I was surprised. Not because Rachel
isn’t smart (which she is, very), knowledgeable in GI or full of common sense.
It’s just that all the CGRNs of my acquaintance were either the nurse managers
of local endoscopy suites or a few scattered nurses of long tooth and years
of experience. But Rachel, although experienced, is young and a “regular” GI
nurse. Then I discovered that about a dozen nurses at hospitals at which I practice
all got their CGRNs this June.
Being the ever-inquiring gastroenterologist,
I resolved to get the skinny on this CGRN epidemic. According to Carol Shaner,
CAE, the executive director of the Certifying Board of Gastroenterology Nurses
and Associates (www.CBGNA.org), there are
approximately 3,000 certified GI nurses in America. Published studies on certification
reveal enhanced patient outcomes, cost effective care and job satisfaction.
The eligibility requirements are just two years as a gastro nurse and the certifying
exam. The CBGNA was established in 1986, and is here to stay. So why aren’t
all GI nurses with two years’ tenure CGRNs or CGNs?
Kim Cooper, CGRN and head of Chesapeake
General Hospital’s endoscopy suite, says it’s about self-actualization. “GI
nurses should pursue certification for their own pride in their professionalism,”
she says. “There are benefits to your patients in improved quality of care —
and that’s what nursing is about, isn’t it?” Her hospital pays up to $200 for
exam prep, and up to $300 for the certification. Thirty percent of her nurses
are certified, and certification is celebrated with roses, a banner, recognition
in the Surgical Services departmental newsletter and a new name badge to highlight
their specialization.
Another local hospital celebrates
the newly certified nurses in a multidisciplinary “Professionalism Award” ceremony,
which recognizes certification, research and presentations at national conferences.
“It can’t just be a warm and fuzzy,” adds Ginny Jacobs, BSN, RN, endoscopy nurse
manager for Sentara Health Care. Her hospital places high value on certification:
employing 22 GI RNs total, with six not yet in the business for two years, they
now have eleven certified GI nurses. Ms. Jacobs organized vendors to provide
lunch during the in-house weekend review course, and the hospital system offered
reimbursement for review course and exam if passed. And there’s a pay differential
of $1 per hour — less than deserved but more than many.
So, how do you know that you are
one of us; an “insider;” that it’s past time to move ahead and earn your CGRN?
Rachel and the other endo nurses that I work with realized there were things
that those experienced in endoscopy know, but aren’t on the test, and are not
known by outsiders to GI. Here’s your exam:
1. Correctly interpret these endoscopy
patient statements:
I took most of my prep.
It was coming out clear.
I just had a little sip of water.
I won’t need much medication.
I need to wait outside by the
curb after my procedure; a
friend is coming to pick me up.
If you got those, answer these tougher
essay questions, smarty pants:
2. When sedating with meperidine
and midazolam, what does it mean when the patient reaches up and scratches his
nose?
3. If the gastro is having difficulty
with a tortuous colon, and calls for a pediatric scope, what happens while you’re
out of the room?
4. If a patient begins to desaturate,
what occurs when any medical professional in the room uses the magical “O” word?
So you’re an insider; why haven’t
you made it official? IMHO (in my humble opinion), it’s about the pride in your
profession, and the opportunity for advancement. It’s about branding yourself
as a higher quality of professional. In the future, as reimbursements continue
to fall and gastroenterologists might delegate out
diagnostic procedures, those endoscopies will not go to the
GI physician assistants and nurse practitioners, but to experienced CGRNs
with years of certified expertise.
All I know is, when faced with an
aggressive GI bleed, a frustratingly
jammed foreign body or a complicated ERCP, I know
who I want watching my back.
Be a GI Insider. Get your CGRN or
CGN. Invest in yourself.
Chesapeake,
Va.-based gastroenterologist Patricia
Raymond, MD, is a consultant and author
who speaks for hospital systems and medical
conventions. Her book, “Don’t Jettison
Medicine: Resuscitate Your Passion
For The Career You Loved!” will
be published in fall 2003. Visit www.RxForSanity.com
for more information.
Answers 2-4
2. Patients are adequately sedated
when they reach up their hand to scratch
their nose.
3. He/she will get around the difficult
flexure while you are retrieving the
scope from the washer.
4. Simply saying the magic word ‘oxygen’
causes O2 saturation to rise.