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The Future of Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing: Observe, Reflect, and Take Action to Empower Knowledge for the Greater Good.

Victoria Soltis-Jarrett
Published in: Issues in mental health nursing (2023)
The purpose of this article is a call for action to identify areas of concern and promise for the specialty of psychiatric-mental health nursing to flourish in the twenty first century and beyond in the United States. Bits and pieces of this call for action may be relevant to other countries where psychiatric-mental health nursing has had similar trends. However, this paper focuses on the issues, barriers, and politics of education, practice, and research for nurses in the United States who gravitate to psychiatric-mental health and endeavor to rise above the value-laden past that perpetuates the marginalization of not only the specialty, but also the work that PMHN do and for the individuals that they are meant to care for in the new millennial. Much of the history of PMHN knowledge and care is value-laden, biased and riddled in patriarchy, fundamental religious views from centuries ago, and a basic fear of the unknown. It is well over due to sort through the closets and filing cabinets of the specialty's knowledge to clear out the stigma, the myths, the unknown and the "doctor knows best" world view. If PMHN is to survive and truly heal or comfort the suffering that is observed and witnessed first-hand in the twenty first century, a deliberate and purposeful approach is needed.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • mental illness
  • quality improvement
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • pain management
  • depressive symptoms
  • current status
  • human immunodeficiency virus
  • medical students
  • prefrontal cortex