l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire
dying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm
l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire
l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire
dying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm
l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire
l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire
dying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm
l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire
l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire
owing personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm
l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire
No•ble
[nōbəl]
1. having high ethical principles
2. embodying personal qualities
that people admire
For 11 straight years,
nurses have ranked #1 as the
MOST TRUSTED
PROFESSION
for honesty and
ethical standards.
#1
Currently, this nursing workforce is
…and counting.
U.S. Nurses
U.S. Army
That’s about 4x the size of the U.S. Army.
With the critical role they play,
it’s not too surprising that nursing is the
FASTEST GROWING
INDUSTRYin the country.
NURSING
ALL OTHER
OCCUPATIONS
19%
11%
TotalIndustryGrowth
TO PROVIDE SAFE AND
QUALITY CARE FOR THE
8,102,573 AMERICANS
in need each day.
Their mission:
Nursing Student
RN
Registered Nurse
LPN
Licensed Practical
Nurse NP
Nurse
Practitioner
Nurse Researcher
Nurse
Executive
…not to mention all of the
nursing students preparing to fill
the ranks in the very near future.
Nurse Educator
So who makes up this noble group of nurses?
Which means by year’s end, the nurse has
traveled farther than
the length of California
moved enough weight to
dwarf the great blue whale
helped improve the lives of
nearly 1,100 patients
And that’s considering their already
JAM-PACKED SCHEDULE.
direct patient care
research and evaluate more effective
ways of caring for patients
coordinate care
document care
communicate with care team
interpret patient information
conduct physical exams
and health histories
counsel and educate patients
administer medications
Yes, the job of a nurse can be
QUITE DEMANDING.
In fact, meeting the
professional criteria is
no small accomplishment,
as a nurse must:
Physical Strength
Mental
Strength
Emotional
Strength
The Noble
Nurse
KNOW anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology,
and more, and apply that knowledge at a moment’s notice
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
admit, transfer, and
discharge patients
MAKE crucial patient care decisions
BE an advocate for the patient, teacher for the family,
and the backbone of the healthcare team
LOVE people at their weakest moments
DO what no one else does, in a way that no one else can do it
Not that it’s a simple task.
DURING A SINGLE SHIFT, a nurse will, on average...
THE NOBLE NURSE
walk over 4 MILES safely lift over 1.8 TONS and care for nearly 7 PATIENTS
perform wound care
stay on top of new innovations
and information in the field
But despite all that the profession asks of them, nurses continue to
MAKE A DIFFERENCE EVERY SINGLE DAY.
And that is, perhaps, their noblest quality of all.
Sources: 1. Gallup. Americans Rate Nurses Highest on Honesty, Ethical Standards. December 2014.
2. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook. May 2014. 3. U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services. bhpr.hrsa.gov/healthworkforce 4. American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
http://www.aacn.nche.edu 5. National League of Nurses. http://www.nln.orgTogether, we can shape the future of nursing.
15-NHPklw-0298

Infographic: The Noble Nurse

  • 1.
    l qualities thatpeople admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire dying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire dying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire dying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire l qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people admire owing personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. showing personal qualities that people adm l] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire No•ble [nōbəl] 1. having high ethical principles 2. embodying personal qualities that people admire For 11 straight years, nurses have ranked #1 as the MOST TRUSTED PROFESSION for honesty and ethical standards. #1 Currently, this nursing workforce is …and counting. U.S. Nurses U.S. Army That’s about 4x the size of the U.S. Army. With the critical role they play, it’s not too surprising that nursing is the FASTEST GROWING INDUSTRYin the country. NURSING ALL OTHER OCCUPATIONS 19% 11% TotalIndustryGrowth TO PROVIDE SAFE AND QUALITY CARE FOR THE 8,102,573 AMERICANS in need each day. Their mission: Nursing Student RN Registered Nurse LPN Licensed Practical Nurse NP Nurse Practitioner Nurse Researcher Nurse Executive …not to mention all of the nursing students preparing to fill the ranks in the very near future. Nurse Educator So who makes up this noble group of nurses? Which means by year’s end, the nurse has traveled farther than the length of California moved enough weight to dwarf the great blue whale helped improve the lives of nearly 1,100 patients And that’s considering their already JAM-PACKED SCHEDULE. direct patient care research and evaluate more effective ways of caring for patients coordinate care document care communicate with care team interpret patient information conduct physical exams and health histories counsel and educate patients administer medications Yes, the job of a nurse can be QUITE DEMANDING. In fact, meeting the professional criteria is no small accomplishment, as a nurse must: Physical Strength Mental Strength Emotional Strength The Noble Nurse KNOW anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology, and more, and apply that knowledge at a moment’s notice ü ü ü ü ü admit, transfer, and discharge patients MAKE crucial patient care decisions BE an advocate for the patient, teacher for the family, and the backbone of the healthcare team LOVE people at their weakest moments DO what no one else does, in a way that no one else can do it Not that it’s a simple task. DURING A SINGLE SHIFT, a nurse will, on average... THE NOBLE NURSE walk over 4 MILES safely lift over 1.8 TONS and care for nearly 7 PATIENTS perform wound care stay on top of new innovations and information in the field But despite all that the profession asks of them, nurses continue to MAKE A DIFFERENCE EVERY SINGLE DAY. And that is, perhaps, their noblest quality of all. Sources: 1. Gallup. Americans Rate Nurses Highest on Honesty, Ethical Standards. December 2014. 2. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook. May 2014. 3. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. bhpr.hrsa.gov/healthworkforce 4. American Association of Colleges of Nursing. http://www.aacn.nche.edu 5. National League of Nurses. http://www.nln.orgTogether, we can shape the future of nursing. 15-NHPklw-0298