Melissa Fitzpatrick

MELISSA A. FITZPATRICK, MSN, RN, FAAN


Closing Day 1: “When the Nurse is a Patient: Employing Ethical Competence as We Advocate for Self and Others”

Melissa A. Fitzpatrick was interviewed by Sarah Delgado, DNP, RN, ACNP, a clinical practice specialist in strategic advocacy at the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses and a NNEC Planning Committee Member.

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– Melissa Fitzpatrick

Sometimes only a foot or two ahead of the train!

– Melissa Fitzpatrick

– Melissa Fitzpatrick

Behaviorally, we see those acting out as a result of fear. Every time I try to peel the onion about someone’s behavior. Why are they acting that way? Why are they speaking that way? Why is there such violence that we’re facing now? That’s an ethical dilemma right there. We can talk about violence in the workplace all day. When I peel those onions, I often find a few core things. A lack of knowledge. Maybe somebody doesn’t understand what’s happening, so they’re acting out in a challenging way because they are afraid. What’s happening to me? Why am I going through this? Scarcity plays a role in our challenges, whether we don’t have enough of something right now, such as the workforce challenges, we’re facing in nursing, and in the industry and in healthcare at large. The scarcity mentality drives a lot of behaviors, a lot of conversation, a lot of the challenges we’re facing when you don’t have enough of X. Let’s say it’s that you don’t have enough of the right people at the right place at the right time to deliver the care that we are obligated and privileged to deliver. That sets up a whole internal conflict, when you’re constantly feeling like you couldn’t do everything you wanted to do for that patient. I was raised by the nuns at Gwynedd Mercy University to treat every patient as if he were my own loved one. On each shift, day in and day out, if you feel like you couldn’t do everything you wanted to do for that loved one, that leaves you with moral injury and tremendous conflict over time. 

I see ethical questions and dilemmas as organizations try to fill their leadership gaps. The dichotomy of we’ve got to be good stewards, we’ve got to maintain our fiduciary responsibilities, cost effectiveness, eliminating waste, saving money. We also need to provide the highest quality and caliber of leaders with the right numbers and in the right places. It becomes an ethical dilemma. I see it in my work every day where so many organizations say they don’t have enough people. You’re the Chief Nurse of one hospital? Well, why don’t you just go ahead and be the Chief Nurse of all five with no additional support. You’re leading the critical services right now. We want to save money by not filling that position or not putting an interim leader in. So, let’s just have you lead all the emergency services to the ambulatory service and ambulatory surgery center. Get everybody to do more and more and more with less. Not only does that create internal conflict and feeling less than or not good enough, but it’s also the impact of all of those decisions on clinical quality. It’s a vicious cycle, kind of shooting yourself in the foot, where we think we’re saving money by not filling these important roles. And yet, at the end of the day, you’re just frying people, burning people out right and left. Whether you are the president of an executive search firm, frontline staff nurse, or whatever role you might be and in whatever setting, it’s always going to be about trying to manage the challenges of needs versus resources. 

– Melissa Fitzpatrick

– Melissa Fitzpatrick

If everyone took the time to reflect on: Why did I go into nursing? Why did I go down this path? Whether you’re in your early career, a multi careerist, at the end of your career, whatever it might be. If everyone got back in touch with the why of going into nursing, I think it would give us some optimism. We see the goodness and the work ethic and the strength of our convictions and the intentions that we brought into this beloved profession. I am still very hopeful. I see examples every day… Organizations are just people. It’s a lot of people in some cases, but it’s people coming together to fulfill the unified mission and share the same core values. If those are patient-centered, then most bad things won’t happen. I know the power of people who are aligned around a shared mission, vision, and values. How powerful that can be, even if it’s just two nurses at a time. 

– Melissa Fitzpatrick

– Melissa Fitzpatrick


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