Transitioning from Sports to Nursing
While some may consider professional football and nursing to be entirely different worlds, there are many overlapping skills that Helaire can bring from his time at the Kansas City Chiefs to healthcare.
Stress
Professional athletes are under an extreme amount of pressure due to the competitiveness of their industry and the direct result public performance has on job security. The average career for NFL players is only three years, which can lead to players being overwhelmed by the pressure.
The stress of nursing is well-known, as burnout continues to drive qualified nurses from bedside care. Nurses know that the quality of care can be the difference between life and death for their patients. Business News Daily ranked ER nurse as the 10th most stressful job in 2024.
Resilience
On top of the mental resilience nurses must have, there is also an increasing threat of violence for nurses who handle erratic and stressed patients who may lash out. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics found that nurses experienced 73% of all nonfatal injuries from workplace violence.
Football players are also at an increased risk of injury due to their careers. Repeated concussions and other force-impact injuries raise the chance of developing a degenerative brain disease known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
Teamwork
When watching football, it’s easy to see how every team member plays a vital role in winning the game. Helaire, the running back, must be aware of both teams and their positioning to receive the ball from the quarterback and run to the endzone without being stopped.
Nurses are an essential part of healthcare teams, acting as a direct liaison between physicians and patients. Nurses are often directly responsible for administering care directly to their patients as well as advocating for them. Reporting on a patient’s progress is also the job of the nurse, who keeps the entire team informed through careful charting.