IOM Initiative on the Future of Nursing
Invitation to Hear Announcement of Initiative on
This is not about me clarifying anything. It’s about me getting confused. Maybe you can supply the insights. I’ll supply the confusion.
Tonight I was watching a baseball game. The New York Yankees played The Tampa Bay Rays in a crucial late season game. The game was a disaster for the Yanks. But the real action was in the first inning, when what I have come to call a CHMP alarm went off.
Funny about these CHMP alerts. They seem to go off more frequently in media settings that are not specifically health related. Explicit and implicit messages about disease and illness are pervasive. Sometimes they come in the form of an intentional message and sometimes they are embodied in a person you confront on the street whose appearance catches your attention. All sorts of institutions and individuals completely outside the realm of health care are often in the position of providing health-related information. You just never know when the alarm will sound and you will be confronted with a CHMP-worthy insight.
[caption id="attachment_544" align="alignleft" width="150" caption="President Obama "][/caption] The
[caption id="attachment_526" align="alignleft" width="150" caption="Street Nurses"][/caption] The Hunter
The New York State Department of Health
[caption id="attachment_499" align="alignleft" width="150" caption="Jessie Daniels"][/caption] I'm very
[caption id="attachment_496" align="alignleft" width="112" caption="Bill Silberg"][/caption] Bill Silberg
Yesterday's editorial in the New York Times
Jen Busse, RN, MPH, is an intern
Ellen-Marie Whelan, a nurse pratitioner, Senior Health