Convocation 2014: Meet Bloomberg Nursing's Deidre Bainbridge
For the 91³Ō¹Ļās Deidre Bainbridge, it was a long, winding ā but ultimately rewarding ā road to her Master of Nursing degree.
āI didnāt actually choose nursing as a career until I had been a nurse for 10 years,ā Bainbridge says.
Despite her early interest in forensic medicine, the abundant employment opportunities for RNs led Bainbridge to a two-year diploma in nursing. She put those skills and knowledge to work as a forensic nurse at the Sexual Assault & Domestic Violence Care Centre at Womenās College Hospital. But she didnāt stop there.
A volunteer at the Toronto Rape Crisis Centreās 24-hour hotline, Bainbridge also took on a part-time role at the Bay Centre for Birth Control.
With her professional life focused in the increasingly important and sensitive field of female reproductive health, Bainbridge then began working toward her BScN. And, in 2001, she completed the Primary Health Care Nurse Practitioner Program post-degree certificate.
After becoming a nurse practitioner, Bainbridge finally āchoseā nursing as her career. She quickly discovered she was in a unique position to examine, diagnose and treat patients.
More important, Bainbridge says, she had the chance to make an impact in forensic nursing at Womenās College Hospital ā where sheās now spent more than two decades providing care and counsel to vulnerable women.
Forensic nursing is a specialty that involves the provision of care to victims of crime, including sexual and other assaults. It may also involve working with perpetrators of crime deemed not criminally responsible for their actions. Forensic nurses collect and preserve physical evidence, document and photograph injuries and provide witness testimony when needed.
āAs a nurse practitioner, I have educated more than 1000 nurses across Ontario on how to examine, test and treat victims/patients of sexual assaultā says Bainbridge.
She also provides follow-up care to victims/patients in the six months following the assault ā testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections, support and education, and help managing sleep disturbance and depression as a result of assault.
āWe really address the bio-psycho-social needs of the patient/victim,ā she says.
Itās challenging and important work. But it isnāt for everyone.
āBearing witness to the capacity we as human beings have to be violent and cause pain and devastation to others can be profoundly upsetting,ā Bainbridge says. āThere are only a handful of forensic nursing experts in Canada, in part due to being a relatively small area of specialty, and in part due to the nature of work ā this work is emotionally difficult, leading to compassion fatigue and burnout.ā
Bainbridge intends to keep working to advance the field in which Bloomberg Nursing has helped her become a leader, by leading clinical research and writing articles for publication, among other initiatives.
āThe Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing at 91³Ō¹Ļ has a solid reputation internationally largely because of the leadership and research scholarship generated by the faculty in womenās health, particularly womenās mental health.ā