Spoiler Alert: Do not read ahead if this show is still on your watch list.
Could you survive a day in the kill-or-be-killed world of “The Last of Us” if you were suddenly thrust into that post-apocalyptic drama? With no hospitals in operation and very few medical resources at your disposal, you would be forced to think of nursing in a new light. Even with Joel at your side, the constant threat of running into the infected would make caring for the sick or wounded a true test of anyone’s skills and abilities. Ethical lines will also be blurred, so knowing the right thing to do won’t always be easy.
If you’re already a fan of this Emmy award-winning show, these thoughts may have already crossed your mind. After all, who wouldn’t want to spend a day with Pedro Pascal, albeit under extreme duress? Let this article get you up to speed if you have yet to see this talented cast light up the screen.
Warning! Spoiler alerts ahead. “The Last of Us” is a TV show based on a popular video game of the same name and captivates you as much as it horrifies you. It’s set 20 years into the future after a worldwide pandemic caused by a fungal infection decimates society. The people who contract the infection become a living host for the fungus; while alive, they no longer control their bodies. FEDRA is the lawless law of the land, and the Fireflies are an opposition group to that brutal government. Citizens of this world are forced to live in quarantine zones ruled by FEDRA, and their lives are filled with cruelty, violence, and despair.
The main characters are Joel, played by Pedro Pascal, and Ellie, played by Bella Ramsey. We soon discover that Ellie is immune to the infection, and Joel must smuggle her to a distant Firefly camp.
Now that we’re all on the same page if you found yourself in this savage world, you would either lay low in a FEDRA camp or fight for freedom with the Fireflies (renewing your nursing license and remembering CE requirements will be a thing of the past). Whatever your choice may be, the fact remains that increased know-how would help balance out the constant disadvantage of waking up to horror every day. In this article, we’ll review the best evidence-based continuing education courses for nurses that could help you survive in “The Last of Us” should the need arise.