Alumni Award Recipients Honored at Ceremony

Nearly 100 School of Nursing alumni and friends gathered Friday evening, Sept. 25, to celebrate the Alumni Award recipients. Cheryl Moseley Gibson, BSN ’92, received the

(L-R) Cheryl Moseley Gibson, BSN '92, Linda Flynn and Don Flynn, daughter and husband of Sara Blaylock Flynn, BSN '55, Lt. Col. Mona Bingham, PhD '06, and Dean Kristen M. Swanson after the Alumni Awards Ceremony on Sept. 25, 2009.

(L-R) Cheryl Moseley Gibson, BSN '92, Linda Flynn and Don Flynn, daughter and husband of Sara Blaylock Flynn, BSN '55, Lt. Col. Mona Bingham, PhD '06, and Dean Kristen M. Swanson after the Alumni Awards Ceremony on Sept. 25, 2009.

Carrington Award for Community Service, Lt. Col. Mona Bingham, PhD ’06, received the G.O.L.D. (Graduate of the Last Decade) Award, and Sara Blaylock Flynn, BSN ’55, received the Alumna/us of the Year Award posthumously. Both Dean Kristen Swanson and Tiffany Gibson, MSN ’06, addressed the crowd.

Join Us in London!

The School of Nursing will take London by storm in March 2010, and we want you to come with us. This is the first time the SON Alumni Association has offered this trip to alumni, donors and friends.

Faculty expert and SON Alumni Board member Laura Nasir will lead a group of SON students through London during Spring Break (March 7-March 13). Nasir is currently

King's College of London will be host to various parts of the School of Nursing's March 2010 trip to London.

King's College in London will be host to various parts of the School of Nursing's March 2010 trip to London.

studying for her doctorate at King’s College in London, and she will introduce you to our sister colleagues there.
Associate director of Advancement and Alumni Affairs Anne Webb will meet you at your 4-star hotel and will accompany you throughout the week. You will see many of London’s historic sites that highlight the origins of medicine and nursing, including the Victorian Hospital and the Florence Nightingale Museum.

We will focus on a variety of multidisciplinary, cross-cultural learning experiences, including comparison between the U.S. and U.K. healthcare systems with discussions around healthcare reform, setting up multidisciplinary teams in primary care settings, issues addressing healthcare quality, safety and innovation, integrating healthcare and the humanities and global perspectives.

This is a unique opportunity for you to mingle with current students and faculty, meeting British healthcare leaders and educators and enjoy the sights and sounds on one of the world’s great cities. Optional activities can include an evening (for two) in the famed theatre district, visits to outdoor markets and gardens, historic sights and shopping.

Carolina SON alumni, spouses and friends are all welcome to participate with us.

Space is limited to eight individuals, and we must have at least six participants to offer the trip.

This travel adventure includes:

  • Six nights lodging in a 4-star hotel
  • Six breakfasts
  • Two group dinners
  • King’s College Private Tour
  • Two museum tours: Victoria Hospital Walking Tour and Florence Nightingale Museum
  • UNC’s Winston House-London reception and lecture
  • A range of educational sessions
  • Time to explore on your own

Early Bird Registration:  $1,685.00 (double-occupancy) if you register before Dec. 1, 2009

After Dec. 1, the registration is $1,885.00 (double-occupancy)

Single Supplement:  Add $985.00

Deposit:  $500 to secure your space

Optional CEUs Offered:  $295

If you wish to earn 16 CEUs for the educational offerings, there is an additional per person cost of $295.00.  You will have the opportunity to participate in various educational sessions with the students and faculty during the week and complete a self-report.

What is not included?

Airfare, taxes, service charges, ground transportation to and from the airport; taxis and other ground transportation or excursions while in London; additional meals and snacks not specified above; alcohol; tips and gratuities; insurance and incidentals.

Air Transportation From N.C. to London

You will be responsible for booking and paying for your own airplane ticket. We request that you arrive in London at the hotel (to be arranged) by 4 p.m. on Sunday, March 7, 2010. We will arrange for an evening welcome and orientation for the week.

To register, contact one of us and we will send you a registration form:

Norma Hawthorne, Director of Advancement

Norma_Hawthorne@unc.edu

or Anne Webb, Associate Director of Advancement

Anne_Webb@unc.edu

(919) 966-4619

Russian Healthcare: Observing Nurses A World Away

By Darcy Tashlein-Van Heuveln

Cold War images of Russia in movies and the country’s dramatically different culture have always enthralled me. So, when as a rising senior in the School of Nursing, I was given the opportunity to choose an externship in a foreign country, choosing the location was simple.

