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URGENT NEED for RN Volunteers Haiti Ravaged by Earthquake

January 30th, 2010 by Pattie Lockard

From our friends at National Nurses United: Join your fellow RNs, National Nurses United members, and the Registered Nurse Response Network on an emergency mission to help Haiti. “All of the hospitals are packed with people. It is a catastrophe,” said, President René Préval of Haiti to the New York Times. HOW CAN YOU HELP?The Registered Nurse Response Network (RNRN) is a national network of direct-care RNs that coordinates sending volunteer RNs to disaster stricken areas wherever and whenever they are needed most. RNRN was organized in 2005 when Katrina and Rita — two of the most destructive hurricanes in history — dramatically exposed America’s flawed disaster relief system.Through RNRN, we hope to send experienced RNs to provide emergency medical support to Haitians who are dire need of medical care. “We are calling on nurses throughout the U.S. to join us in this critical effort,” said National Nurses United (NNU) Executive Director Rose Ann DeMoro.*RNs VOLUNTEER ONLINE HERE*MAKE SECURE ONLINE DONATIONS HEREOr – Make checks payable to:California Nurses Foundation2000 Franklin St. Oakland, CA 94612(Donations are secure, and tax-deductible to the extent of the law)* CALL THE RNRN HOTLINE (800) 578-8225WHAT TO EXPECT:Currently, telephone communication is down, and internet communication is sporadic. Aftershocks continued well through the night until approximately 3:00 o’clock this morning. Infrastructure damage is significant; the National Palace has collapsed, and the National Cathedral, many buildings have been severely damaged.All RNs will need to have a valid passport. Also, all RNs must have or be able to quickly get, Typhoid and Hepititals A and B vaccinations as well as Malaria pills.”I tried to volunteer with at least half a dozen relief agencies who said they needed nurses in the region without success. It was a matter of days after contacting [RNRN] that I arrived in my assigned hospital in Baton Rouge. The hospital was in dire need of nurses as a result of getting the bulk of medical evacuees from New Orleans, which resulted in a doubling of their census overnight. Ten minutes after my arrival, I had a nursing license in Louisiana, changed into scrubs, and went to work.”- Gulf Volunteer Diane Dengate, RN of Detroit, MichiganNational Nurses United2000 Franklin StreetOakland, Calif. 94612www.NationalNursesUnited.org

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Agitating for the Good

October 12th, 2009 by Nurse Talk

Dear Maggie and Casey,…I do love your show. Lots of good information and highlighting of practical health concerns and solutions along with the humor–the effect is to show that nurses are the go-to people in our health care system, that this is where we can get the answers–as well as the true care.Since nurses aren’t governed by a hyper-stingy bean-counting insurance system, since they are simply paid directly by an employer, they have a whole lot more freedom to actually help patients. And to be integrative–that is, practical (tried and true wisdom is the best thing)–in their approach.I hear, though, that the paperwork and the pervasive bureaucratic authoritarianism of the health care “system”  now take up more time than actual patient care. So nurses, like doctors, are handcuffed by the same accountability to insurance companies in the end.So your show is a breath of fresh air for the profession, not only for its status, but as proof of its incredible value for medicine–and for the freedom with which you deal with issues of health…Thanks for doing a great job. Nurses rule; nurses rock.Now if we could just get that MediCare for all, what Congress has, a single-payer insurance system, nurses might be able to do again what they do best– educate and care. Meanwhile, do keep agitating for the good.–Penelope P.

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I Hope and Pray for Single-Payer Health Care

October 8th, 2009 by Nurse Talk

Dear Maggie,Hi!  So glad to have stumbled on to your show. What a great way to offer good information. I have a friend who is a nurse and she is a member of California Nurses Association. Love the laughs! Anyway, after 60 years on either Blue Shield or Blue Cross, I’ve found myself currently uninsured for the first time in my life.  My mother was so upset by this that it caused her to have a heart attack when she found out a few months ago.  Since I have disabilities and am greatly underemployed, I applied for SSI and Medi-Cal; and, I’m glad to say that I just got the Medi-Cal card in the mail and news that I’ve been accepted on SSI.  However, I was sad to discover that Medi-Cal no longer covers dental for people on Medi-Cal (who aren’t pregnant women whose infant is endangered by poor dental health or someone in a nursing home …)I heard your show while I was driving in my car this afternoon and just caught the last few minutes.  But, I chuckled to myself when I heard you or someone else (didn’t catch which host was talking – thought it might be you) say that dental health is so important.  Yeah.  We know that; but, our governor doesn’t.  Tell me he thinks he would be happy to have his teeth pulled instead of getting a crown or a filling?  If the morons who voted Arnold in hadn’t prevailed, California would now have single payer health care AND dental for everyone.  It makes me sick.  The whole time I had Blue Shield (our last provider), I was unable to afford treatments for my disorders. And, that’s the truth.  No matter what angle I came from, no matter what I tried to do to accommodate some sort of treatment to their plan, they found some way to deny it to me. I have Interstitial Cystitis (which is a hugely painful and disabling disease).  Yet, there are some very good treatments for it – if a person can afford them.  And, most of us can’t.  I also have Hepatitis C that I got in 1971 from a blood transfusion.  I had Blue Cross when I tried to get treatment for hep C.  In order to be able to afford the treatment for that, I had to go into a study, since Blue Cross would only pay a small portion of the expensive drug costs in the treatments recommended by doctors.  The study drugs were so hard on me that I ended up getting IC.  So, in our current health system, in order for the health insurance companies to turn profits, they must make treatments so expensive that people are forced to go into studies OR skip treatments altogether.  And, that’s my experience of health insurance.  I go to a pain clinic; and, I would bet you a million dollars that half the people in there have treatable maladies; but, their insurance companies have made the treatments so unaffordable that they’ve taken the cheapest route–which is painkillers.  When people spout off about how bad drugs are, just look at all the people that are sent to pain doctors and put on narcotics instead of being given physical therapy or whatever it is they need to treat their disorders. We live in a hypocritical society.  On one hand, we condemn the use of hard drugs; but, on the other hand, we allow health insurance companies to deny people important treatments and let them get away with sending treatable conditions to the pain doctor who will just give them something to help numb the pain.  Most of us would rather find a better way.  I know I would.  IC has been very responsive to certain forms of physical therapy.  But, most of the pelvic pain clinics that offer these treatments charge about $500. Per visit!  And, most of these clinics can’t get on with Blue Shield/Blue Cross anyway.  For some reason, the insurance companies have a thing about physical therapy; and, they go way out of their way to make it difficult for people to get it – even though it works.  I think this is a crime.  I hope and pray that this country wises up and gets single payer health care someday.  But, I’m not going to hold my breath.  –Paulette K.

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Pregnancy vs. Vasectomy

October 5th, 2009 by Nurse Talk

We are a couple of nurses. We cannot prescribe, diagnose or treat, especially over the airwaves but advice and opinions, we’ve got plenty of those. From time to time we share emails from the Nurse Talk Inbox. Do you have any advice for our listeners? Or, perhaps, some questions of your own?Hi Casey and Maggie,A “friend” of mine has 2 beautiful children. She wants to keep it that way. Now, her husband has finally agreed to get a vasectomy, but he’s being fairly dramatic about the sacrifice he’ll be making. And, he’s famous for requesting “chore amnesty” at the slightest sniffle, although she was back on her feet grocery shopping within days of giving birth. I’m just wondering since nurses probably regularly have to quantify suffering from whining, if you could give your opinion about which experience–pregnancy and childbirth, or the vasectomy–is more invasive and painful. You can just call me…–Sassy in Sonoma.

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