Voices from the Nursing Frontline

Domestic Violence Awareness with Carla Kirkland

43 min · 22 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Domestic Violence Awareness with Carla Kirkland

Descripción

Abuse is about power and control—not just physical violence—and often goes unseen.   Nurses are in a unique position to identify abuse across all care settings.   Routine, nonjudgmental screening helps patients feel safe to disclose.   Subtle signs (chronic symptoms, delayed care, controlling partners) can signal abuse.   Leaving an abusive relationship is often the most dangerous time—safety planning is essential.   Trauma-informed, empathetic communication builds trust and supports disclosure.   Collaboration with community resources improves outcomes for survivors.   Education and awareness are key to breaking cycles of violence and protecting patients.

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76 episodios

episode Prevention Starts Early: Nursing’s Role in Changing Lifelong Health Outcomes with Chris Owen artwork

Prevention Starts Early: Nursing’s Role in Changing Lifelong Health Outcomes with Chris Owen

In this episode of Voices From the Nursing Frontline, host Dr. Lisa Beasley speaks with Chris Owen, MS, ACNP, a nurse practitioner whose 34-year nursing career spans trauma and ICU care, vascular surgery, education design, prevention science, and legislative advocacy. Chris shares her professional journey from associate-degree nurse in a Level I trauma center to surgical ICU nurse, vascular nurse practitioner, and ultimately Director of Innovative Design and Simulation in the Education Division at the American College of Cardiology. In her current role, she helps shape education for more than 60,000 cardiovascular professionals across in-person, online, and simulation-based platforms—while continuing to practice clinically. The conversation explores the power of prevention across the lifespan, from child passenger safety and injury prevention to vascular disease, hypertension, and cardiovascular risk reduction. Chris emphasizes that atherosclerosis and chronic disease develop over decades, making early education, lifestyle changes, and community-level interventions critical to improving long-term outcomes. Dr. Beasley and Chris also discuss gaps in clinician education—particularly where nursing and advanced practice provider workflows differ from physician-centered models—and the importance of practical, bedside-relevant education that supports transitions of care from hospital to clinic and back again. The episode concludes with a powerful discussion on nursing advocacy. Chris reflects on her experience working with legislators, including helping write Maryland’s booster seat legislation, and encourages nurses to recognize their influence beyond direct patient care. Her message is clear: curiosity, courage, and persistence can open doors nurses may never have imagined—and those doors can lead to meaningful change for patients, families, and communities.

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episode Bridging the Gap: Forensic Nursing and Education in Rural Communities with Carrie Bailey artwork

Bridging the Gap: Forensic Nursing and Education in Rural Communities with Carrie Bailey

In this episode of Voices from the Nursing Frontline, host Dr. Lisa Beasley sits down with Dr. Carrie Bailey, Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Tennessee College of Nursing and an experienced Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE). Dr. Bailey shares insights from more than two decades in nursing education and clinical practice, discussing how simulation, trauma-informed care, and real-world clinical experiences prepare students for today’s healthcare environment. She also highlights her work expanding SANE services across rural Tennessee and the importance of multidisciplinary collaboration to ensure survivors of sexual assault have access to compassionate, specialized care. The conversation explores nursing education, rural healthcare challenges, mentorship, and the critical role nurses play in bridging the gap between classroom learning and patient care.

27 de may de 202646 min
episode Motivating Nurses Through Patient Care with Tiffany Street and host, Dr. Lisa Beasley artwork

Motivating Nurses Through Patient Care with Tiffany Street and host, Dr. Lisa Beasley

In this conversation, Dr. Tiffany Street shares her journey through nursing, leadership, and clinical practice at Vanderbilt Heart and Vascular Institute. She currently serves as the Associate Nursing Officer and continues to practice as an acute care nurse practitioner in vascular surgery, a specialty she has loved since 2005. She oversees clinical operations across 23 clinics in Tennessee, with additional locations in Kentucky, Indiana, and Alabama, making her service line the first at Vanderbilt to operate in four states. Dr. Street talks about her unconventional path into nursing. She originally studied biology and chemistry with plans for medical school but discovered the nursing model through a nurse practitioner she worked with after graduation. She completed a bridge program at Vanderbilt, moved into cardiac surgery at the VA, and eventually shifted into vascular surgery, where she has spent most of her career. She later pursued leadership, which eventually led her back to Vanderbilt in a director role and then into executive nursing leadership. Her motivation for earning both her MSN and DNP grew out of wanting to serve, lead, and better understand the systems guiding patient care. A major theme she returns to is balance. With over 400 FTEs under her leadership, she emphasizes the importance of motivation, communication, and purpose. She believes strongly in starting with the “why” when leading change and in staying connected to frontline staff and patients. Continuing her own weekly clinical practice keeps her grounded and gives her credibility with the teams she leads. She notes the importance of reflection, feedback, and the role of informal leaders in shaping culture. Dr. Street also speaks passionately about advocacy and professional governance. Her involvement in organizations like the Society for Vascular Nursing and the Tennessee Nurses Association grew from realizing how deeply public policy affects nursing practice. She encourages nurses to get involved at any level—through professional organizations, unit councils, or grassroots advocacy—because their voices directly impact patient care and the future of the profession.

21 de may de 202643 min
episode From Bedside to Breakthroughs: Dr. Ann Cashion on Nursing Science artwork

From Bedside to Breakthroughs: Dr. Ann Cashion on Nursing Science

* Nurse scientists play a critical role in translating research into improved patient outcomes.  *  Mentorship is one of the most influential factors in developing future nurse researchers.  *  Nurses bring unique clinical insight to interdisciplinary research teams.  *  Symptom science and genomics continue to shape modern nursing research and precision health.  *  Successful nurse scientists are strong team leaders who collaborate across disciplines.  *  Persistence, curiosity, and relationship-building are essential traits for research success.  *  Health equity remains a major issue, especially in underserved rural communities.  *  Nurses should pursue leadership roles beyond traditional bedside and management positions, including policy and government.  *  Research funded through the federal government supports critical healthcare discoveries that private industries may overlook.  *  The future of nursing innovation includes AI, big data, precision health, and collaborative team science.

14 de may de 202645 min