At the end of a life well lived, many of us hope to be surrounded by the people we care about mostβand those who care for us. For many patients, that means family and friends. But it can also include a kind and competent hospice nurse. In other words, you.
Regardless of how long youβve worked in hospice care, you know itβs an extraordinary role that constantly supplies profound lessonsβand raises just as many questions. One of them may be, how can I enhance my skill set so that I might help patients enter the next stage with as much comfort, compassion, and dignity as possible?
Youβre in the right place. Dive into our guide on touching up your skills as a hospice care nurse and overcoming the distinct challenges you may face. Who knows? You might even get some ideas on sprucing up your hospice nurse resume while you’re at it!
Consistently Acknowledge Your Unique Role in Your Patientsβ Lives
You know first-hand that your position radically differs from those of your non-hospice-based colleagues. Whereas your best friend in the ER may deal with life-or-death decisions in a fast-paced environment, you provide terminally ill patients and their loved ones with the emotional strength and support they need to transition toward death.Β
Thereβs still urgency, yes, but βsaving a lifeβ or even prolonging one is no longer your main goal. Rather, itβs building a nourishing environment in which comfort is paramount and maintaining your patientβs quality of life in their last stages.Β
Whatβs occasionally less clear is how to create this nurturing place while also, importantly, preserving your own wellness. With this in mind, you may want to consider these practices and tactics.
Face Your Discomfort with Self-Compassion
For many in the medical field, death can sometimes feel like a clinical matter. In nursing school and every day at work, you learn that death is a natural part of life.
However, in hospice care, a patientβs passing can hit a lot closer to home. Hospice patients arenβt people who you took care of for a few hours in the ED. In many cases, theyβre people youβve spent considerable time withβand you may experience their death as acutely as you would a dear friendβs (which they very well may have become). This can be even more challenging to manage if youβre on a travel assignment and away from the comforts of home and the people that define it.
One of the wisest and kindest things you can do for yourself is to seek out peer supportβor the listening ear of another nurse (hospice or otherwise) who will understand the meaning of losing a patient on a deeper level. A colleague may be able to offer you the emotional encouragement you need, as well as invaluable insights on coping. It may also be important to internally reaffirm your role in your patientβs lifeβas a caregiver, not a lifesaverβwho did as much as possible to ensure their journey was peaceful, loving, and comfortable.Β
Build an Unbreakable Bond with Your Patients and their Loved Ones
It may seem contradictory to suggest establishing a strong connection with your patients if their death stands the chance of having an enormous impact on you. And yet, building a bond with your patients and their loved ones is one of the keys to enriching your skills as a hospice nurse and promoting both patient and job satisfaction.Β
This comes down to two primary reasons:
- Increased comfort β As you know, your patientβs comfort is the single most crucial part of your obligations. Knowing that theyβre in the hands of a compassionate nurse who cares not just about their illness but also who they are as a person may deepen their sense of easeβand boost your confidence and gratification.Β
- Enhanced communication and cooperation β Helping your patients and their loved ones navigate the intricacies of a terminal illnessβfrom guiding them through end-of-life planning to answering medical questionsβis a significant part of your workday. This is made all the more doable if thereβs mutual trust and understanding.Β
How can you help your nurse-patient relationship flourish? By practicing active listening and expressing your appreciation to your patientsβ loved ones.
Refine Your Patient-Centered Approach
One of the beauties of hospice nursingβperhaps even one of the things that drew you to the professionβis that itβs not about medical interventions and curative treatments, but learning about and respecting your patientsβ values and belief systems.
Every culture views death and dying differently. Part of furthering your success in your hospice nursing career is identifying and understanding those differences and then implementing them to the best of your abilities.
Of course, you donβt have to do this work alone. Instead, gently ask your patients and their families about their preferences and beliefs. As you spend more time with each patient, youβll learn more about their wishes and how they view their situation.
These values should be the guiding stars that inform how you tend to your patient in their final momentsβthat, and remembering that the patientβs decisions should also drive your care. Because when you put in the effort to learn about customs and cultural differencesβand accept them with open armsβyouβll have a lasting impact on your patients and their loved ones.
Hone Your Essential Soft and Hard SkillsΒ
The skills youβve accumulated as a hospice nurse are indispensable. And yet, youβre probably well aware that learning them is only one part of the process: Mastering them requires practice and diligence.Β
As you search for ways to improve as a hospice nurse, you may want to return to the basics and consider fine-tuning the following:
Practicing Effective Communication
In end-of-life care, communication is crucial. First of all, you have to communicate effectively with medical professionals across different teams to develop patient care plans.
However, more importantly, you communicate with your patients to understand their needsβoftentimes in the absence of medical reasons and simply because a great deal of fear surrounds the concept of dying. Because hospice care is all about keeping a patient comfortable, active and thoughtful listening is vital.
