This is an eye-opener! Thanks Ms Lisa! Now I know what I will be doing in the next couple of years..thank you for this motivation and for introducing us to the program.❤❤❤
As a nurse, Health and wellness is so heartfelt to me that with so many health related experiences I had with clients---through success and failures, I'm on board!
Great vid :) I was just wondering where holistic nurses may work because I look up jobs here and never see that title. I was in nursing school years ago & left because while I do appreciate western medicine, my true love is natural healing. I would rather teach people natural therapies instead of overloading on medication, but unfortunately even though a lot of people love "natural", they don't seem to take you serious unless you have RN, RD, or MD after your name. I've heard of holistic nurses (here on yt) never getting to implement therapies on patients, but just using the knowledge they learn to help understand patient more. All of these are huge concerns & I would definitely go back to school if I knew I'd be able to use holistic care, but don't see how that's feasable when all hospitals want is for you to push meds & document all day. Even in your situation, you mention you never got to even implement holistic nursing, nor did you witness other nurses do so, yet went straight into coaching. If this holistic profession is so successful & useful, why wasn't it touched on before going into coaching?
It definitely depends on the hospital system you are in. I’m a travel nurse and started out at Mayo Clinic. Mayo did a decent job as utilizing nonpharmacutical interventions along side pharmaceutical ones. Massage, acupuncture, guided meditation, aromatherapy, etc were all available to patients, although not all nurses would offer the services. Now that I travel though, I’m lucky if I can get peppermint oil for nausea or lavender oil for anxiety. I haven’t looked too into holistic nursing, but I do believe you’d have a better time finding a job at a med spa or an integrative/functional medicine clinic.
This is an eye-opener! Thanks Ms Lisa! Now I know what I will be doing in the next couple of years..thank you for this motivation and for introducing us to the program.❤❤❤
As a nurse, Health and wellness is so heartfelt to me that with so many health related experiences I had with clients---through success and failures, I'm on board!
Really well done! I'm on the fence onto which program to enroll in and this video/review gives some great insight! Thanks Lisa Chappell!
Hello! This review was awesome! Thank you so much for taking the time to make this review I really appreciate it🤗
This is fantastic, Lisa! Thank you for your detailed review!
Great vid :) I was just wondering where holistic nurses may work because I look up jobs here and never see that title. I was in nursing school years ago & left because while I do appreciate western medicine, my true love is natural healing. I would rather teach people natural therapies instead of overloading on medication, but unfortunately even though a lot of people love "natural", they don't seem to take you serious unless you have RN, RD, or MD after your name. I've heard of holistic nurses (here on yt) never getting to implement therapies on patients, but just using the knowledge they learn to help understand patient more. All of these are huge concerns & I would definitely go back to school if I knew I'd be able to use holistic care, but don't see how that's feasable when all hospitals want is for you to push meds & document all day. Even in your situation, you mention you never got to even implement holistic nursing, nor did you witness other nurses do so, yet went straight into coaching. If this holistic profession is so successful & useful, why wasn't it touched on before going into coaching?
It definitely depends on the hospital system you are in. I’m a travel nurse and started out at Mayo Clinic. Mayo did a decent job as utilizing nonpharmacutical interventions along side pharmaceutical ones. Massage, acupuncture, guided meditation, aromatherapy, etc were all available to patients, although not all nurses would offer the services. Now that I travel though, I’m lucky if I can get peppermint oil for nausea or lavender oil for anxiety. I haven’t looked too into holistic nursing, but I do believe you’d have a better time finding a job at a med spa or an integrative/functional medicine clinic.