New Jersey Nursing Insights

NJCCN

The New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing (NJCCN)—the nursing workforce center for NJ—presents the New Jersey Nursing Insights Podcast. Now hosted by Drs. Susan Weaver  and Daria Waszak, the program features conversations with nurses from a wide range of professional and personal backgrounds, each discussing the nature of their profession. Nursing Insights was originally hosted by Stephanie Olaso, MHCI, BSN, RN, who led the program through its first 30 episodes.

  1. MAR 27

    35 | The Backbone of the Hospital – Why Med-Surg Nurses Are the Ultimate Generalists

    Medical-surgical nursing is often called the backbone of the hospital – but it’s also one of the most misunderstood specialties in healthcare. In this episode of Nursing Insights, Susan and Daria speak with experienced Med-Surg nurses Brooke Roth and Luz Parris about what it really takes to thrive in one of the most demanding areas of nursing. From managing multiple high-acuity patients at once to making split-second decisions about who needs help first, Med-Surg nurses operate in an environment where prioritization, teamwork, and adaptability are essential. Luz shares a powerful story from the COVID era when she was responsible for ten patients in a single shift – including several critically ill patients and multiple emergencies happening at the same time. Brooke explains why strong clinical judgment and constant awareness are critical when caring for patients whose conditions can change quickly. They also discuss the realities of night shifts, including the so-called “bewitching hour” when unexpected events often happen between 3 and 4 AM – and why the idea that hospitals sleep at night couldn’t be further from the truth. If you’ve ever wondered what makes Med-Surg nurses such versatile and resilient professionals, this conversation offers an honest look at the skill, pressure, and dedication behind the specialty.   Key Takeaways Medical-surgical nurses care for a wide variety of patients and conditions, making them some of the most versatile clinicians in healthcare.Strong prioritization skills are essential because patient conditions can change rapidly, and multiple needs often compete for attention.Teamwork between nurses, physicians, and support staff is critical to managing complex and unpredictable situations. Hospitals are rarely quiet at night – many nurses say the most intense moments often happen in the early morning hours.Experience in Med-Surg nursing builds a strong clinical foundation that supports many other nursing specialties.  Relevant Links New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing (NJCCN): https://www.njccn.orgAcademy of Medical-Surgical Nurses: https://www.amsn.org

    46 min
  2. MAR 5

    34 | When the Healer Is Wounded – A Nurse’s Story from the California Wildfires

    Trigger Warning: This episode contains discussions of trauma, disaster, displacement, survivor’s guilt, and medical distress, including descriptions related to wildfire evacuation, loss, and a medical emergency involving a child. Some listeners may find these topics emotionally difficult. Please listen with care and take a pause if needed. _________________________________  What happens when the trauma expert becomes the trauma survivor? In this powerful and deeply personal episode of Nursing Insights, psychotherapist and psychiatric mental health clinical nurse specialist Donna Gaffney shares her experience living through the January 7, 2025 California wildfires in Pacific Palisades. For decades, Donna has supported children, families, nurses, and communities through some of the most devastating crises in recent history – from 9/11 to Hurricane Katrina to COVID-19. But this time was different. This time, she was in the middle of it. Donna takes us through the moment she realized she had to evacuate, the shock of displacement, the heavy weight of survivor’s guilt, and the emotional toll of returning to a neighborhood reduced to ash. She introduces the concept of “shared traumatic reality” – when healthcare providers are living through the very same disaster as the people they serve. Key Takeaways Trauma feels different when you are inside it, not observing it.“Shared traumatic reality” occurs when healthcare providers and patients experience the same crisis.Survivor’s guilt can surface even when you did not lose everything.Healthcare professionals are not immune to destabilization during disasters.Being called “strong” is not always helpful – vulnerability matters.Community, storytelling, and meaning-making are essential for healing.Self-compassion is not optional – it is necessary.Recovery is not a return to what was, but a movement forward.  Relevant Links New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing (NJCCN): https://www.njccn.orgKristin Neff – Self-Compassion Research: https://self-compassion.orgVivek Murthy – “My Parting Prescription for America”: https://fcsinterventions.com/resources/my-parting-prescription-for-america/Suleika Jaouad: https://suleikajaouad.comMurthy, V. H. (2022). Confronting health worker burnout and well-being. https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/health-worker-wellbeing-advisory.pdfand https://www.vivekmurthy.com/partingprescriptionNJ-NEW https://njnew.org/programs/virtual-schwartz-rounds/Meaningful Work Matters Podcast https://open.spotify.com/show/7FCvG2GBgVA66PhCks0g4rDon’t Clock Out https://www.dontclockout.org/Introspective Spaces  https://www.introspectivespaces.com/The Relentless School Nurse https://relentlessschoolnurse.com/Courageous Well-Being for Nurses: Strategies for Renewal https://www.press.jhu.edu/books/title/12847/courageous-well-being-nurses

