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RNAO-CTNIG Digest

January 2011

In This Issue
Address from the President: Watson Hears a WHO!
Education/Conference Opportunities
CTNIG Member Submissions for RNAO Members Voices
Scholarship and Awards Opportunity
Research
Website
Quick Links
Greetings!


When one door of happiness closes, another opens, but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one that has been opened for us.
~
Helen Keller


1) Address from the President: Watson Hears a WHO!

This is an exciting time for me coming on board as the President of the CTNIG. I am also joined by others on the board who equally are feeling the enthusiasm of the possibilities as complementary therapy (CT) moves forward in Ontario, and Canada. Like Horton, in Dr. Seuss's book "Horton Hears a WHO" I have been aware of the use, viability and possibilities of CT, and the scepticism of many of those in healthcare and within our communities who do not yet understand what we do and why. For many years I have represented us as an individual who loves what she does as an energy worker, and a nurse.

Last year I had the luck to complete an RNAO Advanced Clinical Fellowship looking at the "Introduction and Integration of Complementary Therapies in Acute Care." The fellowship provided a unique opportunity to explore and develop the use and knowledge about CT; to better understand the CT literature and research, especially around biofield/energy therapies; to determine the present programs, organizations, associations, and practitioners doing CT with acute care clients; to provide energy treatments to staff and patients in an acute care hospital, as well to determine how will I share all that I know. Well, my last objective has led me here, to the President role of the CTNIG. I thankfully am walking in the path where some strong leaders, like Darka Neill, our founding President, blazed the trail. I was blessed to have Darka as a mentor with the fellowship to share with me what she knew to date.

I have a vision, and it includes CTNIG being one of the leaders in Ontario and ultimately Canada, to bring forward the art and science of CT to healthcare, be it for wellness, or dis-ease; to ultimately improve outcomes for all. Like Horton, we will be tested to hold on to what we know is true, and what we hear from our hearts and souls, and those we serve. Our healthcare system has been preaching a shift from disease intervention to dis-ease prevention and health promotion. CTNIG will be part of that solution. Through the use of CT Canadians can embrace new, or should I say old strategies, that will promote health and wellness. Many of the methods of CT have been around for hundreds of years, if not centuries, and many countries have been using them around the world. We only need to see the direction our neighbours to the south are taking to see where we are headed. So as CT is researched, observed, and integrated into healthcare programs in the USA, should we sit by and be reactionary, or do we take the lead and start pointing the way?

Your executive is already hard at work in preparing a resolution for the April RNAO AGM; we are asking them to advocate to include CT education at the baccalaureate level for nurses (as a start). So be it through my work with CTNIG, the education or workshops I Kimpromote and provide, the treatments I give, or the opportunities I have had to share my knowledge with others; the biggest thing I have learned is I do not do this work alone. So I am looking forward to hearing from you! Be involved, even to just share your ideas with me. You too are not alone, we are here. It is nice to know I am backed by such a wonderful group of nurses, who also hear a WHO! So keep listening, it is just the beginning!

Blessings, in love and in light, Namasté, Kim
2) Education/Conference Opportunities

1. SPIRITUALITY IN HEALTH-CARE NETWORK MEETING
Integrating Spirituality and Health Care

Wednesday January 26, 2011

7:00 pm to 9:30 pm

Friends House    
60 Lowther Avenue    
Toronto
(2 blocks north from the Bedford exit of the St George Subway Stn.)
 
AWAKENING TO OUR TRUE SELVES: CLEARING THE WAY THROUGH GUIDED SELF HEALING
Sue Guttenstein, PhD. Psychotherapist and Co-founder of the new ADIEWA Centre, devoted to helping people and groups align with and realize their potential.
 
Many of us sense that we have more potential than we are living, that we are not quite alive in the ways that we want to be. Guided Self Healing offers us a way to find and work with the root causes of our difficulties, including those that may begin in what we could call a non-traditional, non-material reality. The evening will be a demonstration of this work with one or more individuals. Those present often benefit from the healing work done in circle.
 
