This “Bugle Notes” is to every nurse. I have had the
privilege to serve alongside hundreds of nurses in the nearly 40 years since I started
medical school. This includes the hospital and outpatient settings and the 40
plus medical missions I have led around the world. There are five amazing
nurses in my family as well. I have
learned from every nurse with whom I have served. This has made me a more
compassionate, caring, and empathetic person and a better physician. I
unabashedly tell people how much I love nurses for who they are as people and
for what they do as nurses.
I have reflected on what are the “things” that make nurses
truly special. Not everyone has what it takes to be a nurse. There are certain
attributes of those who choose nursing. In my experience, these attributes
overlap in many ways with physicians yet there is still something intrinsically
different to those who choose nursing that sets them apart. I want to share
with you my thoughts. They come from my heart. I hope every nurse who reads
this will be encouraged, empowered, and feel valued for who they are as a
person and for what they do as a nurse.
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You are the “front-line” of health care. You
spend the most time with our patients and their families daily meeting their
personal, physical, emotional, and even spiritual needs.
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You are the “eyes and ears” of the patients and
thus their biggest advocate. You must have the clinical acumen to recognize a
potentially serious problem with a patient and the confidence to make it known
to the physician. I know that is not always an easy thing to do.
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You have a servant-heart – humble, loving, and
caring. The needs of others always comes first to you.
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You are able to “notice” the need around you and
go to that need whether it is a patient or a co-worker.
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You wear many hats – mediator, negotiator,
peace- keeper, and at times the truth-speaker when patients and families are frightened,
angry, vulnerable, feel forgotten, or alone.
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You are “hope-givers’ when there seems to be no
hope. Without hope, one cannot truly live.
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You are the “warmth of love” given through a
caring touch, a gentle hug, or a reassuring word when they are needed the most.
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You are a difference-maker in the lives of
people every day and you do it one life at a time.
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You are “right there with them” in the time of a
patients and families greatest need.
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Finally, when all else fails, and there is
nothing medically left to do, you are the “tears of a loving God” when a patient
has no one else to turn to in their grief and sorrow.
Mother Teresa once said, “None of us do truly great things
but we can all do small things with great love.”
Every day you do just that – you do the small things with
great love and in doing so you are making a difference in the lives of all you
touch.
To be a nurse means to have a heart “like a stained glass
window” – a window that has been broken only to be forged back together again
stronger and more beautiful for having been broken. Thank you for having just
such a heart! You are a blessing to those you serve and to every provider
privileged to serve with you.
“You are beautiful, you are important, and you are loved”.
Humbly,
Andy Lamb, MD
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