How Does the Advisory Relate to Nursing?
The U.S. surgeon general’s priorities often are highly relevant to the work and lives of nurses. The most recent advisory is no exception.
Along with other health workers, nurses often provide frontline care to parents, youth, and the general public while juggling their own families and household obligations. Nurses are a prime example of a profession sandwiched between two highly demanding existences. Many American families are struggling, and nurses are in a perfect position to empathize and advocate for positive change.
Dr. Murthy’s advisory functions as a strong, descriptive, and definitive call-to-action. Within mere hours of its release, the topic of parental pressure gained widespread traction in the media and sparked discussion within health-related circles.
What Does the Advisory Say About Mental Health Solutions for Parents?
It’s not news that raising a family can feel stressful. Caregivers know this feeling viscerally, perhaps even as a daily reality. However, the acknowledgement from the surgeon general is both validating and reassuring to parents.
Dr. Murthy’s 36-page advisory has four focus areas:
- The Current State of Parental Stress and Well-Being
- The Relationship Between Parental Stress and Mental Health
- The Impact of Parental Mental Health
- We Can Take Action
It reads as though penned by somebody who knows firsthand the challenges of parenting but with the influence and authority to inspire change.
“Throughout their lifespan, parents and caregivers often face heightened stressors, including financial strain and economic instability, time demands, concerns over children’s health and safety, parental isolation and loneliness, difficulty managing technology and social media, and cultural pressures,” he wrote.
While everybody experiences stress in some capacity, Dr. Murthy stated that parents have been “consistently more likely to report experiencing high levels of stress compared to other adults” over the past decade.
This cumulative stress has consequences, like the increased risk of mental health conditions, and extends beyond the overburdened individual.
“Parental mental health conditions can have far-reaching and profound implications for children, families as a whole, and for society, including increased health care costs and reduced economic productivity,” he wrote.
Inequities also exist in how parental stress impacts various populations. Family or community violence, poverty, racism, and discrimination are among the circumstance that can increase the risk for mental health conditions, according to HHS.
Dr. Murthy’s call to action spans from the top down, including various levels of government, community organizations and schools, health systems, and professionals, researchers, family and friends and — finally — the parents and caregivers themselves.
A Hypothetical Scenario of Stressors
So, what exactly about parenting is so stressful? Perhaps ask a nurse who is supporting struggling families at work, often while helping raise his or her own children. Time to step inside the shoes of caregivers in the trenches!
Consider the following hypothetical patient-care scenario:
A harried parent has been sitting in the emergency room for hours with their teenager on suicide watch. The family didn’t have the resources to drive to the nearest children’s hospital, so here they are — at the bustling urban hospital’s adult ER at 1 a.m.
This single parent is frantically trying to arrange school transportation for her younger children in the morning because the next-door neighbor cannot stay for long. She texts her boss that she’ll be absent from work (again), while simultaneously comforting her teenager and receiving medical instructions.
There is no current children’s mental health bed placement, so they’ll remain in limbo. Nobody has eaten real food for hours. Could this parent lose her job and not be able to pay her bills? How can she help her child navigate the school bullying that spurred this crisis, while she barely has time to connect with her family once activities, dinner, and homework are complete?
And by the way, where’s the nurse who’s caring for her child?
Well, that nurse is doing the following:
She’s using the bathroom … for the first time in eight hours since her double shift started. She was already in overtime, but her coworker needed to attend a funeral (which isn’t covered by the bereavement leave policy).
However, this nurse loves her work and the patients she serves. Later, she’s able to take a brief dinner break as she catches up on delayed charting. Her coworker is doing the same, while discussing how to carpool for an older daughter’s hockey tournament while his preschooler is at home vomiting. His baby has already been out of daycare all week from hand-foot-and-mouth disease.
This coworker has called in sick for four consecutive days and received an email about a performance improvement plan. Tonight, he left his spouse over-extended to show up for work. The unit is short-staffed with high census, but they’ll manage. Why? The staff are skilled, experienced, and care deeply about their team and patients. And it’s just another day in the life!
If these scenarios sound stressful, that’s because they are. Perhaps they seem like dramatizations; however, many caregivers and families navigate situations like these on a regular basis.
Sure, some days are better than others, and certain stages of life bring more routine and peace. Nonetheless, it merely takes a glimpse into the unpredictability of family life to realize, “We’ve all been there at some point; that it either is us, has been us, or is likely going to be us in the future — and if not us, perhaps our friend, family member, neighbor, or colleague.”
For a striking visual of the tangled network of possible parental stressors, explore the following graphic — both dizzying, yet illuminating — crafted by Molly Dickens, Ph.D., creator of an exploratory initiative called The Maternal Stress Project.
The image represents a parent’s mind from pre-pregnancy through the teen years and beyond, to answer the question: “What are parents worried about?” It also shows the very real, system-based nature of these numerous parental pressures.
Dickens emphasizes the need to acknowledge “that most ‘stress management’ recommendations are not solutions, and we need to extend beyond individual responsibility and coping in order to have a real impact on health.”
HHS agreed the solution must involve more than individual efforts, which is why the surgeon general’s advisory “calls for a shift in culture, policies, and programs to ensure all parents and caregivers can thrive.”
“Better supporting parents will require policy changes and expanded community programs that will help ensure parents and caregivers can get paid time off to be with a sick child, secure affordable child care, access to reliable mental health care, and benefit from places and initiatives that support social connection and community,” HHS stated.
