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Holding Out Hope
Volume 19, Number 2 Spring 2002

Article Summaries

Editorial- Hail and Farewell by Judith Allen Shelly
It's goodbye to long-time JCN managing editor, Melodee Yohe, as she retires, and hello to new managing editor, Cathy Walker. Each one shares a bit about themselves and her relationship with nurses, nursing and JCN. Shelly asks readers for prayer for a smooth transition.

Trauma Revisited: One Nurse's Response to Terrorism by Joy Ruth Cohen
After the terrorist attacks, the author wants to do something to help. She hears on the news that military nurses are being called to work at Ground Zero, leaving the veterans' hospitals drastically understaffed. She calls several in her area about volunteering. One responds. So Cohen, an RN associate professor of nursing, spends a number of evenings with the men, primarily VietNam vets, on the wards. To her question, "How may I serve you?" she gets a variety of answers from talking with, crying with, rubbing a back, writing a letter, making a phone call-offering support to men suffering from excruciatingly painful flashbacks of their war experiences because of what they're being bombarded with on TV. She can't fix them, but she can listen and empathize. Some call out to her, calling her "wonderful lady" or "sweetheart" as she moves from bed to bed, being Jesus to the men in the only ways she knows how.

Calm in the Midst by Sandra D. Reece
This sidebar, written by an RN who lives and works in New York City, describes a little of what it was like for area nurses to be in NYC on September 11th. She talks about the need for everyone to share their stories and comfort one another. She sees NYC as a city that is grieving and that will never again be the same. She compares the coming together of the Christian community in NYC to the Pentecost experience of Jesus' disciples in the book of Acts. She talks about how the NYC Nurses Christian Fellowship has met for prayer and support, as individually they have been involved in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Sleepover at Sloan-Kettering by Joan Fox-Rose
In the process of spending the first post-op night with her friend, Peg, after Peg's modified breast surgery, Fox-Rose sees Peg's faith in God in action. Yes, she is struggling with the cancer diagnosis and anxious about learning the results of the lab reports; and yes, she has some fears for the future. But, in the midst of her stress, she shows her abiding trust in God by the way she reminisces about shared nursing experiences with her friend and speaks encouragingly to all those with whom she comes in contact in the hospital. Peg's optimism is contagious.

Supportive Communication in the Face of Breast Cancer by Heidi Apsey
It's one thing to dispense helpful information to cancer patients in the line of duty, but it's quite another thing to give what is needed when that patient is your beloved sister. Apsey learned much in the process of her sister's cancer experience that is now proving invaluable in the way she communicates with patients. At first her sister wanted the cold, hard facts-information, statistics, probabilities-about her cancer diagnosis and treatment. She wanted advice as to where to turn for medical help. But a year later, when cancer cells showed up in Linda's axillary lymph tissue, and later still when cancer had metastacized to the bone, she no longer needed facts. Because the physicians offered no hope for a cure, she began exploring other avenues, searching for renewed hope. She found it in herself, her faith in God and in the positive support of family and friends. Nurses aren't well taught to offer this kind of support. Apsey gives nurses some ideas on how to be sensitive to the patients' needs when information isn't what they're seeking.

A Circle of Prayer: Bringing Hope to the Oncology Unit by Marcia Krugh Leaser
Leaser interviews three nurses who work on an oncology outpatient chemotherapy unit, who have made it a habit of praying together every Monday morning for their patients, and the physicians and nurses who treat these seriously-ill patients. They share some things they've learned along the way about maintaining hope in their patients and for themselves.

Spiritual Care: Lingering Questions by Julia D. Emblen & Perrie Peverall
An RN and a chaplain co-author this article that discusses concerns and questions that Christian student nurses have raised in Emblen's classes about how to communicate their faith appropriately to patients. Student concerns include: When is it appropriate to share your faith? How do you respond to people of other faiths? How do you answer when people ask why this crisis is happening to them? How can you communicate or sympathize with patients who are experiencing something (like losing a loved one) that you can't relate to or haven't experienced yet? Readers are encouraged to give feedback on this article on the JCN website. See Share the Faith Discussion.

