Los Angeles Times

Biden needs nurses’ expertise

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Re “Another nurse shortage,” Opinion, Nov. 23

Thanks to Stacy Torres and Andrew Penn for addressing the need for nurses to be on President- elect Joe Biden’s COVID- 19 advisory committee. As a retired intensive care unit registered nurse, I couldn’t agree more that nursing input would be an asset.

So far, nurses have had to strike to ask for more protective equipment. It breaks my heart knowing they have had inadequate protection when treating coronaviru­s patients.

It is the nurses who run the daily activities of most hospital units and are at the front lines of assessing patient care. Many doctors understand this and respect nurses’ contributi­on to patient care.

Perhaps Biden’s “preeminent public health experts” will recognize nursing expertise and insist that nurses are included on their team. Our country needs them, and we need to give them the respect and recognitio­n they deserve. Jackie Sarlitt

Irvine

While the physical and emotional demands of nursing are understood by the public, the role nurses play in assessing and monitoring patients and intervenin­g where necessary; implementi­ng, adjusting and coordinati­ng prescribed treatments; and organizing and managing care is not appreciate­d.

Nurses have an understand­ing that is distinct from that of physicians and administra­tors of how care is organized and delivered. They know the weaknesses and opportunit­ies for improvemen­t both in the institutio­ns they serve and in caring for individual patients. Their insight and engagement is critical to improving care and protecting patients.

Any board or task force trying to analyze and improve care that does not include the expertise of nurses is frankly incompeten­t to do its work. Jack Needleman

Los Angeles The writer chairs the department of health policy and management at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

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