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Nursing Against the Odds: How Health Care Cost Cutting, Media Stereotypes, And Medical Hubris Undermine Nurses And Patient Care (The Culture and Politics of Health Care Work)

Nursing Against the Odds: How Health Care Cost Cutting, Media Stereotypes, And Medical Hubris Undermine Nurses And Patient Care (The Culture and Politics of Health Care Work)
By Suzanne Gordon

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Product Description

Gordon examines how health care cost cutting and hospital restructuring undermine the working conditions necessary for quality care. She shows how the historically troubled workplace relationships between RNs and physicians become even more dysfunctional in modern hospitals.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #26834 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-03-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 512 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"Up-to-date investigations like Gordon's should be required reading for nursing students, public healthcare advocates, and all medical interns." -- Library Journal, March 15, 2005

From the Inside Flap
"The nursing profession lacks many things, like decent working conditions, recognition, and respect on the job. But, with Suzanne Gordon, it has something other professions can only envy-a skilled reporter, brilliant analyst, and steadfast advocate."-Barbara Ehrenreich

"Nursing is one of the most honorable professions I know. I'm proud of the service I provided during my nursing days. I learned so much about my beliefs, values, and passions as well as learning about others. Anyone who has spent time in a hospital knows that nurses are the true caregivers, the backbone of our health care system. Most doctors spend only a few minutes with their patients while nurses are there around the clock. This is an important book and needs to be required reading in all our medical schools."—Naomi Judd, RN

About the Author
Suzanne Gordon is an award-winning journalist. She is the coauthor of Life Support: Three Nurses on the Front Lines, the coauthor of From Silence to Voice: What Nurses Know and Must Communicate to the Public (also from Cornell), and has written for the New York Times, the Boston Globe, and the Toronto Globe and Mail, among many other publications. Gordon is also Assistant Adjunct Professor at the University of California San Francisco School of Nursing and was a health care commentator on Public Radio International’s Marketplace.


Customer Reviews

The Failure of Nurses to Take Care of Self threatens Us All5
Nursing Against the Odds: How Health Care Cost Cutting, Media Stereotypes, and Medical Hubris Undermine Nurses and Patient Care (Suzanne Gordon, ILR/Cornell University Press)is a first rate work of journalism, the beginning of a civilian audit that should have been documented by the profession itself, either in its primary practice venue (hospitals) or by its primary proponents of its own value (academics and the American Nurses Association).

Nursing Against the Odds documents not only the manipulation of nursing by the hospital industry, the medical profession and the media (reinforced by drug and device manufacturer Johnson & Johnson). It documents that nurses themselves think so little of their own contribution that they are unable or afraid to speak up when given the chance.

Nursing Against the Odds also documents the real tragedy of the hospital reengineering movement of the 1990s. This response to the challenge to health providers by the Managed Care companies to show their value in the marketplace was the wrong tactic at the wrong time by the wrong people. Michael Hammer and James Champy made a point to warn (in Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution, 1993) that the chief financial officer should never be tasked to manage the reengineering effort, simply because it was not about cutting costs but raising quality. Since the big accounting firms had the ear of the hospital CFOs this is exactly what happened. So the same folks that brought us Enron messed up hospitals and nursing so thoroughly that neither has yet to recover.

The contribution of Nursing Academia and the American Nurses Association during this cascading iatrogenesis has been less than helpful. Nursing schools teach care planning using a methodology that is largely an intellectual fraud. The Nursing Diagnosis Model demands so many mental gyrations that most students don't get it by the time they graduate. Nursing documentation in the clinical record using this method invites ridicule by other health professionals. Consequently Nursing Diagnosis does not inspire care planning and assist in documenting progress. Nursing care plan documentation is simply ignored or mindless phrases show up in clinical documents ("buffing the chart") that no one reads. Nursing Diagnosis phrases like "situational low self-esteem" or "ineffective coping" are more descriptive of Nursing's present state of affairs and its inability to assert itself as an independent profession.

While many academics look down their noses at union membership by calling it unprofessional, they forget that most professions bill for their time in fractions of an hour and produce quantifiable outcomes for their work. (Not many nursing graduates recognize the SF-36 or the FIM, common health outcome measurements tools.) Most professionals have figured out ways to protect themselves and their families, either by bargaining units or individual, enforceable contracts that protect against the hazards of their work or the vicissitudes of their employer. The fact that Nursing is unable to protect itself, and that this leaves anyone who is subjected to a hospital stay in grave danger, should be enough to give us all some motivation to put Nursing Against the Odds at the top of everyone's reading list.

Michael Newell, RN, MSN
Haddonfield, NJ

A Hard Read5
I have become a shameless, devoted Suzanne Gordon "follower" since reading her: "From Silence to Voice".
Suzanne has grabbed the bull by the horns, "put the blame on Mame" for the nursing crisis and offers constructive solutions in order to recruit and retain nurses.
"Nursing against the Odds", is a book that management/administration, government, nurses,student, patients and potential patients/the public - should read in order to understand "what" exactly is going on within the healthcare setting and how to make amends.
"Nursing Against the Odds" was extremely hard for me to read...emotionally. It has taken me months of picking up and putting down the book...especially getting through "Part 3" in such chapters as: "Mangling Care" and "Nurses on the Ropes".
I felt such rage reading what I know is to be so true.
Suzanne details the many players who are " not just supporting good [nursing] practice, they are undermining good practice" and notes that "when nurses believe that exit is their only option, they are really expressing their profound sense of defeat."
And exiting with their feet, they are.
It's deafening and deadly.

Reality 1015
While of benefiit to nurses everywhere in just reminding us we are not alone, this book also reminds us how we may be our own worst enemy in promoting change.
Sadly, those who could benefit most from this book, consumers, CEO's and physicians will probably never read it. In light of the JCAHO white paper on the nursing shortage, why isn't JCAHO also implenting and assessing facilities based on their own strategy recommendations? Without nurses at the bedside, medicine is headed for the rocks!
This is a very powerful book on nursing today.
Lisa Jones RN IBCLC