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Patient & Clinical Care Workgroup 2014 Summary and 2015 Action Plan

Nate Swift-Erslev, our Patient & Clinical Care Workgroup leader, has posted their 2014 Summary and 2015 Action Plan!   It is available on their workgroup page here

One of the early steps in our workgroup’s action plan is creating an office and break room poster for nurses and other providers that has basic questions related to sexuality, reproductive and gender health to improve care of LGBTQI patients.  They have drafts under review now, so watch for more information on this exciting project coming soon1

GLMA Nurses working for Diversity and Inclusion at NLN

Laura C. Hein and Patti Zuzelo of the GLMA Nursing Section Leadership Team were invited to serve on the National League for Nursing (NLN) Strategic Action Group for Diversity in Nursing Education.   Nine nurses (two of whom were NLN leaders) spent the last two days discussing diversity and how to make nursing education more inclusive. Patti and I represented the LGBTQ community and emphasized the importance of recognizing and embracing all of our diversity. The current NLN Diversity Statement includes sexual orientation but does not include gender identity or gender expression. In my role as a GLMA board member and GLMA nursing leadership team I emphasized the importance of including “gender identity and gender expression” in NLN’s diversity and mission statement.

Our Diversity Action Group created a rough first draft of NLN’s Diversity Vision, Mission and Strategic Plan. We will have a final version published by February 2015.  Patti and I will continue to represent GLMA nurses and work to advance inclusive LGBTQ policies at NLN.

NLN dinner Sign

Report from meetings at the American Academy of Nursing!

Saturday, October 18th was a momentous day for LGBTQ nurses!  The American Academy of Nursing LGBTQ Expert Panel (established in 2012) met at 8 am, with a significant number of GLMA Nursing Section members present!  In addition, Ed Craft, GLMA VP for External Affairs and Chief Nursing Cheerleader, and Emily Kane-Lee, GLMA staff member

Selfie - Laura and Peggy

Selfie – Laura and Peggy

representing Executive Director Hector Vargas, also joined the meeting to indicate GLMA’s support for a cooperative working relationship between our two organizations! I wish I had more photos to share .. the 2 posted here were selfies with Laura and with Sarah!

After the Expert Panel meeting, GLMA Nursing Section leaders met with Emily

Selfie - Sarah and Peggy

Selfie – Sarah and Peggy

and Ed to follow through on a number of organizational issues. The GLMA Section folks present were Mary Foley, Chair; Laura Hein and Sarah Fogel, GLMA Board members and new inductees in the Academy! I was there as the web manager and because of my role in the creation of the GLMA Nursing Section.

We had a wonderful discussion, dominated by not only a spirit, but explicit intent and actions to assure a positive and constructive ongoing relationship between the Section leadership and the GLMA Board and staff, as well as ongoing collaborative relationships with the Academy Expert Panel.  Here are the “big” specific topics we focused on:

  • The transition from our “Commitment to Join” process for our Section, to the formal and official process to join the GLMA nursing section!  Emily has this process well underway and described how this will work – the system will be ready in the next 1 to 2 weeks – so stay tuned for details on this coming soon!
  • A process to assure coordination and communication with the GLMA staff and board.  Emily and Ed agreed that the great work of our Workgroups needs to move ofrward with the details of specific projects worked out internally.  But when we get to the point of communication and interactions with other nursing organizations and institutions as representatives of the GLMA Nursing Section, we will establish a process to inform GLMA staff and seek their go-ahead for any new initiatives.  Emily will develop a format for letters and emails from the Nursing Section to any external group, and we will communicate to all Workgroup leaders the guidelines for moving forward with this kind of initiative.
  • Follow-up on the topic of financial support for the Section that we had discussed during the Academy LGBT Expert Panel meeting. Members of the Expert Panel suggested the possibility of Expert Panel members seeking financial support for student members of the GLMA Nursing Section for attendance at the annual GLMA Nursing Summit and conference.
  • Exploring the possibility of having a liaison between the GLMA Nursing Section and the Academy Expert Panel – someone who is an active member of both organizations and who can work to assure ongoing cooperation and mutual support between the two groups.

