Tag: Involvement

  • Building Unity in San Diego’s Nursing Community

    Building Unity in San Diego’s Nursing Community

    One Profession, Many Paths

    San Diego’s nursing community is incredibly diverse. Bedside RNs, nurse practitioners, school nurses, and public health nurses all move through the city in different roles. Long-term care nurses, case managers, educators, and administrators also play various roles within the city. Incorporate a wide range of cultural backgrounds. Consider different generations and career stages. You will end up with a rich tapestry. This has the potential for both deep connection and real misunderstanding.

    We’ve seen this in conversations about who “counts” as a “real” nurse. There are tensions between new grads and seasoned nurses over changing practice norms. Disparities exist around who is invited into leadership roles and who remains at the bedside, regardless of talent or aspiration.

    Union actions, staffing fights, and pay debates can sometimes deepen those divides. Yet the core challenges—burnout, housing costs, staffing, safety, respect—are shared across the entire profession. When nurses fragment into competing subgroups, the healthcare system becomes even harder to change.

    How Whispering Hope International Can Help

    Whispering Hope International was created with one belief at its center: hope grows when people are seen, heard, and connected.

    For the broader nursing community, that means:

    • Hosting cross-sector gatherings that bring together nurses from hospitals, clinics, schools, and community settings

    • Facilitating conversations about equity and advancement, including who gets to lead and why

    • Continuing to highlight and honor the specific stories of different communities within nursing—Filipino nurses, Black nurses, Latino nurses, immigrant nurses, LGBTQ+ nurses—while always tying those stories back into a shared profession

    San Diego’s nurses are not just employees in a system; they are neighbors, parents, caregivers, and community builders. The more they stand together, the harder they are to ignore.