Betty R. Ferrell

Keynote Day 1: BETTY R. FERRELL, PhD, MA, CHPN, FAAN, FPCN
Director and Professor, Nursing Research & Education
City of Hope National Medical Center

“The Enduring Legacy of Nursing’s Compassionate Presence in Serious Illness”.

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We as people, as human beings first, are changed, because of the last few years. But as professionals, we are also changed; we’ve experienced vulnerability. We’ve gone from a nurse one day to a patient, a child, a parent the next. It opened us up in really different ways. My work is in the area of palliative care. Serious illness care and end-of-life care are very much a part of what we’ve just been through. It’s the concept of suffering. In 2008, I, along with my colleague Nessa Coyle, published our first book on the nature of suffering. We published that in 2008, because there has been a lot written over the years about suffering from the medical perspective, like the seminal work of Eric Cassell on The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine. But I wanted to say, wait a minute. Nurses are also at the frontlines of responding to suffering. And so we did work and then published our book, The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Nursing. A year or so ago, a colleague, Billy Rosa – a newer nurse to the field, a brilliant scholar, and an ethicist at Memorial Sloan Kettering – really encouraged me to work on a new edition of that book. He said it’s time. He recently completed a masters in ethics and PhD at Penn. So we decided to do the book together. 

– Betty R. Ferrell

– Betty R. Ferrell

There’s a lot of great ethics literature in nursing about being a witness, bearing witness. And in our work on suffering, a number of wonderful nurse authors who have talked about responding to suffering say that it means bearing witness. It means we are there. We are there the moment that woman wakes up having just lost her breast from a mastectomy. We are there on that surgery ward when the patient rolls back from having just had his leg amputated. We are front row to suffering, right? It’s your job as a nurse to witness suffering. That’s your job. That’s what you do, even as a 22-year-old new graduate from that year of bedside care. Now you need to speak up and use your voice. Talk to the media, talk to your legislator, talk to administrators and say, we are now being asked to send women home six hours after a mastectomy. Let me tell you what these women are saying to me. Like the god mothers and fathers of nursing say, nursing is about speaking for the people who can’t speak for themselves, whether they can’t speak because they don’t speak English, whether they can’t speak because they just got in the country last week, whether they can’t speak because they are too sick or too young or too old. We are the voice of the vulnerable. That’s, again, in the DNA. It’s in the job description. You signed on to do the work, right?

– Betty R. Ferrell

I think our nurses are exhausted and overwhelmed. They need so much support. I’m the first to agree to that. But I also think, from this, we will grow and we will do better. Yes, it’s really messy right now to deal with all of these issues of inequity and injustice. It’s messy to look at all the huge gaps and problems of our healthcare system. But you know what would be worse is to not talk about it. What would be worse is to ignore the messiness we live in. So lay it out there. I’m thrilled, because when I started nursing, we didn’t talk about all these things. I started nursing where we didn’t say, maybe our African American patients aren’t getting such good care. So we’re talking about it. And I think we’re at this place, because we now have the courage to talk about where the huge problems are. I also think we have the ability to improve. 

For new nurses or people starting their career this year in the messiness, I would say, you still made the right decision. You still chose the right career. You have a lifetime of joy and privilege to look forward to. You are so lucky.

– Betty R. Ferrell


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