Coffee Before Clinicals

Trust, Technology, and Truth: Navigating Academic Integrity in Nursing Education

28 min · 8 de sep de 2025
Portada del episodio Trust, Technology, and Truth: Navigating Academic Integrity in Nursing Education

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🎙️ Got questions or a topic you're dying to hear? Text us and let’s make it happen—we’re all ears and ready to roll! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520097/fan_mail/new] Nursing has been the most trusted profession for 23 years running, but academic dishonesty threatens both education integrity and patient safety. Dr. Suzanne McWilliams, Director of Nursing at Northern Arizona University, unpacks why integrity matters in nursing and how AI is changing the landscape. • Academic integrity directly connects to patient safety and professional conduct • The real consequences of taking shortcuts include medication errors and missed treatments • AI tools have dramatically changed how students cheat, potentially contributing to falling NCLEX rates • Faculty must balance enforcing academic honesty with showing compassion and understanding • AI can be valuable when used ethically - for brainstorming, not replacing original thought • Building trust requires leadership modeling integrity and transparent communication • Nursing education must be rigorous but compassionate, recognizing students are human • Simulation provides safe spaces for students to make mistakes without academic consequences Remember that trust is earned one decision at a time, and the habits you build now are laying the foundation for the kind of nurse you'll become. Music by Smallrose Productions [http://www.smallrose.com/]

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7 episodios

episode Nurses Confront Bias: Addiction, Recovery, And Respectful Care artwork

Nurses Confront Bias: Addiction, Recovery, And Respectful Care

🎙️ Got questions or a topic you're dying to hear? Text us and let’s make it happen—we’re all ears and ready to roll! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520097/fan_mail/new] What if the fastest way to safer care is changing a single assumption? We sit down with educator and recovery advocate Shane Watson to examine how stigma around addiction silently shapes assessments, pain decisions, and patient trust—and how simple shifts in language and presence can prevent harm. Shane’s lived story spans early substance use, incarceration, and 14 years of long-term recovery. His candor opens a rare window into day-to-day recovery, the fear of being dismissed as “drug seeking,” and the relief of being treated like a whole person. Jennifer brings decades of ICU experience to translate those insights into bedside practice: treating pain as real, using person-first language, and gathering data before deciding. Together, we map out a balanced approach that meets needs while guarding against relapse—think smaller quantities, reassessment, lockouts, and family support for at-home dosing. We also dig into the subtle power of therapeutic communication. Your tone, posture, and micro-expressions can either invite disclosure or shut it down. That matters when the difference between withdrawal and sepsis is a missed cue, or when a hidden med or illicit substance could trigger serotonin syndrome. Case-by-case care beats pattern-based shortcuts, especially with frequent flyers who might be presenting with something new. And because sustained compassion requires capacity, we talk openly about burnout, compassion fatigue, and how to cross the “line” into a room with presence while still protecting your own health with rest, nutrition, debriefing, and support. Across stories and strategies, the theme is constant: addiction is a health issue, recovery is possible, and respect is a clinical skill. If you’re a nursing student, preceptor, or bedside nurse, you’ll leave with practical steps to reduce bias, improve assessment accuracy, and build trust that leads to safer outcomes. Subscribe, rate, and share with a classmate or colleague—then tell us one bias you’ll check on your next shift. Your small changes can have big consequences for patient safety and dignity. Music by Smallrose Productions [http://www.smallrose.com/]

29 de oct de 202541 min
episode Trust, Technology, and Truth: Navigating Academic Integrity in Nursing Education artwork

