Monday, March 30, 2009

I can Pill it, baby!

There’s a new kid trying to make its presence felt on the Diabetic block with a promise that it is free from heart- related side effects (e.g. GlaxoSmithkline’s Avandia) often seen in other treatments.

Onglyza (generic name- Saxagliptin) is Bristol Myers’ answer to Merck’s Januvia, the leading drug in the market and the company is asking the FDA to approve the pill for patients with Type 2 Diabetes.

Let’s hope that Onglyza fulfill its promise and not turn into another bitter pill to swallow in the lucrative Diabetes market, that way we can really proclaim that Life is indeed Sweet!

Please pass the pill, Sugar…

Saturday, March 14, 2009

PICC Line, Anyone?

So, you passed the NCLEX without a sweat and you're good at IV insertions and what have you. Easy huh?

Well, sorry to burst your bubble but think again unless you know how to do this very common bedside procedure--

PICC Line Insertion!






Having cold fingers er feet now?

Well, you need not worry my friend. You will not do this procedure unless you're a certified PICC Line Nurse. Ha-ha. This is just FYI, since you will encounter this procedure a lot nowadays especially if you work on the Med-Surg Floor. :)


Here's more about Central Venous Line

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Nursing Shortage in the US

"An estimated 116,000 registered nurse positions are unfilled at U.S. hospitals and nearly 100,000 jobs go vacant in nursing homes, experts said."


The excerpt above was taken from a "new" article from Yahoo!News. But the topic is certainly old news and conservative at the very least. Nursing shortage in the US is a harsh reality that the Obama administration should address the soonest possible time.

The truth is, the nurse-to-patient ratio is just horrible especially in the Nursing Homes where in most night shift cases, the ratio is up to 1 nurse for every 30 patients or more. The hospitals are not doing good either with a 1:12 nurse-to-patient ratio.

The Day shift ratio in most hospitals is a bit better at 8:1/ 7:1 but not the ideal numbers either. This is not only dangerous to the health and well-being of the patients but also to the health practitioners as well.

Since the US cannot provide the necessary manpower to address the said issue at the moment, the government should continue to look for measures that will help ease the burden on the overworked and heavily burdened US Nurses in order for them to continue to provide optimal health care to their patients.

One of the measures that they should do is to remove the quota for competent nurses coming to the United States especially from English-speaking countries (e.g. Philippines) wherein the nursing curriculum is very akin to that of the US system. This is necessary to answer the shortage for the time being.

And it has been proven time and again that Filipino nurses are not only competent and at par with their American counterparts with regards to their knowledge and skills but compassionate towards their patients as well. They treat every patient with dignity and respect.

Also these nurses are Bachelor's Degree holders and therefore are better equipped with the proper knowledge and expertise to handle the cases that they will encounter in the field.



Here's the article from Yahoo!News---

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. healthcare system is pinched by a persistent nursing shortage that threatens the quality of patient care even as tens of thousands of people are turned away from nursing schools, according to experts.

The shortage has drawn the attention of President Barack Obama. During a White House meeting on Thursday to promote his promised healthcare system overhaul, Obama expressed alarm over the notion that the United States might have to import trained foreign nurses because so many U.S. nursing jobs are unfilled.

Democratic U.S. Representative Lois Capps, a former school nurse, said meaningful healthcare overhaul cannot occur without fixing the nursing shortage. "Nurses deliver healthcare," Capps said in a telephone interview.

An estimated 116,000 registered nurse positions are unfilled at U.S. hospitals and nearly 100,000 jobs go vacant in nursing homes, experts said.

The shortage is expected to worsen in coming years as the 78 million people in the post-World War Two baby boom generation begin to hit retirement age. An aging population requires more care for chronic illnesses and at nursing homes.

"The nursing shortage is not driven by a lack of interest in nursing careers. The bottleneck is at the schools of nursing because there's not a large enough pool of faculty," Robert Rosseter of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing said in a telephone interview.

Nursing colleges have been unable to expand enrollment levels to meet the rising demand, and some U.S. lawmakers blame years of weak federal financial help for the schools.

Almost 50,000 qualified applicants to professional nursing programs were turned away in 2008, including nearly 6,000 people seeking to earn master's and doctoral degrees, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing said.

PAY DIFFERENCES

One reason for the faculty squeeze is that a nurse with a graduate degree needed to teach can earn more as a practicing nurse, about $82,000, than teaching, about $68,000.

Obama called nurses "the front lines of the healthcare system," adding: "They don't get paid very well. Their working conditions aren't as good as they should be."

The economic stimulus bill Obama signed last month included $500 million to address shortages of health workers. About $100 million of this could go to tackling the nursing shortage. There are about 2.5 million working U.S. registered nurses.

Separately, Senator Dick Durbin and Representative Nita Lowey, both Democrats, have introduced a measure to increase federal grants to help nursing colleges.

Peter Buerhaus, a nursing work force expert at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, said the nursing shortage is a "quality and safety" issue. Hospital staffs may be stretched thin due to unfilled nursing jobs, raising the risk of medical errors, safety lapses and delays in care, he said.

A study by Buerhaus showed that 6,700 patient deaths and 4 million days of hospital care could be averted annually by increasing the number of nurses. "Nurses are the glue holding the system together," Buerhaus said.

Addressing the nursing shortage is important in the context of healthcare reform, Buerhaus added. Future shortages could drive up nurse wages, adding costs to the system, he said.

And if the health changes championed by Obama raise the number of Americans with access to medical care, more nurses will be needed to help accommodate them, Buerhaus said.

(Editing by Maggie Fox and Mohammad Zargham)

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