Nurses
in sentence
333 examples of Nurses in a sentence
Who should I turn to?" "Where are the doctors, where are the
nurses?
What if I told you there was a new technology that, when placed in the hands of doctors and nurses, improved outcomes for children and adults, patients of all ages; reduced pain and suffering, reduced time in the operating rooms, reduced anesthetic times, had the ultimate dose-response curve that the more you did it, the better it benefitted patients?
They're real doctors and
nurses.
As patients, we usually remember the names of our doctors, but often we forget the names of our
nurses.
And I always wondered, how did she so instinctively know just how to talk to me? Joanne Staha and my admiration for her marked the beginning of my journey into the world of
nurses.
A few years later, I was asked to do a project that would celebrate the work that
nurses
do.
I started with Joanne, and I met over 100
nurses
across the country.
I spent five years interviewing, photographing and filming
nurses
for a book and a documentary film.
Then we asked hospitals and facilities to nominate
nurses
who would best represent them.
One of the first
nurses
I met was Bridget Kumbella.
Nurses
have a really unique relationship with us because of the time spent at bedside.
And as we tried to make the right decisions and follow my mother's wishes, we found that we were depending upon the guidance of
nurses.
Half of critical care
nurses
and a quarter of ICU doctors have considered quitting their jobs because of distress over feeling that for some of their patients, they've provided care that didn't fit with the person's values.
It's a skill that I call visual intelligence, and I use works of art to teach everybody, from everyday people to those for whom looking is the job, like Navy SEALs and homicide detectives and trauma
nurses.
Our health care system is structured in such a way that the work of diagnosing disease and prescribing medicines is limited to a team of
nurses
and doctors like me.
But
nurses
and doctors are concentrated in cities, so rural communities like Musu's have been left behind.
Community members across Liberia learned the symptoms of Ebola, teamed up with
nurses
and doctors to go door-to-door to find the sick and get them into care.
We'll help these countries accredit these workers, so that they're not stuck remaining an under-recognized, undervalued group, but become a renowned, empowered profession, just like
nurses
and doctors.
I now lead an amazing team of Cambodian social workers,
nurses
and teachers.
Our entrepreneurs and engineers already live in this world, but so do our
nurses
and our plumbers and our therapists.
We had four emergency room doctors and two
nurses
on board the airplane.
I got a call from one of the
nurses
down at the detox unit.
We talked about that, and what we saw every day was that the people that lived in our nursing home were confused about their environment, because what they saw was a hospital-like environment, with doctors and
nurses
and paramedics in uniform, and they lived on a ward.
Imagine a hospital ward with 20, 40, 70 patients and you have a doctor doing it all by themselves: no nurses, no medical assistants, no one else.
A whole team has to be skilled and coordinated; the
nurses
who do the deliveries in a place like this, the doctor who backs them up, the supply clerk who's responsible for 22 critical drugs and supplies being in stock and at the bedside, the medical officer in charge, responsible for the quality of the whole facility.
We trained an army of doctors and
nurses
like this one who learned to observe the care and also the managers and then help them build on their strengths and address their weaknesses.
Getting the
nurses
to practice speaking up when the baby mask is broken or the gloves are not in stock or someone's not washing their hands.
This small army of coaches ended up coaching 400
nurses
and other birth attendants, and 100 physicians and managers.
And this is another example in a healthcare environment of some doctors and some
nurses
and designers acting out a service scenario around patient care.
One of the reasons he chose to take this rather large video camera with him was because he didn’t want the doctors and
nurses
thinking he was actually sick, and sticking something into him that he was going to regret later.
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