If only it was easy...
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About this listen
In this episode of At The Nurses’ Station, Kelly and Sam take on a topic that has become nearly impossible to ignore in emergency medicine. Addiction is everywhere. It shows up in triage. It shows up in the trauma bay. It shows up in the conversations nurses have in the break room when the shift feels too heavy to carry alone.
What begins as a simple story about kids, snow gear, and the chaos of December quickly shifts into a candid conversation that every nurse has had. What is addiction. Why does it hold people so tightly. And how do we respond to it when we are the ones treating both the physical damage and the emotional fallout.
Kelly and Sam walk through the history of heroin, meth, and fentanyl. They talk about how patients react when they hear the word fentanyl at the bedside. They share stories from their own lives. They talk openly about the way pain management has changed over the years. The episode also steps into the uncomfortable territory of personal responsibility, social support, and how a single “yes” can change the entire trajectory of a life.
This conversation is honest. It is messy. It is compassionate. And it reflects exactly what nurses say to each other when the curtain is pulled back. It also highlights how difficult it is to fix a problem that affects hospitals, families, and entire communities.
If you are a nurse or someone who cares about nurses and their work, you will relate to every moment of this episode.
If you want more conversations like this delivered straight to your inbox, subscribe to At The Nurses’ Station on Substack so you never miss an episode.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit atthenursesstation.substack.com