Trust, Technology, and Truth: Navigating Academic Integrity in Nursing Education

🎙️ Got questions or a topic you're dying to hear? Text us and let’s make it happen—we’re all ears and ready to roll! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520097/fan_mail/new] Nursing has been the most trusted profession for 23 years running, but academic dishonesty threatens both education integrity and patient safety. Dr. Suzanne McWilliams, Director of Nursing at Northern Arizona University, unpacks why integrity matters in nursing and how AI is changing the landscape. • Academic integrity directly connects to patient safety and professional conduct • The real consequences of taking shortcuts include medication errors and missed treatments • AI tools have dramatically changed how students cheat, potentially contributing to falling NCLEX rates • Faculty must balance enforcing academic honesty with showing compassion and understanding • AI can be valuable when used ethically - for brainstorming, not replacing original thought • Building trust requires leadership modeling integrity and transparent communication • Nursing education must be rigorous but compassionate, recognizing students are human • Simulation provides safe spaces for students to make mistakes without academic consequences Remember that trust is earned one decision at a time, and the habits you build now are laying the foundation for the kind of nurse you'll become. Music by Smallrose Productions [http://www.smallrose.com/]

8 de sep de 202528 min
episode Med Class in a Mug: Decoding Beta Blockers artwork

Med Class in a Mug: Decoding Beta Blockers

🎙️ Got questions or a topic you're dying to hear? Text us and let’s make it happen—we’re all ears and ready to roll! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520097/fan_mail/new] Beta blockers are essential cardiovascular medications that act as the "brake pedal" of the heart, helping to manage conditions like hypertension, angina, arrhythmias, heart failure, and sometimes migraines or anxiety. Despite their complex names that resemble Wi-Fi passwords, these medications follow predictable patterns in their effects and side effects that nursing students can master with simple mnemonics. • Beta blocker names all end in "-olol" (metoprolol, propranolol, atenolol) • Function by blocking the sympathetic nervous system's effects on the heart • Always check vitals before administration (HR <60 or SBP <100 = hold medication) • Remember the "three Bs" of beta blocker effects: Bradycardia, Blood pressure decrease, Bronchoconstriction • Can mask hypoglycemia symptoms in diabetic patients • Never stop beta blockers suddenly as it can cause dangerous rebound effects • Always assess if the patient's heart is "too slow or too low" before administration Go, do your best, be kind to yourself and if you need more support, you know where to find me - Coffee before clinicals, anytime. Music by Smallrose Productions [http://www.smallrose.com/]

25 de ago de 20254 min
episode Stop Memorizing, Start Narrating: The Secret to Understanding Disease Processes artwork

Stop Memorizing, Start Narrating: The Secret to Understanding Disease Processes

🎙️ Got questions or a topic you're dying to hear? Text us and let’s make it happen—we’re all ears and ready to roll! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520097/fan_mail/new] Remember struggling with pathophysiology, staring at pages of scientific terms wondering how anyone could possibly remember it all? You're not alone—and it's not your fault. The problem isn't your brain; it's the approach. Pathophysiology transforms from an overwhelming memorization challenge into an intuitive learning experience when you approach it as storytelling. Your brain naturally retains narratives better than isolated facts. That red blood cell traveling through narrowing vessels isn't just biology—it's the beginning of a compelling story that explains why symptoms occur and treatments work. The five-part patho story arc provides a framework for understanding any disease process: the normal baseline (once upon a time in a healthy body), the trigger that disrupts homeostasis, the body's compensatory response, the crisis point where symptoms peak, and finally, the resolution through treatment or adaptation. Suddenly, those disconnected symptoms make sense as logical consequences of an unfolding narrative. Imagine pneumonia not as a list of symptoms but as a "neighborhood invasion" where bacteria move into the alveoli uninvited, causing white blood cells and fluid to rush in, ultimately blocking oxygen exchange. Or heart failure as an "overworked employee" forced into constant overtime until it simply can't keep up, leading to backed-up traffic (edema) and exhaustion. These frameworks make complex pathophysiology stick in ways that rote memorization never could. This approach transforms how you'll perform on exams, communicate with patients, and think clinically. Next time you're drowning in patho notes, step back and ask: Where in the story am I? What happened before? What happens next? How can I help rewrite the ending? Your understanding of the body's stories will become the foundation of intuitive, excellent nursing care. Ready to stop memorizing and start understanding? Let's transform how you learn pathophysiology—one story at a time. Music by Smallrose Productions [http://www.smallrose.com/]

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