This blog explores how the environment of care influences the patient's experience and staff well-being, with a focus on how sound, visual atmosphere, pacing, and sensory load shape healing and outcomes in healthcare settings. Topics include patient safety and satisfaction, hospital noise, nurse wellness, HCAHPS, sleep, and much more. Our goal is to share practical insights to help you create environments that heal.
May 14, 2012
Nursing is a calling, so believed Florence Nightingale. She felt that what was required to be a nurse involved both diligence and vigilance, qualities that were not sustainable for many in spite of a desire to serve the ill.
Today, nurses have moved into the role of primary caregivers during hospitalizations, in public health, in clinics and physician offices, in emergency rooms and urgent care clinics.
In her many writings, Nightingale claimed that “while it may be the surgeon that saved the patient’s life, it will be the nurse who teaches that patient how to live.” Thus, the role of the nurse is often not appreciated until it becomes clear that the nurse at the bedside is the person holding the hand and health of the patient.
As we move into Accountable Care Organizations, it will become even more evident that the role of nursing holds the key to healthcare quality.
This month of May, celebrating the birth of Florence Nightingale and honoring nurses who indeed continue to deliver caring at the bedside, is a small statement of gratitude that cannot go far enough to thank all those who have taken up this mission-driven work.