Essay On Nurse Patient Relationship

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Nurses are not just nurses, they are the care takers and life savers. A patient is not just a room number or a diagnosis they are a person. A nurse will do anything and everything possible to help that patient because they are a person with friends and family. A common goal most nurses have is to make an impact and help the patients in any way they can. This impact can really change a patient’s life. Although, doctors are known as the heroes, the nurses are the life savers behind the scenes and don’t always get the credit they deserve. There are many ways to become a nurse, through accelerated programs, an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) or a Bachelor’s Science of Nursing (BSN). However, to get into the nursing school, it takes a lot of …show more content…

Having a strong relationship with the family or parents can make a big difference and possibly comfort the patient even more. In Kachelski article about The Nurse-Patient Relationship, she states, “The Nurse-patient relationship is a bond between two people, one a nurse, the other a patient. Both bring something to that relationship; both need something from it” (Kachelski 76). This statement from Kachelski, says that this relationship is a special bond because it requires only the two of them to make it special. Most of these nurses work up to twelve hour shifts with the same patients for days or weeks or even months. A strong patient-nurse relationship can start to develop; this relationship makes being in a hospital easier because it’s a familiar face they see every day. In some cases, the nurse could get attached to a patient. This is however not always good, nurses need to be unbiased and when a relationship forms it could be beneficial or could ultimately hurt both the nurse and patient. If a nurse gets attached to a patient it would be beneficial because if it is a child, they could be like their second ‘mom’ or ‘dad’ and the real parents could trust the nurse with their child. Being attached could also be a problem because say someone gets even more sick, and the possibility of not getting better is an option. Every …show more content…

For instance, Maggie’s story. When Maggie was younger, she spent most of her childhood in UI Children’s Hospital because she had to undergo numerous heart surgeries. She said “I remember when I was here for surgery for my second valve replacement, I had a nurse that would French braid my hair, give me back rubs, and play games with me to keep me occupied” (University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital 1). These nurses made such an impact on Maggie, that she ended up going to school to become a nurse. Many of her colleagues at UI Children’s Hospital, were her care takers when she was younger. They watched her grow up and turn into a nurse that is now able to help kids in the way she did. She now gives hope to other families because she went through the same experience they are now. This compassion Maggie has from nursing started because she had a nurse that truly changed her life. These stories are only the beginning how nurses truly make a change in any one

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