    55 min
  3. 12/28/2025

    33 | Digital Communication Competencies for Nurse Leaders in a Changing Healthcare Landscape

    Digital communication is no longer optional for nurse leaders – it is a core leadership skill. In this episode of Nursing Insights, we sit down with Alysia Adams, Director of Education Partnerships at the American Organization of Nursing Leadership, to explore the digital communication competencies now shaping nursing leadership across the country. Alysia shares what led her to research digital communication, the barriers nurse leaders face online, and how storytelling, ethics, boundaries, and inclusivity play a critical role in effective leadership. She also explains how these competencies were developed through a Delphi study and why they are now being incorporated into national leadership standards. This conversation offers practical insight for nurse leaders at every level who want to communicate with clarity, confidence, and purpose in the digital era.   Key Takeaways Why communication is a foundational skill for effective nurse leadershipThe most common barriers preventing nurse leaders from engaging digitallyHow storytelling strengthens trust, visibility, and influenceWhy ethics and credibility rank highest among digital competenciesThe importance of boundaries and well-being in digital leadershipHow nurse leaders can communicate across generations effectivelySimple first steps for leaders who want to improve their digital presence  Relevant Links American Organization of Nursing Leadership: https://www.aonl.orgNurse Leader Journal: https://www.journals.elsevier.com/nurse-leaderNew Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing: https://www.njccn.org

    36 min
  4. 12/25/2025

    32 | Making Night Shift Safer: How One Hospital Successfully Implemented Napping for Nurses

    Nurse fatigue isn’t just uncomfortable – it’s dangerous. In this episode, Dr. Pamela Hinds and crisis nurse Brett Bagshaw from Children’s National Hospital explain how their organization became a national leader in implementing sanctioned night-shift napping. From alarming survey data to cultural barriers, space challenges, HR policy changes, and real nurse stories, this conversation offers a practical roadmap for any hospital looking to prioritize safety and wellness for its night-shift staff.   Key Takeaways Night-shift fatigue has real safety consequences, including drowsy driving and impaired clinical performance.A small, well-designed pilot project helped Children’s National gain leadership buy-in before expanding napping hospital-wide.Clear guidelines, protected spaces, and strong collaboration with security and HR were essential to implementation.Not all units adopt napping the same way – autonomy and unit-level decision-making improved success and acceptance.Survey data revealed high rates of near-miss incidents related to fatigue, strengthening the case for change.Napping is one part of a broader wellness approach that includes sleep hygiene, nutrition, and night-shift–specific support systems.A strong safety message helped shift culture: nurses must come to work rested, and naps are not guaranteed.Implementing napping can support recruitment, retention, and a perception of organizational care for night-shift workers.  Additional Reading Geiger-Brown, Harlow, Bagshaw, Sagherian & Hinds: “One Hospital’s Successful Initiative to Implement Napping for Night Shift Nurses.”https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34528852/  Napping on the Night Shift: A Two-Hospital Implementation Project (Am J Nurs, 2016) https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/39786