Overall, we established a firm foundation for working together, not only within the GLMA organization, but for collaboration between GLMA and the Academy!  So stay tuned — I am sure much more will come in the days and weeks to come!

Meet Michael Johnson, our GLMA Nursing Section Chair-Elect!

Michael is a lecturer in the School of Nursing at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He is also finishing his PhD in Nursing Science in the College of Nursing at Medical University of South Carolina. He has published a number of articles related to LGBT populations. His current research examines predictors of cervical cancer screening among LGBT females, including transmen. Here is a message from Michael:

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Michael Johnson and Matthew Roell

Hello! First, congratulations to everyone who was involved with establishing the GLMA Nursing Section! It is an exciting time to be part of this movement in nursing. I look forward to working with the leadership group and the members of the GLMA Nursing Section, and I am confident that wonderful things will come from this section. Momentum can already be seen among the different workgroups! If you are interested in being part of this momentum, please email a workgroup leader or any of the leadership team. I look forward to collaborating with everyone as we work toward advancing LGBT health equality!

 Just like Mary Foley, I could not do this work without the love and support of my husband, Matthew Roell. The picture to the right is of him and I during a winter vacation in London, England.

2015 Nursing Summit Planning Group is underway!

Please join us in welcoming the 2015 GLMA Nursing Summit Planning Committee. We welcome your input and ideas over the next eleven months to make Portland a memorable experience!  You can use the planning group contact form on the web site to share your ideas!planning

Caitlin Stover  returning member and Planning group Chair
Michele McKelvey
Kelli Dunham
Madelyne Greene
Pamela Lin
Eileen Glover
Rob Carroll  returning member
Jose Pares-Avila  returning member
Sarah Sanders     returning member
Mary Foley
Emily Kane-Lee
Pamela Levesque
Amy Wilson-Stronks
Alison McManus  returning member

Tales from a First Timer

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It’s hard to put into words what transpired at GLMA’s Nursing Summit today. Sixty-odd nurses of all ages and areas of nursing got together and had some really incredible conversations and brainstorming sessions about how to represent our field and serve our patients as LGBT healthcare providers. As someone who has been passionate about LGBT health issues and nursing for many years, I was a little first-day-of-school apprehensive as I packed my suitcase for my first GLMA conference, with doubts and reservations flitting around in my brain like moths: “Are these the right clothes?” “What if they all have PhDs and stuff?” “What’s a Nursing Summit, anyway?” “What if it’s just a bunch of old squares?”

Well, by the end of the day — knowing that there’s a  clinical skills-building class on anal dysplasia called “Ass Class” and one of our older members referred to her forgotten idea as “Lezheimers” — I’m at least sure I know the answer to that last question.

Certainly, as a newly minted RN continuing on for my MSN/FNP, I look to the nurses of GLMA for insight into professional practice and career development — what is it like serving the LGBT community? What are the barriers, what victories have you experienced? But what was present in the room today was a broad sense of camaraderie — a feeling that we have been tasked with the challenging but essential work of defining how nurses can provide quality, meaningful care to our LGBT patients while simultaneously asserting our presence as an integral section of the healthcare workforce.

So many ideas and thoughts were generated and shared today.

Some were sobering: one nurse reported research that found only 5% of nurses in the SF Bay Area knew what a gender-inclusive form was. Another told us that very few Magnet status facilities have LGBT-inclusiveness policies.

Other ideas were inspiring. Dr. Heather Young, Dean of UC Davis School of Nursing, encouraged us to practice cross-promotion as a way to fight tokenization. She said this in the context of interdisciplinary practice, but I couldn’t help but translate it as a tool we could also use when advocating for equity. What if LGBT nurses could be articulate about health disparities related to race and class as well as sexuality? We’ve got some big things to think about!

More than anything, today highlighted the collaborative nature of the professional nurse. It was validating to have my views and thoughts listened to and considered by nurses who possibly have more years of experience than I have years of life. Beyond that, it was exciting to hear the plans of action from our five focus groups. Look to hear more from the Nursing Section on our work in the fields of Policy, Training and Education, Clinical Practice and Patient Care, Research, and LGBT-positive Climate.

I’m not one for cameras, but as we wrapped up the day with a group picture, I did sneak into one of the back rows. Sometimes you just want it documented that you were part of making history.