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ONA Original Nurse Activist The CNA press release quotes CNA President Deborah Burger arguing that hospitals have "trivialized" nurses day with "free coffee mugs and t-shirts," but that in the CNA's protest, "bed side RNs" will honor Nightingale's legacy in a more meaningful way. (There is no information on whether those the CNA does not consider "bed side" RNs would be barred from participating in the protest, or whether Nightingale herself would have been deemed worthy, since most of her "activism" (and globally influential health innovation) emanated only from her own "bed side.") (See our FAQ: "Is it OK if we keep saying that only nurses who currently work at the bedside are "real nurses?" Demonizing everyone else helps us fight for workers' rights!") The release goes on to explain that Johnson & Johnson, despite its "much-hyped image as an advocate for nurses," was a "major contributor" to a ballot initiative "intended to silence the voices of nurses and other public employees from participating in the political process." It also suggests that the company contributed funds to defeat a measure to allow Californians to buy cheaper prescription drugs from Canada, and that it has pledged millions to defeat a pending ballot initiative to "create drug price controls with real teeth." Unfortunately, the apparent lack of press coverage means that the public will not get any independent assessment of the nurses' position, any response from Johnson & Johnson, any information on what actually happened at the protest, or any discussion of the protest's larger significance as to the nursing image or the state of the profession.
See the press release in Biospace.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2005may/11_cna.html |
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