 For more information go to http://www.spiritualityinhealthcare.net


2. Winter Haven Hospital and the Watson Caring Science Institute
15th INTERNATIONAL CARITAS CONSORTIUM

April 14 - 15, 2011

Mission Inn  
Howey-in-the-Hills, Florida
   

Exploring Jean Watson's Caring Theory through research, practice, and education

   
Registration: By Jean Watson's invitation
   
Please register at http://www.watsoncaringscience.org>
For information contact:
Sally Raiden at sally.radien@winterhavenhospital.org
Barbara Hope at barbara@watsoncaringscience.org.

 
3. "I Can Do It" Conference Toronto
Sponsored by Hay House

May 13 - May 15, 2011


The Toronto "I Can Do It" Conference is now open for booking. There are significant discounts if you book before January 31.

Meet your favorite authors live and in person, and have the opportunity to share in their knowledge in exceptional keynotes and workshops.

Featured authors             
Louise L. Hay, Dr. Wayne W. Dyer, Marianne Williamson, Peggy Rometo, Cheryl Richardson, Gregg Braden, Joan Z. Borysenko, Ph.D. David Perlmutter, M.D..Dr. Christiane Northrup, Colette Baron-Reid, Crystal Andrus, Caroline Myss, Bruce H. Lipton, Ph.D. Brad Lamm, Mona Lisa Schulz, M.D., Ph.D. Barbara Carrellas, Deborah King, Dr. Darren R. Weissman, Brian L. Weiss, M.D. Doreen Virtue, Reid Tracy, David Kessler, John Holland Robert Holden, Ph.D. Sandra Anne Taylor, Debbie Ford, Michael J. Chase, Denise Linn

For further info go to: http://www.hayhouse.com/tour_details.php?tour_id=91


3) CTNIG Member Submissions for RNAO Members Voices

 

What CT related activities have you participated in?

Every three months the RNAO holds Assembly meetings where RNAO Chapters and Interest Groups can share with the RNAO executive and membership through Members Voices what they have been doing to speak out for nursing and health. In the case of the CTNIG, we would like to hear what CT related activities our members have been involved in to include in Members Voices. Please drop us a few lines whenever you speak out for CT in nursing or health be that through offering classes, involvement in health fairs, participation in conferences, writing articles, sending letters to the editor, research activities,  grant recipients, policy and political action activities to promote CT etc .........
 
Send your submissions to Darka Neill at darka_neill@sympatico.ca

 

4) Scholarship and Awards Opportunity


The Registered Nurses' Foundation of Ontario (RNFOO) is proud to announce their 2011 Awards and Scholarship Application Process is now open. This year we are offering 59 awards totaling almost $80,000.
 
Please view the Awards and Scholarships online. Should you wish to apply for any you must submit an online application and provide the required documents by the deadline indicated.
  
To view the Awards and Scholarship offered, please click here
To view instructions for submitting an application, please click here
  
Please note the deadline to submit an application is January 31st, 2011 at 4:30pm. Please be sure to pass this along to anyone who may be interested in submitting an application.
  
Sincerely,
  
Awards and Scholarship Committee
1 Concorde Gate, Suite 109, Box 26
Toronto, ON M3C 3N6
(P): 416-426-7127
(F): 416-426-7280
info@rnfoo.org
www.rnfoo.org


5) Research

1. Nurses Rank As Most Trustworthy Profession In Annual Survey

From Nurse.com

 
In Gallup's annual survey that ranks occupations by their perceived honesty and ethical standards, nurses finished as the most trusted profession for the 11th time in 12 years.
 
According to the survey, 81% of respondents believe nurses' honesty and ethical standards are "high" or "very high."
 
"It's extremely gratifying to know that the public continues to hold the profession in such high esteem," American Nurses Association President Karen J. Daley, RN, PhD, MPH, FAAN, said in a news release. "The public's high regard for the profession, coupled with nurses' education and skills, makes nurses well-positioned to play a major role in the transformation of the nation's healthcare system."
 
The Institute of Medicine recently released a comprehensive report calling for a larger role for nurses in providing patient-centered care in a reformed healthcare system.
 
Survey results are based on telephone interviews with 1,000 adults. Nurses were first included in the Gallup poll in 1999 and have received the highest ranking every year except 2001, when firefighters took first place.
 
To see the Gallup poll, go to http://www.gallup.com/poll/145043/Nurses-Top-Honesty-Ethics-List-11-Year.aspx.
 

