Welcome to Our Nursing Insights Blog – Explore the challenges and rewards of the nursing profession!

Author: Misty

  • When the Caregiver Becomes the Casualty: The Killing of a Nurse and the Cost to Public Trust

    There are moments in healthcare that hit different.Not because they’re clinically complex — but because they shake something deeper. This is one of those moments. Last week, the news broke about the killing of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse in Minnesota, shot and killed during a federal immigration enforcement operation. And like so many Read more

  • When The Organizational Chart Collapses and the Dust Hasn’t Settled

    It’s been a long time since I’ve written here.Not because I ran out of things to say — but because right now, everything feels unsettled. My organization is in the middle of a massive re-org. Middle management positions were eliminated. Roles were dissolved. Reporting structures changed quickly and without much warning. And the dust hasn’t Read more

  • Shoulder Pads, Synth Music, and Solving Fake Crimes — The Leadership Party That Actually Taught Me Something

    It’s been a minute since I’ve written, but leadership doesn’t always deliver big dramatic plot twists worth blogging about — sometimes it’s just staffing templates, inboxes full of “urgent” emails, and reminding people (again) that yes, the sharps container is full and yes, it needs to be changed. But yesterday, I was reminded of something Read more

  • When the Department of Education Says Nursing Isn’t a “Profession” — We Have a Problem

    By Scrubs & Shift Notes There are tone-deaf decisions…And then there’s whatever the Department of Education just did. Recently, the DOE announced that nursing no longer qualifies as a “professional degree” under its federal student loan categories — a move that is not only insulting, but dangerous, shortsighted, and completely disconnected from the reality of Read more

  • When Menopause Shows Up Like an Uninvited Guest (And Brings Drama With It)

    Let’s talk about the thing nobody wanted to talk about when we were younger: menopause. Not the cute “hot flashes and fans” memes.Not the “haha I forget where my keys are” jokes.Not the sage-woman-circle-floating-in-a-meadow version. I’m talking about the real, messy, blindsiding, knock-you-on-your-ass transition that turns your body, mind, and emotions into something you barely Read more

  • Cruella, Coming to Clinic: Our 101 Dalmatian Halloween Takeover

    Tomorrow’s the day — and I can already feel the chaos brewing. Our dialysis team is going all out for Halloween this year, and let’s just say… the clinic is about to go to the dogs. We’re dressing up as 101 Dalmatians, and yours truly will be stepping into the role of Cruella de Vil Read more

  • 🩵 When Coaching Turns Confrontational: A Woman’s Perspective on Leading With Authority

    Every time I had to coach him, I braced myself — not for the conversation, but for the explosion that would follow. The raised voice. The defensiveness. The way the air in the room changed. And every time, I’d wonder — is this about his behavior, or about mine? Am I being challenged because I’m Read more

  • The Price of Leadership: No One Talks About How Lonely It Gets

    I remember when work was fun.Back when most of my friends were coworkers. We’d hang out after a shift, grab a few drinks, and let it all out. Talked about everything — the boss, the company, that one patient who could test a saint’s patience, and the never-ending “why are we still making this much Read more

  • Sniffles, Swabs, and Seriously?

    As a nurse, and as a mom of a toddler, I’ve pretty much accepted that “healthy” is a relative term. Toddlers are tiny germ factories—they sneeze on you, cough in your face, and share snacks with questionable hygiene. So yes, I came down with a cold. Sniffles, watery eyes, the usual. Nothing dramatic. But here’s Read more

  • When Leadership Feels Thankless.

    Yesterday hit me like a punch in the gut. Two staff members called out, and instead of letting my team drown, I threw on my scrubs and hit the floor. Our usual ratio is 1:8. Yesterday? I took on 1:16. I hustled hard because I knew one of my nurses also had training obligations, and Read more