Top 5 Tips: Self-Care for Nurses
1. Promote a Healthy Lifestyle with Nutrition
Eating healthy foods sounds easy enough… until it’s not. Meal planning is time-consuming, and it requires effort. It is expensive and sometimes inconvenient. Peter LePort, M.D., medical director of MemorialCare Surgical Weight Loss Center at Orange Coast Medical Center, says this is why scheduling solid meals is important. “By pre-planning your meals often, you can often eliminate the impulse, ‘pressed for time’ purchases,” he says. A good example of this is buying impulse candy bars at the register.
2. Exercise as an Outlet
When you exercise, your body releases endorphins, which make you happy. Exercise is a wonderful method to moderate and relieve stress. You can take your stress out on the treadmill, peloton, or punching bag… just not on your family or co-workers. Taking time to exercise is vital for you to be at your best every day. So, go take that new class you’ve been wanting to try out!
3. Get some Sleep!
When you are well-rested you are less moody, have more energy, and your body is able to balance digestion and metabolism. Sleep seems simple enough, yet a global analytics and advice firm, Gallup, determined that over 40% of Americans get less than seven hours of sleep at night. This might take some thought, but experiment with different sleep routines and determine what needs to happen for you to get those extra Z’s.
4. Take a Spa Day
You spend all your days taking care of everyone else, whether it be your patients, your staff, your kids, your spouse, or, of course, your parents. However, you must remember to take a little you time. That may be getting a pedicure, receiving a massage, trying a detox, just taking some time to relax and recharge. You deserve it.
5. Try Words of Affirmation
Start your day with something positive. No, I don’t mean hitting the snooze button five times, then rushing your morning out the door. That only adds stress. Instead, try waking up a few minutes earlier and spending time in prayer, meditation, self-reflection, or journaling. I like to list 5 positive things from the day before, or 5 things I’m grateful for & how I can show that gratitude. Whatever it looks like for you, make it a daily habit to spend a few, quiet minutes with your thoughts.
At the end of a long workday spent taking care of others, remember that you are important and need to be cared for too. Think of yourself as the glue that keeps the walls of the house together, if the glue cracks, the house will fall. You already know what it takes to care for someone, so start treating yourself with the same love and care that you give to everyone else. Go take some time for yourself – self-care for nurses is the best way to ensure that our patients are getting the care that they deserve.