Start with a laugh, stay for the truth. We sit down with Sarah, a psych nurse, and her sister Emily to explore what real inclusion in healthcare looks like when you move past labels and meet the person in front of you. Their story arcs from a pandemic-era TikTok experiment to a community of millions who come for the pranks and lunchbox notes, then stay for the hard-earned wisdom on dignity & communication.
Sarah opens up about struggling through clinicals until psych finally felt like home, pushing back on the myth that mental health units are “glorified babysitting.” She walks us through practical, bedside-level practices that change outcomes: greet and engage the patient first, explain every step, validate pain even when words are scarce, and escalate when first-line meds don’t touch obvious distress. Emily’s recent surgery becomes a case study in bias and advocacy, from a dismissive PACU moment to the relief that came when someone finally listened.
We also talk representation and identity with a powerful milestone: Emily finding a Barbie with Down syndrome after sixteen years without a doll that looked like her. That spark of recognition connects to better care—when people feel seen, anxiety drops and trust rises. Then we switch gears to their other passion: fostering hundreds of rescue cats using transferable nursing skills under veterinary guidance. It’s a joyful reminder that compassion is portable and clinical judgment adapts across settings.
If you’re a nurse, student, caregiver, or just someone who wants to treat people better, you’ll leave with concrete takeaways: speak to the person, assume comprehension, use plain language and teach-back, preserve autonomy, and look for abilities before limitations. Come for the humor, leave with a sharper clinical lens and a bigger heart. If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find us.
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