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A Nurse. A Pandemic. An Addiction.

— A frontline nurse struggles with drug abuse

MedpageToday

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Thank you for joining us here on Anamnesis, a medical storytelling podcast from app. My name is Shannon Firth. I'm a reporter with MedPage and I'll be your host for this episode.

For those of you who listen in regularly, this month's episode will be a little different. Instead of three stories from individual clinicians on a theme, we're bringing you just one story. An important story focused on the underreported, sometimes overlooked, challenges for nurses who struggle with substance use.

During the pandemic, the public romanticized the role of nurses, casting them as superheroes -- women and men who sacrificed everything for their patients. But for many, the grief, stress, and exhaustion took a toll. In one survey, nearly half of critical care nurses said they felt depressed, and a third said they were drinking more. Six percent said they felt suicidal.

And that's where the story of Tiffany Swedeen comes in.

Over the holidays, a nurse in recovery from opioid use disorder struggled to keep her addiction in check. She was caring for coronavirus patients on the front lines in an ICU outside Seattle. She asked her hospital for more support, and received little. She reached out to her family, but that just made things worse. On Sunday, January 3, 2021, Tiffany Swedeen relapsed.

Tiffany's story highlights the fact that when it comes to substance use disorders, our healthcare system has one standard for patients and another for nurses. And while nurses have responsibilities not only to themselves, but to the public, it's worth remembering that substance use disorder is still a chronic but treatable brain disease, and not a moral failing.

This episode of Anamnesis features discussions of drug abuse and suicide that may be disturbing to some listeners. Discretion is advised.

Chapter 1. Blacked Out on Fentanyl for a Day (2:40) -- A nurse in recovery shares one of her loneliest moments.

Chapter 2. Job, License, and Livelihood on the Line (11:09) -- After diverting drugs, the foundation begins to crack for this nurse.

Chapter 3. Nurses Are Not Unbreakable (26:20) -- We as a society need to serve nurses better.

Episode produced and hosted by Shannon Firth

Special thanks to Crystal Phend

Sound engineering by Emily Hutto

Theme music by Palomar

Want to share your story? Read the Anamnesis Storyteller Tip Sheet, and when you're ready, apply here!

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    Shannon Firth has been reporting on health policy as app's Washington correspondent since 2014. She is also a member of the site's Enterprise & Investigative Reporting team.