06Jun

More than ever, this is a time to recognize and honor the nurses of the world. Not only does National Nurses Week begin Wednesday, but in recognition of the bicentenary of the birth of Florence Nightingale, the entire year has been designated as the International Year of the Nurse and the Midwife.

Her memory is being honored in a way that would make Florence Nightingale incredibly proud of the profession she founded. All across the world, and especially here in the US, nurses have responded to the call, working tirelessly, often without a break, to care for those sickened by the coronavirus.

When New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other leaders called for help, tens of thousands of retired and administrative and medical office nurses came forward. Many are providing direct patient care. Others are filling support jobs. All are on the frontline in this pandemic.

Two hundred years ago, Nightingale was also on the frontline of battle. Born May 12, 1820 to wealth, she left a comfortable home and comfortable life in Britain to care for soldiers in the far off Crimea, making rounds so often at night with only a candle she came to be known as the “Lady with the lamp.”

Today’s nurses are practicing Nightingale’s caring and compassion in the face of the worst health crisis in a century and demonstrating to the world what it means to be a nurse.

To all the nurses, we at Green Key Resources say, Thank You for your service.

Photo by Museums Victoria on Unsplash

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Jun 6, 2023

Honoring the Front of Frontline Healthcare Workers

Of all the frontline healthcare workers, emergency nurses are first in the line.

These registered nurses staff a hospital’s emergency room, making life and death decisions on the spot. They triage patients who walk in, are wheeled in, and sometimes carried in determining the urgency of their condition and their treatment priority.

In life-threatening situations, they’ll jump into action without delay – starting CPR to restart a heart or delivering blood products for a trauma victim at risk of bleeding out. In times of a major disaster, emergency nurses will be among the first responders.

It’s all in a day’s work for an ER nurse.

This year, that typical day has been turned upside down, as emergency rooms across the nation became flooded with the COVID-19 sick and those who think that’s what they have.

Before the seriousness of the illness was realized, before much was known about how it spreads, when basic protective equipment such as masks and shields ran out, ER nurses were on the job, risking their health and, sadly for some, their lives.

To recognize emergency room nurses for the heroic work they do, the nation sets aside the second Wednesday of October as National Emergency Nurses Day. The week is proclaimed as Emergency Nurses Week.

This year, the 50th anniversary of the Emergency Nurses Association, the 200th anniversary of the birth of Florence

Nightingale and the most difficult and challenging year for healthcare professionals everywhere, a documentary about the work of emergency nurses makes its debut. In Case of Emergency follows 16 emergency nurses from across the country showing what their life is like.

First shown Oct. 1 at the Boston Globe’s GlobeDocs Film Festival, the film will make its worldwide virtual premier Oct. 14. Tickets for the 80 minute online showing are available here.

Join with us at Green Key Resources and with all Americans in saying thank you to emergency nurses everywhere.

Photo by Hush Naidoo on Unsplash

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