guest says nurses are so important to health policy because of the breadth of their experience.
“nurses work in hospitals, in long-term care, mental health, public health, in the education system, in occupational health and safety, prisons — we work in all types and facets of canadian society,” he says. “nurses are one of the few health care providers that work across all of these sectors in a fairly major way, and have a fairly significant interaction with the the public living in canada, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. so i think we have a good handle on the perspective of the public and what the public needs in order to advocate for them.”
guest also believes that canadians would have seen a different pandemic had there been a cno to oversee things like the vaccine rollout.
“i strongly believe that had there been a chief nursing officer role in place prior to the pandemic, decision-making could have happened much sooner,” he says.
remember the
“hunger games”-esque rush for vaccine appointments
when spots first opened up last spring? guest says that vaccines could have been given out much more quickly if a cno had advised the government to let nurses administer vaccinations.
“nurses have the ability to determine whether an individual is appropriate for a vaccine, and administer it to expedite access,” he said, noting that some provinces have since taken that route. he adds that expanding nurses’ scope of practice to let them prescribe medications could also could lessen the strain on overloaded hospitals and family doctors.