    38 min
  5. 09/16/2025

    29 | How Virtual Nursing is Transforming Bedside Care

    In this episode of Nursing Insights, host Stephanie Olaso sits down with Frank Crispin (Nursing Director) and Veronica Perez (Nurse Manager) from Inspira Medical Center Vineland to explore how virtual nursing is reshaping patient care and supporting frontline nurses. They share the story behind Inspira’s pilot program, how virtual nurses handle admissions and discharges, and the surprising impact on nurse burnout, patient experience, and hospital efficiency. This conversation highlights how innovation and technology can bring relief to nurses while improving outcomes for patients and communities. Key Takeaways What virtual nursing is: A way for nurses to provide admissions, discharges, and patient education remotely through secure technology.Why it matters: Addresses staffing shortages, reduces burnout, and supports bedside nurses with time-consuming tasks.Pilot results: Nurses gained back 30–45 minutes per admission and 15–30 minutes per discharge.Patient impact: Higher satisfaction scores, smoother discharges, and faster turnaround times.Future vision: Expanding the program across Inspira Health with advanced technology and centralized operations.  Relevant Links Learn more about Inspira Health: https://www.inspirahealthnetwork.orgFollow the New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing: https://nursing.rutgers.edu/njccnListen to more episodes of Nursing Insights: https://nursing.rutgers.edu/nursing-insights

    30 min
  6. 08/21/2025

    28 | It’s Raining Meds: Fixing How We Prescribe for Older Adults

    What if a small change in your electronic health record could save lives? In this episode of Nursing Insights, we dive into a quiet revolution in geriatric care: the Geriatric Prescribing Context (GPC). Host Stephanie Olaso, MHCI, BSN, RN  is joined by: Dr. Katie Drago, geriatrician and lead researcher behind the GPCJean Stoerger, PharmD and clinical geriatric pharmacistMary Jo Phillips, DNP and geriatric program directorTogether, they unpack how the GPC came to life after a tragic medical error, how it functions invisibly within Epic to nudge safer prescribing decisions, and what the real-world results look like – like a 50% reduction in dose-related adverse drug events. Whether you’re a nurse, pharmacist, or physician, this episode will challenge the way you think about clinical decision support, EHR design, and the hidden power of tiny nudges in patient care.   Key Takeaways: A tragic overdose case involving haloperidol in a 90-year-old patient became the catalyst for the GPC.The GPC adjusts default medication doses in Epic for patients aged 65+, making them more age-appropriate – without pop-ups or hard stops.Implementation led to a 50% reduction in dose-related adverse drug events, with sustained results over 4 years.Most clinicians didn’t even realize it was active – meaning no alert fatigue and seamless workflow.Nurses play a powerful, often overlooked role in influencing prescribing decisions.The GPC is now part of Epic’s foundations package (post-Nov 2023) and available to others via the Community Library.  Relevant Links: New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing: https://njccn.orgSafer prescribing for hospitalized older adults with an electronic-health record based prescribing context: https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jgs.16640Long term impact of a geriatric prescribing context: https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jgs.17799In pursuit of the quadruple aim: A geriatric prescribing context’s impact on clinician workflows and alert fatigue: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/07334648221079103Improving dose related adverse drug events among hospitalized older adults using a geriatric prescribing context: https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jgs.18754IHI Age Friendly Health Systems, main page, including overview of the movement and how to join: https://www.ihi.org/partner/initiatives/age-friendly-health-systemsGetting started on an Age Friendly journey:

    51 min
4.7
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

The New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing (NJCCN)—the nursing workforce center for NJ—presents the New Jersey Nursing Insights Podcast. Now hosted by Drs. Susan Weaver  and Daria Waszak, the program features conversations with nurses from a wide range of professional and personal backgrounds, each discussing the nature of their profession. Nursing Insights was originally hosted by Stephanie Olaso, MHCI, BSN, RN, who led the program through its first 30 episodes.