Monday, July 19, 2021
 

"The National Academy of Medicine agrees with me that nurses have a really important role in improving health equity and addressing societal factors." — Julia Resnick, AHA senior program manager of strategic initiatives

Societal factors — socioeconomic status, food insecurity, environment (including air and water quality), education, and more — are linked to individuals' health outcomes, and nurses are perfectly positioned to address those social determinants of health (SDOH).

At last week's AONL 2021, the annual conference of the American Organization of Nursing Leadership, Julia Resnick, the American Hospital Association's (AHA) senior program manager of strategic initiatives, outlined four areas where nurses can make an impact in achieving health equity. Read about it in this week's lead story.

 

4 Areas Where Nurses Can Make an Impact in Social Determinants of Health
Nurses 'have a really important role in improving health equity and addressing societal factors,' AONL conference speaker says.
 
Nurses Urge CDC to Reinstate Universal Masking
Nurse union cites the growing Delta variant, which already is dominant in the United States.
AORN Updates Skin Antisepsis Guidelines: What This Means for Organizations
Professional guidelines are out in the field for certain subsets of patients to receive nasal decolonization.
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A Streamlined Care Continuum Elevates Quality for Moms and Babies
Care teams for expectant mothers and babies are often made up of clinicians across multiple specialties and different locations. This means patients with complex cases may have to travel or be transferred to numerous sites in order to receive the care they need.
Reduce Outcome Bias Through Focused Reviewer Questions
A useful strategy to reduce outcome bias is to have the screener provide case-specific questions for the reviewer that are focused on the process of care rather than the outcome.
How ERs Fail Patients with Addiction: One Patient's Tragic Death
Addicts often fall victim to two huge gaps in the U.S. healthcare system: a paucity of addiction treatment and high medical costs.
Why Pandemic-Initiated Safety Protocols Are Here to Stay
When COVID-19 hit, it heightened public awareness of safety protocols, causing healthcare facilities to be more acutely aware of the need to consistently enforce protocols for verifying who was in a building at a given time.
 

Must Reads

 

That's all for this Monday. Thank you for turning to HealthLeaders for your healthcare nursing news.

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Please email me at CDavis@HealthLeadersmedia.com with any ideas or suggestions. Have a good week and stay safe!

 

Carol Davis
Nursing Editor