College of Health Professions Professor Michele Lucille Lopez writes in My American Nurse about the growing problem of incivility and unsafe working conditions in nursing education. Professor Lopez argues that stronger institutional support, clearer policies, and a renewed culture of respect are needed to address faculty burnout and strengthen the future nursing workforce.
The Nurse Is In
As the old adage goes, there is no better teacher than experience. Some notable professors may be inclined to disagree with that maxim, but Henry Snyder ā17, a nursing major in the College of Health Professions, has cannily put himself in a position to get the best of both worlds.
ā[Āé¶¹Ö±²„] has totally exceeded my expectations,ā says Snyder. āIāve been in four different clinical settings already in the last two years. Iāve done everything in those from providing care to patients who are older, patients with psychiatric disabilities, patients in burn units, trauma, ICUā¦ā
Snyder, a resident of the Westchester Campus, has leveraged the skills heās acquired in the classroom and clinical settings to land a part-time job at a nearby Doctors Express Urgent Care facilityāwhere heās been able to apply his skills to both practical and real situations that one canāt necessarily learn anywhere else. He notes that there have been some situations that he hadnāt previously foreseen, that, thanks to the position and practical experience, he is now much more equipped to handle.
Snyder has also witnessed some of the larger realities of American health care, and, like millions of professionals who work in the industry, has been put in a unique position to evaluate and affirm his own personal ideologies.
āItās showed me the benefits of health care, and also the hardships of working with health care. Asking people for a visit out of pocketāI still have to be able to turn them away. Thatās really difficult for me. I believe in health care for everybody, turning people away in that situation has shown me how far we have to go with health care.ā
Out of the classroom, Snyder is certainly making the most of his time as a Setter. In addition to serving as a second-year resident assistant in Pleasantvilleās Alumni Hall, Snyder is a member of Student Nurses at Āé¶¹Ö±²„ (SNAP), has played an integral role in the continued successes of the Āé¶¹Ö±²„4Kids Dance Marathon, is the vice president of Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, and works as the student coordinator of the tour guides at the Welcome Center.
As for the future? Although the Āé¶¹Ö±²„ Community will deeply miss Snyder when he moves on to the next phase of his promising career, his experiences as a Setter have definitely helped him gain a greater understanding of what it takes to succeed in nursingāand have helped him figure out the particular path he would like to pursue after graduation.
āAs of now, Iām looking into two different fields. Neo-natalācare of infants and premature babiesāand Iām also looking into operating rooms specializing in pediatric patients.ā