Higher education, a fix for email overload and meditation: Nurses share their New Year’s resolutions for 2020 – Atlanta Journal Constitution

Posted: Published on January 4th, 2020

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

New Year's resolution? East Tennessee-based registered nurse John Mayer doesn't do that, admitting he's too focused on "making it through the day I'm in." While that's one valid approach, some nurses do set goals at the New Year and are willing to share them. Some of these resolutions are brief and very specific, others literally involve entire public awareness campaigns. All are inspiring (as is managing to get through one day at a time).

Roxanna Chicas, registered nurse and nursing doctoral candidate at Emory University's Nell Hodgson Woodruff School: "My New Year's resolution is to fight climate change by reducing my plastic use, recycle more and switching to all-natural cleaning products."

Delaney McCann, former ICU nurse and current Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist student: "First, I resolve to survive my first year of CRNA school! And also, journal and/or meditate every day and learn guitar."

RELATED:'Tis the season for holidays and hangovers: What nurses need to know

Zakiyyah Weatherspoon, board-certified family nurse practitioner based in Valdosta and CEO ofWeatherspoon Medical Staffing, founded in 2019: "My business New Year's resolution is to have at least 50 revolving nursing and allied health candidates whom we always staff across the United States and the Virgin Islands. This will bring in a steady flow of income and help meet our fiscal goals for this business."

Fiona Crawford, ICU float nurse based in Chattanooga: "Though I don't usually do a formal resolution, this year I am planning on getting more education, learning new skills, and taking better care of myself."

RELATED:Fun dates for you and your New Year's resolution

Helen Baker, clinical instructor at Emory's Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing: "My resolution for this year is to get control of my email."

Registered nurse Mitzi E. DeBusk, a consultant for a home health agency in Richmond, Virginia, whose young adult daughter Brittany died in 2018 from a cardiac event: "My New Year's resolution is to make the public aware heart disease has no age limit. Simple diagnostic tests can make a difference. Too many kids are dropping dead practicing or during an athletic event. For young adults in their 20s, like my daughter, the first thing people ask is, 'Was it drugs?' Brittanys autopsy showed no drugs, no alcohol. It was a heart defect. Physicians, nurse practitioners and physician's assistants all need to listen to the patient, ask pertinent questions and do a full physical. A simple EKG or echocardiogram can tell so much and save lives. My motto is, 'Every beat matters. Dont skip a chance to save a life.'"

Support real journalism. Support local journalism. Subscribe to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution today. See offers.

Your subscription to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution funds in-depth reporting and investigations that keep you informed. Thank you for supporting real journalism.

Visit link:
Higher education, a fix for email overload and meditation: Nurses share their New Year's resolutions for 2020 - Atlanta Journal Constitution

Related Posts
This entry was posted in Cardiac Nursing. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.