Communicating with a patientβs family is just as important. Between giving updates about your patientβs status and discussing next steps, you spend plenty of time talking to sisters, uncles, spouses, and other loved ones. By thinking of effective communication as a flexible, even fluid endeavor that must be adjusted to each patient and familyβs needs, youβll provide the level of personalized attention thatβs so important in this profound life stage.Β
Creating a Supportive Environment for Patients and Families
In addition to being a calm, caring presence and fostering an open, loving, and transparent bond with your patients, you can also create a supportive physical environment. By working with family members and friends to personalize the space as much as possible, you can bring simple joy and a sense of familiarity to your patients.
Some welcome additions include:
- Plants
- Photos and artwork
- A TV and their favorite movies
- Books
Navigating Ethical Dilemmas
All types of nursing care come with ethical questions, and hospice nursing is no exception. In fact, you may have faced ethical dilemmas like:
- Patient autonomy β Patients, as you know, have a right to choose their end-of-life care. However, lines can become blurred when patients have cognitive limitations or family members try to step in. Polishing your ability to navigate this delicately but decisively may come down to asking for guidance from veteran hospice nurses or finding a supportive nursing mentor.
- Communication β Some family members donβt want their loved one in hospice care to hear βbad newsβ about their progression. With that said, being truthful with patients is an important part of nursing. It is important to ask your patient what he/she prefers. Keeping honesty at the forefront of your mind may also result in a stronger connection.
- Symptom management β Hospice nurses must often weigh the pros and cons of particular treatments and their side effects. Will treating a symptom make the patient less comfortable or more comfortable? This requires honesty as wellβwith your patients, those who care for them, and yourself.Β
Navigating these moments can be tricky at times. But as long as you always strive to do whatβs right and put your patients first, youβll ultimately experience new areas of growth personally and professionally.
The Importance of Self-Care for Hospice Travel Nurses
As a hospice RN, you no doubt spend plenty of time thinking and worrying about your patients and their familiesβand this empathy goes a long way. But as you work to support the people around you, donβt forget about someone equally important: You.
Working in end-of-life care comes with its share of challenges. Emotions are high, and every loss may have an impact on you. Burnout is genuine, even for seasoned nurses.
This is why self-care is critical. When you can, be sure to:
- Connect regularly with support systems when youβre on assignment β Traveling for work often means being away from family and friends. Phone calls and video chats with loved ones can recharge your batteries and remind you that people care about you. Whatβs more, a first-rate recruiting agency may offer additional βnourishment,β such as the compassionate and responsive 24/7 support supplied by Host Healthcare.Β
- Consider therapy β Grief is an inevitable part of hospice nursing, but keeping your grief bottled up can lead to stress and sadness. You may find it helpful to talk to a professional who can provide objectivity, emotional support, and strategies for processing your feelings.
- Find time for your hobbies β While it may be tempting to spend your whole day off on the couch, try to engage in the things you loveβwhether thatβs knitting, hiking, or playing video games. This will strengthen your work-life balance and help you feel refreshed when itβs time to return to work.Β
- Care for your body and mind β You may know more than others that balancing eating, sleeping, and exercising with work is no simple feat, especially in careers where you take the emotional weight of your job home. But prioritizing the basics of self-careβnutritious meals, adequate sleep, ample hydration, non-work-related exercise, and smart stress-busting tacticsβwill put you in a better position to provide solid, empathetic care.
Apply to Become a Travel Hospice Nurse with Host Healthcare
Providing end-of-life care as a hospice nurse is a meaningful, honorable career choiceβitβs among the most admirable in the realm of healthcare and beyond.
With Host Healthcare, you can focus wholeheartedly on providing the most exceptional end-of-life care possible while we take care of the logistics of securing your next travel nursing assignment. Not only do we provide exclusive access to thousands of travel nurse jobs in every state, but we also ensure comfortable housing, day-one benefits, around-the-clock support, and more.Β
Ready for the next step in your career? Apply to become a hospice travel nurse with Host Healthcare today.
Sources:Β
βWhat Are Palliative Care and Hospice Care?β National Institute on Aging, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, www.nia.nih.gov/health/hospice-and-palliative-care/what-are-palliative-care-and-hospice-care. Accessed 14 Feb. 2024.
Davidson, Alexa. βHow Nurses Can Cope with a Patientβs Death.β NurseJournal, 23 Mar. 2023, nursejournal.org/articles/how-nurses-can-cope-with-a-patients-death/. Accessed March 4, 2024.
Nurse patient relationship β importance of trust. ANA. (2023, September 13). https://www.nursingworld.org/resources/individual/nurse-managers/nurse-patient-relationship-trust/. Accessed March 4, 2024.
Stilos, Kalliopi, and Lesia Wynnychuk. βSelf-care is a MUST for health care providers caring for the dying.β Canadian Oncology Nursing Journal vol. 31, no. 2, 2021, pp. 239-241.
Registered Nurse
Years of Experience: 24 Years
Specialties: Cardiac, ED, Pre-op/PACU
Cindy began her healthcare career back in 2000 working for an orthopedic surgeon after high school. She fell in love with healthcare and decided to go to nursing school. After becoming an RN, Cindy worked in oncology, cardiac, ED, pre-op/PACU, and currently works in IV hydration.