Emotions and Reading the Room
Each patient, diagnosis, and family unit are unique.
Some nursing programs include cultural awareness, grief and loss, or communication learning modules in their curriculum.
Although these topics are wonderful additions to a young nurse’s learning, they truly do not come close to the real-life experience.
Emotions are one of the hardest nursing components to master. Being unbiased or non-judgmental toward a patient and their wishes are important, but handling pure, raw emotions is a completely different and unteachable circumstance.
In instances of perinatal loss, in order to provide effective patient care, a nurse must allow connection and reaction to take precedence.
As a nurse, one must consider themselves a blank slate. But what exactly does this mean?
Aside from continuing to follow the same protocols provided by their facility, a nurse must become what each individual patient needs them to be, a blank slate.
Having this blank canvas approach allows the nurse to ‘press pause’ on every thought and emotion going through their head and establish their patient’s needs first.
When a patient has lost their child, a nurse must be able to read the room quickly. Take this visual assessment upon entering the room, for example:
Is the patient…?
- Crying
- Talking
- Yelling
- Scared
- Nervous
- Avoiding eye contact
Who else is in the room & what are their reactions?
- Father of the baby
- Grandparents
- Aunts
- Uncles
- Friends
Attempting to gauge where emotions are targeted at; towards you, themselves, the father, or the doctor might help the nurse to build an understanding of the patient’s needs. It can be pivotal.
Emotions can change throughout the day and the nurse needs to know what their patient and the family needs the most upon entering the room.
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