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RNAO-CTNIG Digest

January 28, 2009

In This Issue - Happy New Year!
Be a part of the RNAO 2009 Conference programs
Members write
Conferences
Food for thought ...
Quick Links
Greetings!

 
1. NEW!! Change in Password to CTNIG Website member's area
 
There will be a change in the password to our members area on our website for 2009. The password "nurses" will cease to give you access as of Feb 28, 2009

New login info:

User name: ctnig
Password: holistic

CTNIG website: www.rnao-ctnig.org

As a benefit of membership you can access all Newsletters, Digests, Feedback Requests and 2008 AGM presentation in the members area.

Please keep your login info confidential and handy for future reference.
2. Be a part of the RNAO 2009 Conference programs
 
Call For Abstracts is now open for 2009 events!
 
By taking advantage of these opportunities you will expand knowledge about Complementary Therapies/Holistic Nursing/Integrative Health Care to a wide variety of nurses.

Clinical Nursing Symposium - Call For Stories NEW!
May 27, 2009
Mississauga Convention Centre
 
This is an opportunity for individual nurses to submit stories that demonstrate their use of nursing knowledge on the frontline. The stories should illustrate the knowledge that nurses' use in everyday clinical nursing practice.
 
Deadline: Friday, March 13, 2009 4:00 PM EST
 
For details, please click here 
 
8th International Conference: Older People Deserve the Best:
The Journey of Transformational & Sustained Change

October 6-8, 2009 
Westin Prince Hotel, Toronto
 
Experience in health care work has demonstrated that sharing our vision and commitment is key to transformational change.  The goal of this 8th International Elder Care conference is to promote and support transformational and sustained change in the Care of Older Persons and in Geriatrics.
 
Deadline: Friday, March 27, 2009 4:00 PM EST
 
For details, please click here
 
Annual Nurse Practitioners' Association of Ontario Conference
November 6-8, 2009
The Westin Hotel
Ottawa
 
This three-day conference will provide participants with a broad range of updates in health care issues for nurse practitioners.
 
Deadline: Friday, April 10, 2009 4:00 PM EST
 
For Call For Abstracts details, please click here
For Call For Posters details, please click here

5th Biennial International Conference on Evidenced Based Practice:
Transforming Nursing Through Knowledge: Sharing Global Visions & Local Solutions
December 2-4, 2009 
Westin Prince Hotel
Toronto
 
The primary goal of the conference is to provide an international forum to advance the global vision of nursing excellence, through local development of evidence based practice cultures.
 
Deadline: Friday, May 8, 2009 4:00 PM EST
 
For details, please click here 
3. Members write
 
>From Jeannette McCullough
YOU ARE INVITED TO A MEETING OF THE SPIRITUALITY IN HEALTH-CARE NETWORK
 
"Integrating Spirituality and Health Care"
 
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
7 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.
Auditorium, Bridgepoint Health Center,
14 St. Matthews Road,
Toronto.
(Entrance: On Broadview one block north of Gerrard)
 
Speaker - John Rossiter-Thornton MD, Psychiatrist and Co--founder of Spirituality in Health-Care Network
 
Title: Spirituality, Science and Brain Scanning
Dr. Thornton will review the large variety of sources that suggest our consciousness can exist both beyond the body and independent of the body. He will pay particular attention to the contributions of Brain scanning technology to the field of spirituality.
 
 
>From Jen Gula
Free Osteopathic Workshops
 
The Canadian Academy of Osteopathy
Located in the A.T. Still Osteopathic Centre
132 Melvin Ave.
Hamilton Ontario
 
We will be covering many Osteopathic concepts and treatment applications that are unique to our methodology. This is a great way for you to meet the faculty and participate in treatment. We hope this helps educate those interested in Osteopathic education and its practice.
 
For Free Workshop Schedule go to   www.osteopathiceducation.ca
To register call Jill Oliver Administrator CAO-HHS at 1-905-979-5051
4. Conferences

American Holistic Nurses Association Conference
Reflective Practice: Creating Sacred Space

June 11-14, 2009
Madison, WI

Summit on Integrative Medicine and the Health of the Public Agenda,

Holistic Nursing's central value of self-care incorporates the concept of personal awareness to understand connections with self and others. Reflective practice is a process of exploring the meaning and purpose of caring experiences and creating space within ourselves to evolve as holistic practitioners. This conference presents an opportunity to share your journey and discover the unique ways to enrich your practice, teaching, and research through the process of reflection.

Registration is Now Open!
Take advantage of early bird rates and reserve your place at the 2009 conference. You can register today by going to http://www.ahna.org/tabid/2806/Default.aspx

5.  Food for thought ...

Nursing is an art: and if it is to be made an art,
It requires an exclusive devotion as hard a preparation,
as any painter's or sculptor's work;
for what is the having to do with dead canvas or dead marble,
compared with having to do with the living body,
the temple of God's spirit?
It is one of the Fine Arts:  I had almost said, the finest of Fine Arts.

                                                              Florence Nightingale
 
Take the first step in faith. You don't have to see the whole staircase.
Just take the first step.
                                                                Martin Luther King, Jr.


What about nurses...