2. Imagery Helps Severely Depressed Inpatients      

From healthjourneys.com
 
Apóstolo JL, Kolcaba K. The effects of guided imagery on comfort, depression, anxiety, and stress of psychiatric inpatients with depressive disorders. Arch Psychiatr Nurs. 2009 Dec;23(6):403-11. Epub 2009 Mar 27.
 
Once again the dynamic duo research team of Apostolo and Kolcaba, at the Coimbra Nursing School in Coimbra, Portugal, examined the efficacy of a guided imagery intervention - this time for decreasing depression, anxiety and stress and increasing comfort in psychiatric inpatients with depressive disorders.
 
A quasi-experimental design sampled 60 short-term hospitalized depressive patients, selected consecutively. The experimental group listened to a guided imagery compact disk.
  
The Psychiatric Inpatients Comfort Scale and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales (DASS-21) were self-administered at two time points: prior to the intervention and 10 days later.  Comfort and DASS-21 were also assessed in the usual care group at these points in time.
 
Repeated measures revealed that the treatment group had significantly improved comfort and decreased depression, anxiety, and stress over time, as compared with the controls.
  
It is worth noting that this is one of a very few studies that examines the impact of imagery on severely depressed patients, and it is encouraging.
 

3. To Intend to but Not Being Able to: Frequent Attenders' Experiences of Suffering and of Their Encounter With the Health Care System

Lena Wiklund-Gustin, RN, PhD. J Holist Nurs  November 9, 2010
 
Purpose: Patients who frequently consult the health care system are supposed to cause great economic costs, and they also trouble the health care staff, as it seems as if there are no interventions that will help and keep them healthy. The researcher assumes that these patients attend for a reason and that they attend frequently because they, from a holistic point of view, do not get their health care needs fulfilled. This article aims to describe how frequent attenders experience their suffering and their encounter with the health care system.
Design and method: The study has an inductive hermeneutic design. Interviews with persons identified as frequent attenders were analyzed by means of a hermeneutic inquiry with three interpretive steps: naive reading, structural analysis, and critical reflection.
Findings: Patients are constantly striving to be and become healthy, to be of use, and to please others. The patients do not attend until suffering is experienced as unbearable. The patients experience, however, that health care staff do not understand their situation. Patients experience feelings of mistrust and rejection, which increases suffering. Conclusion: Holistic care could be a means to relieve suffering and, as a consequence, reduce attendance.
 
Published online before print November 9, 2010, doi: 10.1177/0898010110386957     
 

4. Healing: The Journey From Concept to Nursing Practice

Deborah McElligott. J Holist Nurs  December 2010   vol. 28  no. 4  251-259
 
Deborah McElligott, DNP, ANP-BC, AHN-BC
(Advanced Practice Nurses and the Office of Complementary and Alternative Medicine at North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY)
 
Purpose: To build on current knowledge and definitions of healing to further analyze and clarify the concepts as it relates to nursing practice and care of the conscious adult patient.
Methods: Literature surrounding previous concept analyses and definitions of healing were reviewed. Using the process outlined by Walker and Avant, model, borderline, related, and contrary patient case examples with brief rationale are presented.
Findings: Theoretical definition: Healing is as a positive, subjective, unpredictable process involving transformation to new sense of wholeness, spiritual transcendence, and reinterpretation of life.
Operational Definition: Healing is the personal experience of transcending suffering and transforming to wholeness.
Conclusions: Nurses, through transpersonal caring, and patients, through beliefs and their innate healing abilities/nature/God, may mediate the healing process. As nurses focus on the International Year of the Nurse and global health, it is paramount that healing, a major tenet of nursing, be explored and analyzed to increase understanding for both nurses and patients.


6) Website

CAM-quest Database
Another database recently created by the Carstens Foundation is the CAM-quest Database. The database includes research studies in nine therapy categories: acupuncture, anthroposophic medicine, ayurveda, bioenergetics, homeopathy, manual medicine, mind-body medicine, herbal medicine and      TCM - and searches can be made by disease, therapy and study design.
 
 The CAM-quest Database is accessible at www.cam-quest.org
 


Take care,
Darka Neill RN, BScN, RTTP, Reiki II
RNAO-CTNIG Newsletter Editor
darka_neill@sympatico.ca

 

Publication of views, opinions, or advertising does not necessarily reflect the views of or constitute endorsement by the RNAO-CTNIG or RNAO nor can the RNAO-CTNIG or RNAO be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in this digest.