But, getting to Russia proved to be tricky. I tried working with several institutions on campus – the FedEx Global Education Center, Slavic Studies and Study Abroad programs – and found no assistance. Even the Russian Nurses Association said my desire to experience the Russian healthcare system was “unrealistic” and “not possible.” Fortunately, I discovered Connie Vance, former dean of the College of New Rochelle School of Nursing. Vance put me in touch with Sean McGivern, an American residing mostly in Russia, who has organized exchanges between Russian and American nurses for 20 years.

With his help, I secured an externship with several healthcare facilities in the ancient town of Velicky Novgorod. I lived with Natalia, a Russian doctor who teaches nursing skills to nurses at the public hospital. She spoke no English, so I had a true immersion experience linguistically. (I also had the opportunity to teach English to three doctors and a nurse three times a week at an HIV Center.)

I was astonished by Natalia’s poverty – her towels were thread-bare and she washed her clothes in the rust-stained bath tub. Nursing is not a highly-respected profession in Russia. Doctors and nurses earn an equivalent to $200 American dollars per month. Since the Russian Nurses Association formed in 1992, that perception is slowly changing, but it is difficult because nurses have little time for professional development.

While in Russia, I observed how the healthcare system functions by visiting a public hospital, an orphanage, and HIV clinic, a hospice, a polyclinic (a clinic that provides services in many specialty areas), a rehabilitation clinic for disabled children, a dermatology clinic and a birthing center.

During my observation, I witnessed incredible understaffing. One surgical unit had three nurses for 40 patients. Scarcity was evident everywhere. Nurses completed only essential tasks, and almost all supplies were reused, including suture needles, surgical gloves, patients’ surgical drapes, emesis basins, urinals, bed pans, jars and glass IV bottles.

Russian healthcare is far different from the American system. Far more women get abortions to avoid having children born into an unstable financial or social environment. Consequently, the Russian population is declining. There is also a high rate of HIV infection either from sexual activity or intravenous drug use, and society stigmatizes these individuals.

The hospice I visited had 100 beds – 60 for children and 40 for adults. Ten of the 40 adults had contracted HIV. The remaining patients were suffering from sepsis, flu, pneumonia and mosquito-born encephalitis. Three doctors and nine nurses cared for the adults. Each room had up to four beds, and there were no privacy curtains or amenities, such as televisions. While doctors did provide grief counseling upon request, one of the nurses told me that they have no formal training in it.

Whether the setting was a public hospital (which provides free care) or a polyclinic (which accepts the federal government insurance and serves mostly the middle class), conditions are still dismal by American standards. Patients in public hospitals often share rooms with multiple other patients, and they must all bring their own hygiene supplies, while sharing a hallway bathroom. Polyclinics, though more modern, still do not have all the supplies available in American healthcare settings. For example, I witnessed a dentist performing a root canal without using any water for the drill because water is contaminated. Consequently, the clinic smelled strongly of burning bone.

I also observed the situation with Russian orphanages. Since the population is declining in number, there are a fewer number of orphans. This situation has led the country to consolidate the homes for these children. One orphanage that currently has 95 children expects to expand to 135 soon with no extra funding to support the additional youths. Many of these children come to the orphanages with physical or psychological maladies that stem from congenital or substance abuse problems, and they require a great deal of care.

But the situation is not hopeless. Despite the current dark picture, most Russian nurses I interviewed reported that even with the country’s poor and struggling healthcare system, life in Russia is better than it was 10 years ago. There is hope that modern advances and assistance will push Russian healthcare to continue to move forward.

**Darcy Tashlein-Van Heuveln graduated from the School of Nursing in spring 2009. To view all of the photos from her Russian externship, click here: http://www.flickr.com/unc_ch_son.

SON Faculty Achieves Rare Clinical Nurse Leader Certification

SON faculty member Meg Zomorodi, BSN ’01, PhD ’08, passed the

SON Faculty member Meg Zomorodi, BSN '01, PhD '09, passed the American Association of Colleges of Nursing clinical nurse leader certification exam.

SON Faculty member Meg Zomorodi, BSN '01, PhD '09, passed the American Association of Colleges of Nursing clinical nurse leader certification exam.

