
Nursing is a community. I never thought of it that way but I see it now. There are 16 of us in our clinic office and although each of us has specific duties, there are many that we all share. The patients are everyone’s responsibility and when one person can’t anther steps up. Each of the nurses has undergone the same training. There are some who have done their training in different schools but the general training for each of us is the same.
We understand each other. The medical speak that my family quickly grows tired of at home is welcome within the community that is our nursing staff. Here I can discuss blood draws and gross wounds to interested eyes and ears, not the ones at home that get green around the gills. Our jobs at the same clinic holds us together however the nursing community is a world-wide community. When one of our community members are on television in a news story I now catch myself stopping and listening even if the nurse on TV lives in a different country, I can relate.
Nurses share one major need, to help others. Each of our community members has realized that they need to take care of others; they need to make people better. Our values are steeped in human life and making the human condition better. No matter what sex a nurse is, what race, what economic status, no matter how we grew up or what baggage we carry, we all have the same heart and have answered the same call to make people better.
In our clinic everyone works well together and understands the needs that have to be met however I can see where it could all go wring quickly. If there is one among us who doesn’t care, who isn’t there to help but just needs the job, there are balls that get dropped. The nursing staff has to be a well oiled machine in order to make sure that everyone who comes for help gets it. There are times when the office gets busy or there is an illness within the community that is touching the lives of everyone and things get tough yet our staff steps up.
I have always wanted to work in the medical field and I am pleased to have been given this opportunity. Now, however, I no longer think of it as the “medical field” but instead the medical community, my community.
We understand each other. The medical speak that my family quickly grows tired of at home is welcome within the community that is our nursing staff. Here I can discuss blood draws and gross wounds to interested eyes and ears, not the ones at home that get green around the gills. Our jobs at the same clinic holds us together however the nursing community is a world-wide community. When one of our community members are on television in a news story I now catch myself stopping and listening even if the nurse on TV lives in a different country, I can relate.
Nurses share one major need, to help others. Each of our community members has realized that they need to take care of others; they need to make people better. Our values are steeped in human life and making the human condition better. No matter what sex a nurse is, what race, what economic status, no matter how we grew up or what baggage we carry, we all have the same heart and have answered the same call to make people better.
In our clinic everyone works well together and understands the needs that have to be met however I can see where it could all go wring quickly. If there is one among us who doesn’t care, who isn’t there to help but just needs the job, there are balls that get dropped. The nursing staff has to be a well oiled machine in order to make sure that everyone who comes for help gets it. There are times when the office gets busy or there is an illness within the community that is touching the lives of everyone and things get tough yet our staff steps up.
I have always wanted to work in the medical field and I am pleased to have been given this opportunity. Now, however, I no longer think of it as the “medical field” but instead the medical community, my community.