How nurse practitioners can improve heart failure outcomes
Nurse Watch is compiled in conjunction with the AHA鈥檚 American Organization of Nurse Executives (AONE) and highlights articles of interest to nurse leaders, nursing professionals and other health care leaders. For more about AONE, visit .
Nurse revives lifeless man at volleyball game
School district nurse Kelly Fogelman saved the life of an elderly man who collapsed during his granddaughter鈥檚 volleyball game in Marion, Ark., last month, WREG.com . Fogelman was watching the game from the bleachers when she was summoned to help the man, whose heart had stopped beating. Seconds after talking with Fogelman, he collapsed without a pulse 鈥 dead, the publication said. Fogelman administered CPR while another nurse grabbed the automatic defibrillator, and they revived the man.
"I don`t believe I was a hero. I think anybody could have done what I did," Fogelman said.
Study: Nurse practitioner support for heart failure patients improves outcomes
When nurse practitioners follow up with heart failure patients within 30 days after their discharge from the hospital, mortality and readmission rates improve, HealthLeaders . According to research conducted by the University of Virginia Health System鈥檚 Hospital-to-Home program, participants had a 41 percent lower mortality rate than non-participants and a 24 percent reduction in the number of days they were readmitted to the hospital. These outcomes occurred even though the participants were sicker than non-participants, and the savings from the program were significant: about twice as much as the program鈥檚 staffing costs, the publication says. AONE .
Nurses need education in genomics, authors say
Nurses must acquire basic knowledge of genetic and genomic concepts to truly meet population health needs, and nursing schools鈥 curriculum should help address this, in the Journal of Professional Nursing. Personalized treatments based on genetic profiling and direct-to-consumer genetic screenings are increasing, they say.
鈥淕enetic testing has implications not only for the patient, but also for at-risk family members,鈥 the professors write. 鈥淗ealth care tailored to genetic profiling is a reality today, and it is crucial that nurses receive extensive formal and ongoing continued education on genetics and genomics.鈥
AONE .