American Association of Colleges of Nursing Clinical Nurse Leader (CNL) certification exam. Very few nurses in the United States have achieved this level of certification. The CNL is an advanced generalist clinician who has the knowledge and clinical competencies to coordinate and manage care for a distinct group of patients.

SON Alum Receives NLN Award for Teaching

Anne Belcher, BSN ’67, will receive the National League for Nursing’s

Anne Belcher, BSN '67, will receive the NLN Excellence in Teaching Award in September.

Anne Belcher, BSN '67, will receive the NLN Excellence in Teaching Award in September.

Excellence in Teaching Award at the upcoming National League for Nursing Education Summit. The meeting will be held in Philadephia on Sept. 26, 2009. Belcher is currently an associate professor and director of the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing Office for Teaching Excellence. She previously served as the associate dean for academic affairs at Johns Hopkins.

SON Alum Becomes Impromtu Rap Star — Beats Out Lyrics about Carolina Nursing

Jon Seskevich, BSN ’87, has been working for more than two decades to help families with stress and pain management. He has also produced two spoken-word CDs, but few people are aware of his lyrical talents. While a student at the SON, Seskevich put his creative juices to work, wrote a rap about the School and performed it on campus. We’re lucky that someone caught it on video. It’s priceless, and it captures the spirit of being a Carolina Nurse!

Check it out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pUhD55eoa5M

Give Us Your Thoughts!

We need your help! The School of Nursing Office of Advancement is looking for the best way to describe the School and what it provides for its students and healthcare, and we want to know what you think. Please take a few minutes to answer the questions below. Your answers don’t need to be lengthy. You can leave your comments here or e-mail them to whitney_howell@unc.edu.

We thank you in advance for your assistance!

  1. What does Carolina Nursing mean to you?
  2. When you think of the School and your education here, what one word pops to mind?
  3. What is the most important thing you learned here?
  4. What difference has the School made in your life?
  5. What is the one thing you always wanted people to know about the School?
  6. If you had to describe nursing in one phrase, what would it be?

Follow the SON on Twitter!

The School of Nursing is now on Twitter! For quick updates about news concerning students, faculty, research, clinical experience, global study, alumni or development activities, go to www.twitter.com and follow UNCSON. We’ll be tweeting you!

Doctor of Nursing Practice Survey — We Need Your Input!

Your input is important to us as we consider the needs of, and direction for, graduate preparation of advanced practice nurses in North Carolina.
Please participate in the DNP Survey linked below.

Women With Heart Disease: Symptom Recognition & Timely Treatment

Who is going to get heart disease? The common answer is “men, of course.”

And, indeed, men are at higher risk in their mid-40’s to mid-50’s, according to Leslie L. Davis, RN, MSN, ANP-C, a cardiology nurse practitioner and doctoral student at UNC-Chapel Hill School of Nursing. Davis, who gave a continuing education presentation to a group of 35 Carolina SON alumni this past week in Charlotte, cautioned that as women get older, more of us are having heart attacks. In fact, women who reach the age of 55 have a higher risk than men! “If you live long enough, you’re going to have heart disease,” she said. The alumni gathering and presentation was hosted by the Levine Children’s Hospital at Carolinas Medical Center.

 

The leading cause of death for both men and women is heart disease. In the United States, heart disease has been the number one killer since 1900. Citing Center for Heart Disease 2002 data, Davis noted that heart disease was the cause of 356,000 deaths for American women. The cause of death from the next four major diseases was 274,000 combined. Stroke caused 100,000 deaths. Lung cancer caused 68,000 deaths. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease caused 64,000 deaths, and breast cancer caused 42,000 deaths.

 

“We do well decreasing death rates for men,” said Davis, “But we’re not doing enough for women.” Davis, the Jane Winningham Smith Doctoral Scholar in Cardiovascular Nursing, is focusing her doctoral research on how to help women reduce heart attacks.

 

Davis went on to explain that there are two types of heart disease. The first is known as Stable Angina. It presents a predictable pattern of symptoms after a person has had a coronary artery disease diagnosis. Stable angina is associated with mild symptoms associated with physical exertion, weather extremes or emotional stress. People know they are having symptoms or can predict when symptoms will occur, and know that rest, a nitroglycerine tablet or aspirin will relieve the symptoms. If rest and nitroglycerine are not getting rid of symptoms, you’re probably having a heart attack.