Spiritual Openness by Don Posterski
This brief article, written by the director of church relations for World Vision, International, includes a helpful chart summarizing the traits, results and responses of our culture to spirituality. The author concludes that even people not interested in the essentials of Christianity, orthodoxy or organizational religion, feel that matters of the soul really matter. The chart gives suggestions for those who want to influence people for Christ in today's spiritual environment. Our challenge is to engage them to express spiritual interest-regardless of how unorthodox it may seem. Only by listening and accepting where people are in their spiritual journey will we be able to share the God of creation and the Christ of redemption with them.

Walking with Fan Through Bone Marrow Transplant by Shu-Ya Chen
Over the course of Fan's lengthy treatment, in and out of the hospital and outpatient clinic, Chen got to know the nineteen-year-old girl well. They became friends and shared many social activities, as well as life crises. Chen was able to minister to Fan with the four A's of spiritual care that she had learned: assessment, approach, action and award. Chen was rewarded by seeing Fan grow in her new Christian life, as well as enjoy remission from her cancer. During this process, Chen and her colleagues were encouraged as they learned what patients and families need when they go through a long course of treatment for a life-threatening disease.

Rose Hawthorne Lathrop: Servant of the Dying Poor by Linda E. Sabin
Though coming from a loving, wealthy, educated, well-connected family, Lathrop endured much sadness as a young adult: the untimely deaths of her parents, the death of her only child and a troubled, often loveless, marriage. At the age of forty-five, Lathrop developed an interest in the plight of terminally ill cancer patients, particularly those without resources. After taking a short nursing course on the care of the dying, she rented three rooms in a lower East side New York City neighborhood to care for several dying patients. Within a few years, she and an associate became affiliated with the Dominican Third Order, and the ministry grew to several caring communities. To the end Lathrop (now Mother Alphonsa) cared for patients, seeing that as what she had been called to do as her service to the Lord. Her legacy is a ministry that thrives today.

Diane's Legacy by Mary E. Snyder
Snyder was a nurse in her twenties when she met a special patient, Diane, who had advanced leukemia. Diane was in her mid-thirties, the mother of four young children. Despite her dreadful disease, Diane never complained. She was always cheerful and kind. Her Bible and her strong Christian faith were evident. It was the mid-seventies, and Diane had been placed in reverse isolation. Snyder was assigned to Diane during her frequent hospitalizations, and they became good friends. Despite a missed opportunity to say goodbye when Diane was admitted for the last time, Snyder never forgot her. Now she has been diagnosed with breast cancer, and, in her memory, Diane has become her role model. Diane's strength and faith through her difficult journey with cancer twenty-five years ago is Snyder's inspiration to maintain a positive attitude and a close relationship with God through this experience.

Evelyn and Charles: An Oasis of Love in the ER by Peggy Doyle
It was another chaotic Friday evening in the emergency department for Doyle, but one room kept drawing her back because of the love and peace in it, despite Evelyn's terminal illness. This couple knew Evelyn's time to depart this life was coming soon, and they wanted to share every precious moment of the time they had left. The couple was an example of all that is positive in a negative situation-love, respect, dignity and peace. Doyle wishes she could give to all her patients the peace Jesus described in John 14:27: "My peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled."

Research: Does Prayer Really Help? by Leslie Furlow and Josie Lu O'Quinn
Building on previous studies on the influence of intercessory prayer on the recovery of patients hospitalized with a cardiac diagnosis, Furlow and O'Quinn based their research on the question: "Does intercessory prayer to the Judeo-Christian God have an effect on the patient's medical condition and recovery while in the hospital?" Thirty-nine patients were in the study; twenty-two were in the experimental group and seventeen in the control group. Findings were compared with previous studies; the conclusions were significant, although further research with a larger group and rigorous controls needs to be done.

Heart Surgery: Body and Soul by Patti Ozzello
Ozzello is a student nurse in her cardiac rotation and goes to the OR with her patient as he undergoes cardiac bypass surgery. Seeing the procedure, she makes many comparisons between what the physicians and nurses are accomplishing in her patient's body with the radical surgery God is in the process of doing in her heart and life. She finds this her most profound experience of nursing school.

Someone to Love Me by Sylvia B. Aftonomos
This nurse is floated from OB to a medical floor and told in report that one of her patients is demented and muttering to herself all the time. Aftonomos inwardly groans and wonders if she'll have to spend the whole evening in this elderly woman's room, to the neglect of her other patients. Lamenting to God, she questions his wisdom in giving her this assignment. But as she makes rounds and takes the time to listen to Mabel's mumblings, she finds that God had a plan all along.

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