National Nursing Week | 2020

NATIONAL NURSING WEEK

4 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS - SATURDAY, MAY 9, 2020

MAY 6-12, 2019 NATIONAL NURSING WEEK cna-aiic.ca MAY 11-17, 2020

Nursing the World to Health

Your leadership makes a difference every day. Share your story @canadanurses #VoiceToLead #IND2019 & #NationalNursingWeek

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PROUD TO PROTECT AND SERVE THE PUBLIC INTEREST, TOGETHER WITH RNs.

crnm.mb.ca

AS A COLLEGE WE:

INTHE MIDST OF THE CURRENT PANDEMIC, INFECTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL MESSAGING THAT WAS ONCE A HARD SELL HAS NOW FOUND AN AUDIENCETHAT IS ALL EARS.

Regulate registered nursing practice in Manitoba Support RNs to provide safe, competent and ethical care Set standards for education, registration and practice Take action when the standards are not met

DIANE ROBSON, INFECTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL (IP&C) PROFESSIONAL AT ST. BONIFACE HOSPITAL,

AT THE END OF 2019 WE HAD:

PHOTO BY NATASHA WOLOSCHUK

10 Graduate Nurses

13,346 RNs

261 Nurse Practitioners

ALL (CLEAN) HANDS ON DECK PREVENTION IS HALFTHE BATTLE IN FIGHTING INFECTION

Need a Foot Care Nurse? Find a Foot Care Nurse in your community at www.mafcn.ca

BY MIKE DALY

This isn’t Diane Robson’s first rodeo. With more than 35 years of experience as an Infection Prevention and Control (IP&C) Professional at St. Boniface Hospital, Robson is also a registered nurse. She has a Bachelor of Science in Microbiology, and a Master of Education, and she has worked her way through several infection control efforts and pandemics.

‘ I was around when we were worried about hepatitis B and hepatitis C, then HIV,” she says. “I was around for SARS, H1N1 influenza, the Ebola scare, and now it’s COVID-19.” Through them all, the goal was constant. “Our goal in Infection Prevention and Control is to try to prevent the transmission of organisms that have the potential to cause infections and disease in patients, staff and visitors when they are in the health-care environment,” Robson says. THE ROUTES TAKEN TO MEET THAT GOAL ARE VARIED, AND INCLUDE (BUT ARE NOT LIMITEDTO): • education of staff, patients and the public • health care associated infection surveillance • development and review of operational directives, education

In the midst of the current pandemic, infection prevention and control messaging that was once a hard sell has now found an audience that is all ears. “You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who is not aware of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Robson says. “Everybody wants a bottle of hand sanitizer on their desk, and the response from health-care staff and the public has been impressive. Everyone seems to be trying to find out as much as they can. They want to be part of the solution, not part of the problem, and that’s terrific.” Robson encourages the public to maintain that level of vigilance and commitment to preventing the spread of infection, even after the pandemic ends. “We need all hands on deck,” Robson says. “It really is the whole community — health-care staff and the general public alike — that will make us successful. You have to have everyone onboard. If we can maintain our commitment to social distancing, hand hygiene and other preventative measures we will continue to see the infection curve plateau and eventually descend.” ✚

In addition to the infectious organisms themselves, the IP&C team is tasked with helping develop a germ-fighting ethos that helps prevent infection not only during a full-blown pandemic, but long after such a crisis passes. That means being able to “sell” the importance of preventative measures even when there are no outbreaks to keep them top-of-mind. “Prevention is somewhat of a hard sell because you are talking about things that haven’t happened yet,” Robson says. “Once an outbreak occurs, then people will get onboard more quickly or easily. We’ve seen this with the current pandemic; precautionary messages didn’t resonate as much as they should have until it became quite obvious that this was something that could affect everybody and that it was more pervasive than people may have initially thought.” That phenomenon is more instinctual than it is deliberate, Robson adds. “I think it’s human nature to let those things go to the back of your mind,” she says. “At IP&C, we’ve realized that we need to be out there, constantly promoting the message and connecting directly with the people we are trying to have an impact on, reminding them that they need to incorporate the things we’re talking about into all of their behaviours.”

Manitoba Association of Foot Care Nurses

MB Primary Care Nurses, Care to Make a Difference We serve you in primary health care settings, family practice and community health clinics all over Manitoba!

Our goal: empower you to be your healthiest, avoid illness and injury, and avoid needing the hospital.

Here are some ways we support your health care:

• Support healthy pregnancies, early childhood development, and provide immunizations

• Give information and connect you with community resources • Help manage or resolve acute & chronic health problems • Promote health and well-being • Collaborate with various practitioners and specialists to customize care

• Care for sexually transmitted infections, reproductive and sexual health; operate Teen Clinics and more!

packages, and standard operating procedures • outbreak management

• facility design, renovation and construction where appropriate • product and equipment review and evaluation • Medical Device Reprocessing • auditing and reporting

Mike Daly is a communications specialist with the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority .

OUR TEAM IS EXPANDING: ARE YOU A PRIMARY CARE NURSE? Come join our team to empower our professional community through education, networking and advocacy events! Visit us at www.mpcna.ca or https://www.facebook.com/MPCNA

We serve Manitobans of all ages! Primary care nursing: Want to learn more?

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