Salon events ignite nurses' passion with conversation February 6th, 2012 1 of 6 5/18/17, 8:07 AM
AUTHOR: NURSE.COM Categories: Greater Chicago Regional The concept is simple. The results can be life-changing. Invite a group of nurses to your home, prepare a simple dinner (or order pizza) and encourage a conversation about the nursing profession. With a little bit of guidance, guests soon will be brimming with energy, and before they leave, they ll have a renewed sense of purpose about their profession. Perhaps that s an oversimplification of the nursing salon concept, but as Kathy Mikos, RN, DNP, and Connie Hardy, RN, DNP, CNL, have discovered, it s not much more complex. Mikos, vice president for patient care services and CNO of Ingalls Memorial Hospital in Harvey, Ill., and Hardy, assistant professor at St. Xavier University in Chicago, have brought nursing salons to the Greater Chicago area with great success and with hope the concept will grow. One of the people at the [second] salon does not believe in the term burnout,' Hardy said. She said she was at a kind of turning point and she needed to refresh her spirits, and that happened that night. It s not a top-of-the-mountain-type thing; it s pretty mundane, but you do walk away refreshed with your spirit reactivated. Mikos said she learned about nursing salons from Marie Manthey, RN, of Minneapolis, who has helped start salons around the country. Manthey writes a blog about the salons she hosts and attends at mariesnursingsalon.wordpress.com. Connie Hardy, RN Mikos and Hardy spoke with Manthey about conducting nursing salons in the Chicago area, and so far three have taken place, hosted by Hardy; Shawn Tyrell, RN, CNO at Adventist Hinsdale (Ill.) Hospital; and Melinda Noonan, RN, DNP, 2 of 6 5/18/17, 8:07 AM
I brought students in, and we also had retired RNs, so we really ran the gamut of representing various thoughts, Hardy said. It s not necessarily representing various specialties, but where people are in their life and how they look at the profession. Kathy Mikos, RN I think the cool thing about these is they re not discussions, they re conversations. Discussion kind of implies we re trying to weigh people s opinions on a certain topic, and that s not the focus of this. It s truly the opportunity to sit and converse about important topics. It s a little bit like complexity theory, where the whole is really more than the sum of the pieces. The topic of conversation the first evening was what can be done to help new nursing graduates at a time when many of them are finding it difficult to land their first job. The very first question that was asked it s the only question was what s on your mind in nursing today?' Mikos said. By the time you go around the room, there is a topic that kind of naturally surfaces and becomes the focal point for the night s discussion. There is no agenda for the meeting, and there are no minutes, no accountabilities. It s just that conversation for the night. When you walk away and I think everybody felt that in both [nursing salons] you are absolutely with something inside yourself, Mikos added. Lora McGuire, RN, MS, a retired Joliet Junior College faculty member who serves as a clinical educator at Provena St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, Ill., attended both salons. She said she found the no negativity rule at the salons refreshing. It was so great to be in a room with such dynamic nurses. When I came back [to work], I was so excited, McGuire said of taking part in the salon. It was so great to be around passionate people. I decided to do it every other month. I would be 3 of 6 5/18/17, 8:07 AM
You don t want it turning into a club, Mikos said. You do want new people coming in. Tom Clegg is a freelance writer. FOR INFORMATION or tips about nursing salons, contact Connie Hardy at hardy@sxu.edu or Kathy Mikos at kmikos@ingalls.org. 4 of 6 5/18/17, 8:07 AM
Leave a Reply Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked * Comment Name * Email * Website Post Comment 5 of 6 5/18/17, 8:07 AM
Sign Up 6 of 6 5/18/17, 8:07 AM