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ANA 2004 Convention
Highlights Unveiled
'Nurses: Your Voice, Your Health, Your Life - Your Career' is Theme
Washington, DC - Preventing back injuries, gaining competency in basic
disaster life support and care of the aged, and embracing Magnet™ hospital
best practices in staffing are among the wide-ranging educational topics to
be featured at the American Nurses Association (ANA) 2004 Biennial
Convention, June 26-29 in Minneapolis, MN.
"Nurses: Your Voice, Your Health, Your Life - Your Career" is the theme of
the convention, which will offer more than 120 educational sessions covering
a range of topics and practice areas, and some of nursing's top speakers,
who will share their knowledge and experiences.
U.S. Surgeon General Vice Admiral
Richard Carmona, MD, MPH, FACS
to deliver kenote address
Invited to offer the keynote address at the four-day nursing event is United
States Surgeon General Vice Admiral Richard Carmona, MD, MPH, FACS. As
Surgeon General, Dr. Carmona is one of our nation's chief spokespersons on
public health and medicine. During his long, distinguished career, Dr.
Carmona has served in a variety of roles in the medical field, including
paramedic, educator, surgeon and registered nurse.
Also scheduled is a June 26 pre-conference session on preventing back
injuries. This session will focus on the progress being made in ANA's
"Handle with Care" ergonomics campaign, which was launched last September.
The campaign seeks to mount an effort to prevent back and other
musculoskeletal injuries that afflict up to 52 percent of nurses - through
greater education and training and the increased use of assistive equipment
and patient handling devices.
Another highlight of the convention will be an ANA Political Action
Committee fundraising event featuring Newsweek correspondent Eleanor Clift,
who will discuss her book, "Ordinary Women, Extraordinary Lives: The
Founding Sisters and Their Struggles for the 19th Amendment." Ms. Clift's
discussion will be followed by a special presentation of HBO's Iron Jawed
Angels.
A key entertainment event will be a June 25 showing of "Blue Vinyl," which
premiered at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival. This film has "ignited" a
consumer revolution to phase out polyvinyl chloride (PVC). Considered "the
worst polluter ever," PVC is associated with dioxin - the most potent
carcinogen known - and ethylene dichloride, which together can cause severe
health problems such as cancer, endocrine disruption, endometriosis,
neurological damage, birth defects and impaired child development, and
reproductive and immune system damage. Moreover, dioxin is a persistent
bioaccumulative toxin that accumulates in fatty tissues and travels up the
food chain. Finally, PVC plants are among the top targets for a potential
terrorist attack, which could endanger millions of lives. The film is
co-sponsored by Healthcare Without Harm.
In between these featured events are a plethora of concurrent educational
sessions designed to provide nurses from all levels of clinical background
and practice the opportunity to build their knowledge and skills on issues
and areas that are vital to nursing. In addition, nurses will have the
opportunity to network and exchange information, and to visit the
convention's exhibit hall where health care products and services designed
to make nursing practice safer and more efficient will be on display.
As ANA President Barbara Blakeney, MS, APRN,BC, ANP, noted, this year's
convention theme "Nurses: Your Voice, Your Health, Your Life - Your Career"
reminds us how important nurses are to patients, families and society as
take-charge providers and advocates. "But today, our reality is shaped by
new forces, including the massive reorientation of our health care system
toward bioterrorism preparedness and the challenges of AIDS, SARS, and other
deadly illnesses. And ANA is ready to respond to this reality B by offering
these one-of-a-kind events and exhibit offerings, along with the opportunity
to discuss and share the challenges and joys of nursing with other nurses."
For details, including how to register, call 1-800-274-4ANA or visit
http://nursingworld.org/convention.
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