 

Acute Coronary Syndrome is a new terminology that explains a less predictable pattern. Symptoms are more frequent or lasts longer, are progressive, more intense, occur at rest or abruptly awakens a patient from sleep. Acute Coronary Syndrome is more likely to occur with a new diagnosis or is a change of pattern from stable angina. The symptoms are strong enough to wake them up and include extreme tiredness, nausea and occur even at rest. If symptoms occur between the belly and the nose, Davis says we should be highly suspicious that it could be heart disease.

 

How do you find out if you’ve had a heart attack? The fastest test is an EKG. But, blood work will be what identifies heart attack for most women. Davis advises patients to ask for an EKG within 10 minutes after being admitted to a hospital, so that therapies or surgery to open the blood vessel can be ordered immediately. Unfortunately, it can take an average of one to two hours after an admission before an EKG is ordered, and sometimes, that can be too late. It takes about eight hours for results to come back from the laboratory after blood has been evaluated.

 

What To Look For: Symptoms of Heart Disease

 

Ischemic pain, pain caused by the narrowing of the coronary arteries, includes pressure, tightness, crushing and squeezing. It happens throughout the chest and is not localized to any particular area. Up to 33 percent of those with acute MI (myocardial infarction or heart attack) have silent ischemia. Angina is the term for the pain caused by ischemia. One-quarter to one-third of men and women never had any chest pain before a heart attack. They had other symptoms. Davis continues to explain that we need to be aware that something is different in our bodies. Do we note unusual fatigue, feelings of impending doom, anxiety, lightheadedness? Are we experiencing palpitations, profuse perspiration, nausea and vomiting?

 

If you get admitted to the Emergency Department, what do you say that will get you an EKG immediately? Davis tells her audience to say, “I have chest pains. I think I’m having a heart attack.”

 

The take home message is clear. Women and men may not have chest pain to be having a heart attack. Up to 37 percent of women who had heart attacks did not have chest pain. Davis explains that women have chest pain and a lot of other symptoms. It’s important to recognize what’s happening with your body, to get help immediately, call 9-1-1 and take two-to-four low dose aspirin while you are making the call. Aspirin, she says, can stop 20 percent of heart attacks. A low dose is 162 mg to 325 mg.

 

Davis tells her audience of nurses that we assume that people will recognize symptoms, but they don’t. It is an average of three hours from the time that symptoms occur to when people finally decide to call for help, and it has been this way for 30 years.

“When you’re having a heart attack you want to get an EKG fast and then get immediate treatment. The time of treatment is inversely related to mortality and morbidity,” she says. “Every half hour you wait decreases your chances for survival, and surprisingly, women more likely to wait to call for help than men.”

 

Why do women delay? They are more likely to have atypical symptoms and vague warning signs. There is a mismatch of expected vs. actual symptoms. Women think we are supposed to have the Hollywood heart attack, and we don’t. We believe we are invulnerable to heart disease. We are socially ingrained to take care of others and put our own needs aside. The older we are the less likely we are to go to the hospital quickly. African Americans are less likely to go to the hospital than their white counterparts. If women ask a spouse or family member to take them to the hospital, it will most likely take longer. If you need to get to the hospital quickly, ask a stranger!

 

Davis observes that because there are competing demands of women’s time, because women are trying to “do it all” and wearing lots of hats, so to speak, that women push the symptoms back and postpone addressing them. There is a subset of women who know they have symptoms and just don’t take the time to deal with them. She says that when women do go in for medical help, they are more likely to be misunderstood and misdiagnosed. Typically, women have single vessel disease while men have multiple vessel disease. The tests are not designed for women who need medical imaging. Because women have vague symptoms and are not having the traditional MI, they don’t get cathed.

 

Prevention and managing risk factors:

  • Lower blood pressure
  • Lower total cholesterol, LDL and raise HDL
  • Stop smoking
  • Manage diabetes
  • Weight loss
  • Increase physical activity (30-45 minutes daily)

 

Davis says that current mass public education is not working. Men and women have to deal with their thoughts, feelings and emotions. She is conducting a study that includes how to eliminate pre-hospital delay, educate people in hospital after they have had their first heart attack to talk about symptoms, how does it feel, rewards of seeking treatment, negative outcomes of denial and who makes decisions if the patient can’t.

 

Resources:

www.med-decisions.com to determine heart attack risk

Questions? lldavis@email.unc.edu

 

 

 

 

 

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