
They are the practitioners of the difficult and heroic art of transition, whose ultimate goal is to promote quality of life. Hospice Heroes accept and embrace this gift of providing compassionate end of life care for their patients as a profound mission based on self- sacrifice and a willingness to live for something greater than themselves. They know that care is more than tending to the physical end of life, so they are able to be and act in the present moment to help ease the gnawing fears that the patient, his or her family, and support group feel. Above all, Hospice Heroes understand that death does not have to be painful, joyless, or lacking in dignity.
We have entrusted them with such a profound responsibility, yet we often neglect to provide them with the necessary tools to carry out their mission. In 2006, The National Quality Forum published A National Framework and Preferred Practices for Palliative and Hospice Care Quality: A Consensus Report. This report details the problems hindering healthcare outcomes, the preferred practices to improve healthcare outcomes, and the rationale for developing these practices.
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Although the regular housing market has continued it’s long, slow decline, the senior housing market is on fire.
Check out this story from the The Sun News of Myrtle Beach.
If any of you have experience working in SNFs, Nursing Homes or ALFs, this is a great bricks-and-mortar type business to get into with the aging boomer population promising a rise in clientele.
Enjoy the article!
Tell me what you think.
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PHILADELPHIA — Though the overall housing market has not escaped the doldrums, the senior housing sector, driven by investment companies, has gone gangbusters since 2010.
In the third quarter of 2011 alone, 39 senior housing deals worth $5.5 billion were completed, primarily by real estate investment trusts that specialize in housing for the elderly. That figure includes independent-living and assisted-living communities, but not nursing homes.
The total value of senior housing deals in the quarter ended Sept. 30 was greater than the combined total in the previous two full years, according to the National Investment Center for the Seniors Housing & Care Industry in Annapolis, Md.
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Nurse Entrepreneurs upholding the highest standards for their employees as one of BC Business Magazine’s 2011 Best Companies to Work for in British Columbia.
Good job, guys!
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Nurse Next Door, one of North America’s fastest growing home care franchise systems, is proud to announce that they have been named to BC Business Magazine’s 2011 Best Companies to Work for in BC list in the number 3 spot. For the fourth time in five years, Nurse Next Door was acknowledged by the annual program that recognizes thought leading employers in BC.
“We’re honored to be named a top employer again,” said John DeHart, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Nurse Next Door. “Caring for the people who care for our clients is the most important thing we can do. Being named to this list again shows our efforts to admire people and attract the best people are paying off.”
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Great profile, in The Gulf Coast Business Review of Nevco, a business pioneered by a nurse and her son, an attorney.
They started out as a humble Dial-A-Nurse service and have expanded into a large international nursing educational material provider.
Excellent profile and great take-aways!
Let me know your thoughts in the comments box?
Any of you thinking of providing educational materials for other nurses? Let me know, I can put you in touch with some highly professional educational material packagers and distributors.
Cheers,
Anna
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If you guys like this post, feel free to re-post it on Facebook or Twitter! Let’s make this nurse entrepreneur thing go viral!
Follow me on Twitter @icoachnurses and join the club at my Facebook Fanpage so you never miss out on the latest posts and events info!
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Here are 5 no-brainer reasons why you should use blogging as an Internet marketing tool.
1. Blogging is simple. If you have a PC and an Internet connection then you can blog. Period.
2. Blogging is authentic. In this day and age where advertising literally saturates our lives, the credibility of promoters’ claims are always in question. However, in blogs things are different. Blogs are about creating a community and sharing valuable information. With a blog, you can connect deeply and personally with your audience and provide them with real value based on the relationship you’ve built with them vs. the marketing mumbo jumbo you spout at them. See the difference?
3. Blogging is free. Any opportunity for free exposure is a huge bonus especially to start-ups. But many new nurse entrepreneurs aren’t blogging, thus literally losing out on the significant opportunity to gain valuable exposure to their target market for free.
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Nurses have been at the forefront of patient care for a long time. This uniquely positions us within our nursing jobs to ask some of the most vital, creative and high-quality questions in healthcare. And as the great Tony Robbins once said, “Quality questions create a quality life.”
So what does being uniquely positioned to ask good questions mean to the average nurse?
Well, asking the right kind of questions, can lead to some pretty creative thinking about the real-world answers to those questions. And, as many Nurse Entrepreneurs have discovered, answering the most common questions or solving the most common problems in healthcare can not only be a great service to patients, families and healthcare providers, but it can also be a very lucrative endeavor.
Terms such as EntrepreNurse™, Nurse Entrepreneur and Nurse Leader are becoming more common and serve as important new topics for discussion, even though many are not familiar with what these relatively new concepts mean.
What is an EntrepreNurse™or a Nurse Entrepreneur?
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