the ANA address this specific topic in the next edition of the code of ethics to provide a basis of guidance and support for nurses. I would much rather see our governing body set the precedent than the winning attorney of the first lawsuit.

American Medical Association. (2010). AMA Policy: Professionalism in the Use of Social Media.
American Nurses Association. (2001). Code of ethics for nurses with interpretive statements. Silver Spring, MD: ANA.
American Nurses Association (2010). House of Delegates resolution: Social networking and the nurse. Kansas Nurse, 85(6), 21-21.
Chretien, K. C., Azar, J., & Kind, T. (2011). Physicians on Twitter. JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association, 305(6), 566-568. 

Friday, March 11, 2011

Grow Up Missouri! Doctors are People with Doctorates!

This is from the Online DNP Community. While I personally do not define myself by a title and believe it is important to explain who you are and what your role is when you use one, I believe anyone who has achieved a doctorate has the right to refer to themselves as a doctor in whatever setting they choose.  Please support this action - id this passes it can be used as precedent the profession needs to avoid!

Hello everyone, 

I received a message from a colleague in Missouri, JoAnn Franklin, DNP, APRN, notifying us of some legislative plans that could transfer disciplinary authority over Nurse Practitioners, now regulated by the Board of Nursing, to the Board of Healing Arts - a physician run entity. This is her recommendation:

 334.092 needs to be completely removed because currently the judicial court system takes care of this issue and state boards should only discipline their licensees.  We do not believe the Board of Healing Arts can be the disciplinary for other professions.  Additionally the burden of proof is much less in an administrative hearing than it is in the judicial court system.

There's also a section of Senate Bill No 303 (Section 334.250 number 3) that would criminalize the use of the title Doctor. Here's the essence of that section: 

334.250 number 3.  Any person who uses the title "Doctor", "Dr.", "M.D.", or "D.O." within a hospital as defined by section 197.020, or within an ambulatory surgical center as defined by section 197.200, and is not now or has not been a registered physician within the meaning of the law or is not now or has not been licensed as a physician in another state or territory shall be guilty of a class D felony.

Here's a potential letter that we encourage you to send to the senators listed and linked below:

Senate Bill No. 303; 334.092 and 334.250 number 3
My colleagues in Missouri have notified me and other advanced practice nurses that have earned a practice doctorate degree of some of the language in the senate bill that is due to be voted out of your Financial and Governmental Organizations and Elections Committee. 

Please know that any language that criminalizes someone from using the title "doctor" is unnecessary and inflammatory. 

To make using the title a criminal offense negates the efforts and successes of an entire class of professionals. Missouri would be setting a dangerous precedent that could negatively impact the provision of health care services in the state. Health care providers that have earned a doctorate degree follow the policies of specific organizations such as hospitals to obtain privileges. The policy of the organization is more than enough to avoid any potential patient confusion due to a title. Trying to criminalize the use of a title is draconian without any evidence to show that harm has been done, or is likely to be realized on any patient or patient care organization. 

The motivation is not about safety. 

Please reconsider removing this section of the bill. Similarly, section 334.092 places disciplinary power with one profession over another. This is contrary to our tenets of democracy and definition of professionalism. 
Others outside of Missouri are watching and hoping that the citizens in your great state will not be stifled by unnecessary and ill conceived bills that have little value and a great potential to harm health care professionals and their patients. 

Thank you for reading my note and allowing me to share my concerns. 

Kindest regards, 

The following Senators are in the Financial and Governmental Organizations and Elections Committee
Thank you for your considerations and request to help our colleagues in Missouri. 
Best wishes to all,
David O'Dell

Thursday, March 10, 2011

I Would Have Rather Been a Waitress

A Facebook pal and classmate posted this and I had to share. At just shy of 60 years from the writing of this passage, APRNs have almost managed to get the phrase "physician extender" out of the vocabulary, and RNs are continually ranked the highest in professionalism and respectability in the healthcare field. Enjoy how far we have come!

The Handmaiden 

Nursing is an extension or component part of medicine;
--Nurses are physical extensions of the doctors
--Nursing work is solely delegated medical work done under the close control of a doctor
--Nursing is a part of medicine’s business, and doctors can speak for nurses.

Because the nurse is no more than a participant in medical care, the nurse is expected to obey the doctor.
Nurses are not expected to challenge doctors even if they believe the doctor to be making mistakes which are endangering the patient’s life.
If the nurse carries out the orders of the doctor without question the nurse will not be at fault even if s(he) believes on reasonable grounds that the doctor’s orders are incorrect or immoral and may endanger the patient.
--Even if the nurse performs activities which s(he) knows to be morally wrong, the nurse can be exonerated if s(he) were ordered to do so by the doctor.

The nursing profession is the handmaiden of medicine and the final success of the treatment of disease is often bound up with the efficiency of both. Hon. Dr. Parr, Hansard, 9 September 1953.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

ANA on Social Media and Networking

I just submitted a concept map on social networking for my concept and theory class that covered potential uses, boundary issues, and guidelines for creating an official position statement on social networking for nurses. Is a lot of it HIPPA/don't friend your patients/avoid posting naughty photos/keep the 3-day bender footage off YouTube common sense advice? Of course. But the AMA issued a policy on professionalism in the use of social media in 2010, and gee willikers, this is all the ANA had to say about it:

Social networking and the nurse. 
There is very little research regarding the new phenomena of social networking and its role in nursing practice.  The ANA HOD, in an effort to begin the dialogue, brought forth an informational resolution.  An informational resolution does not require the ANA HOD to take action, however, it does indicate action will be considered in the future as nursing research evolves and demands attention.

The nature of social networking is new to most everyone.  Nurses need to understand the potential reach of social networking sites such as Facebook®, MySpace®, and Twitter®.  Although social networking sites have positive benefits in the realm of mutual support and knowledge sharing, there are negative effects as well.  Some negative aspects include:  loss of privacy, legal liability, and loss of professionalism (Frohna, McGregor, & Spector, 2009).

The ANA Code of Ethics outlines ethical responsibilities of nurses in practice relating to social networking (ANA 2005).   Crossing over through personal and professional boundaries can represent a conflict of interest for the nurse.  Nurses have accountability for individual actions, professionally and personally.  Nurses have the responsibility to behave consistent with personal and professional values to protect the integrity of self and profession.

The HOD supported this informational resolution.  Social networking remains unfamiliar territory for the ANA.  Research is needed to guide and inform policies and practices in the utilization of social networking on the national stage as well as at the local level.



Referring to the ANA Code of Ethics is like saying "wear your cap and keep your mouth shut"- I venture to guess less than 5% of all nurses have read the thing (ohh, good idea for a survey!). I do not think we need to go through the whole finger-shaking nursing diagnosis way of creating a position on this. The time is over-ripe for the profession to play a dominant rather than handmaiden role in the healthcare marketplace and stop relying on the old "most respected profession (so why change?)" pat-on-the-head. Responsible use of social media can make that happen. Let's put it in writing!