The Chicago Tribune
January 14, 2009
Doctors going alternative
More mainstream physicians suggesting meditation, massage and acupuncture
Julie Deardorff

For years, Dr. Ali Keshavarzian ignored "alternative" therapies because his Western-trained brain wanted more evidence that they actually worked.

But Keshavarzian also knew conventional medicine often needed some assistance. And when he learned his patients were seeking out natural products, acupuncture, meditation and massage, he took a deep breath and dived in.

Ten years later, Keshavarzian straddles both worlds, using Western treatments along with a variety of alternative approaches, a combination known as complementary and alternative medicine, or CAM. "CAM is looking at a patient as a human being, rather than a disease," said Keshavarzian, a gastroenterologist at Rush University Medical Center. "Instead of treating 'ulcerative colitis,' I treat 'Mr. Jones.' "
 
The future success of the holistic CAM movement in the U.S. hinges on the very people who once viewed alternative medicine with cold skepticism: mainstream, conventionally trained doctors. Though many, such as Keshavarzian, still believe medical treatments should be backed by rigorous scientific data, they will not rule out adding into the treatment mix mind-body therapies that have been used for centuries in other cultures. Keshavarzian, for example, might suggest relaxation techniques when he thinks stress is a factor, acupuncture for pain or probiotics for acute diarrhea.
 
"The public has been on board for some time," said physician Andrew Weil, founder of the University of Arizona's School of Integrative Medicine, which has trained more than 350 physician fellows. "The professionals are harder to win over."
 
Five chronic conditions-mood disorders, diabetes, heart disease, asthma and high blood pressure-account for more than half of all U.S. health expenditures, according to the Institute of Medicine, part of the National Academy of Sciences, which advises the federal government on health issues. But these are the disorders that conventional medicine struggles to treat, according to the institute.
 
"Studies show that $2.5 trillion is being spent in a system that is not improving the overall health of our citizens," according to the institute. "Incidents of chronic disease are on a sharp rise and by 2023 will cost our nation $4.3 trillion."
 
Proponents say CAM, which is also called "integrative medicine," is a cost-effective solution.
 
Integrative treatments fall into four main categories: natural products (vitamins and supplements), energy medicine (acupuncture), manipulative practices (chiropractic work) and mind-body medicine (meditation or deep breathing).
 
For instance, if a patient needs bypass surgery, an integrative doctor would recommend it. But afterward, he or she might suggest fish oil, exercise or nutritional changes to aid healing.
 
Laura Restaino of Wheaton tried an integrative physician, Charles Dumont, a Loyola University pediatric gastroenterologist, after prescription drugs, creams, steroids and lotions prescribed by conventional doctors failed to treat her daughter Alex's severe eczema. After receiving hand acupuncture (using pellets in place of needles) from Dumont, the condition cleared up almost instantly, Restaino said.
 
Alex, now 12, sees Dumont every six to eight weeks for maintenance acupuncture. "He's kind, he listens and he doesn't rush," her mom said.
 
Though primarily driven by patient demand, the integrative medicine movement recently has received a boost from the conservative medical establishment, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, which has a CAM task force.
 
An increasing number of prestigious medical schools are teaching integrative practices. Since 1999, the Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine, a group that includes Duke University, Harvard and Northwestern, has grown from 8 to 43 members. With more traditional medical schools focusing on health care that addresses the mental, emotional and physical aspects of healing, the use of CAM by the nation's future physicians is expected to grow.
 
Meanwhile, it's getting easier for practicing physicians to find CAM training. In early December, the University of Chicago and the Mayo Clinic co-sponsored the ninth annual two-day CAM conference for medical professionals. And the 2009 Integrate Chicago Conference on Jan. 17 at Loyola is being organized by, and for, medical students interested in integrative medicine.
 
Nearly 40 percent of adults used integrative therapies last year, according to a new government report, most often to treat chronic back, neck and joint pain, arthritis, anxiety, high cholesterol and head or chest colds.
 
And 12 percent of U.S. children have used an alternative therapy.
 
"Early in my career I felt like we [doctors] were missing the boat because we weren't addressing underlying problems," said integrative physician Steve Devries, a preventive cardiologist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. "We'd often tell patients after angioplasty that they 'had the heart of a teenager again.' But it was completely untrue. We'd bought them time to correct the underlying problem, but if we didn't fix that then we'd see them again and again."
 
Now Devries focuses on prevention; his aftercare includes addressing factors that influence heart disease, including stress and nutrition. He'll find a therapy that fits a person-meditation, yoga, biofeedback or talk therapy-as part of an overall treatment plan. "The modality is not as important as the awareness of a mind-body connection," he said.
 
One of the challenges of integrative medicine, however, is that it requires more of a doctor's time. Critics say it also has a relatively small evidence base, but that, too, is changing. Though research funding pales in comparison to pharmaceutical drug trials, the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine has been increasing its pace of granting funds for CAM research. It has funded more than 2,200 research studies since 1999.
 
"The difference is that 50 years ago Western medicine began to examine its practice more vigorously; the other methods have begun to do it more recently," said Keshavarzian. "You can't dismiss CAM; it's the result of 1,000 years of experience. But we can vigorously study it."
Take care,
 
Darka Neill RN, BScN, RTTP, Reiki II
RNAO-CTNIG Newsletter Editor
darka_neill@sympatico.ca