Aug 20, 2024
Claire Champion is a nurse practitioner at Texas Children's Hospital, specializing in pulmonary hypertension. As a nurse practitioner, she has the opportunity to see some of the patients as outpatients, which allows her to witness positive outcomes and the resilience of children. She also highlights the need for nurses to have a support system to cope with the emotional toll of the job. Claire encourages families to be open about their ongoing issues so that the healthcare team can provide the necessary support.
My
name is Claire Champion. I am now a nurse practitioner at Texas
Children's Hospital working with Elise Whalen and the pulmonary
hypertension group there. Previously, I was an ICU nurse in the
PICU for five years and was on the floor that focuses on the
pulmonary hypertension kids that are there for a long time. So I
had a lot of bedside experience with this population. When I
graduated nurse practitioner school, I didn't really know what I
wanted to do, so I just hung out for a while. Then, this job
opening posted and one of the ICU attendings, Dr. Charton, who's
one of the PH doctors as well, came up and was like, "Are you going
to apply?" Initially I was like, "Absolutely not. I don't want
anything to do with that," because it's a very hard population to
deal with. I knew it was going to be a lot of education. It's so
different being an ICU nurse and being a nurse practitioner. He was
like, "I think you'd be great and we will get you through the
program." That's what happened and here I am. It's really been a
great opportunity and experience and the education I have learned,
I can't even begin to say how much it has really been
life-altering.
We initially had a PICU that was not cohorted. Then, Texas
Children's built a new tower called Legacy Tower that was
specifically designed for the new ICUs. What they did was we have
three different floors. We have the 9th, 10th, and 11th.
They cohorted it so that when consulting groups would come in, they
had all their patients in the same area. I was never scared of the
pulmonary hypertension kids. It didn't bother me. So, I just ended
up on that cohort of the unit. And so I had a lot of experience and
it worked out for me.
I think from the bedside nursing perspective, you really just have
to focus on getting a good relationship with the parents and
getting them to trust you, because they're overwhelmed, they're
exhausted, they're constantly there. Their kids sit in the ICU for
months. So, really figuring out what the parents want for their
child and how they want their child to be cared for is, I would say
the number one most important thing that you can do. It gives the
parents that ability to feel more comfortable and they can start
leaving the bedside, getting back to some of the other things that
are important in their lives, their other children.
Then you just adapt to what the kid needs, because all the PH kids,
no one is the exact same. There's a difference between the
idiopathics that come in. They're usually not there for too long.
They're usually a two-week max type of patient. Then, you have the
BPD babies that are there for months. So, you just feel out what
the parents and what the family is wanting and go from there.
One of the things I think is cool about transitioning to the nurse
practitioner job is that now I do get to see some of these kids as
an outpatient, whereas when you are an ICU nurse, you don't see
them ever leave. So, that part gets really hard because it feels
like these babies are just sitting here for months and months and
not progressing. I think the flip side of switching to the provider
role is now I get to see, wow, eventually one day we will get
there. It's nice now to go in as a nurse practitioner to some of
these families that are in the ICU and talk about the positive
outcomes of kids that, "Oh, three years ago I had this patient who
was in the same position as you, and now they're out and they're
living their best life." There's a positive end, because a lot of
times in the ICU, everything is so negative and just drowning. So,
I think that's one of the benefits of switching to this role is
seeing the fun side of outpatient world.
You have to learn to disassociate yourself from work and your real
life. When I first started as a PICU nurse, I mean, that was
probably one of the hardest jobs I could pick straight out of
graduating from just general nursing school. It was very
depressing. There were times that I would drive home and you don't
turn the radio on, you just sit there in silence and are like, wow,
that was a very rough day.
But then you learn to rely on your nursing friends and the people
in that community, because they understand what you're going
through. So, you can always vent or you talk about anything else
and they get you through it. I think one of the most important
parts of being in this career is finding coworkers to have an
outlet to speak to. But then, I think there's a lot of positives
that you learn and you get to see a lot of miracles, as well.
There's so many things about children. They're so resilient. You
get this diagnosis and think they're never going to get through it.
I saw a kid that was on a PEEP of 24 and now he's on a PEEP
(positive end-expiratory pressure) of 12 and doing great. So,
there's just a lot of cool things that you get to see that I've
seen in my seven years in the nursing profession. They're just
eye-opening to what children can go through and what they push
through.
It's a nice change to see them outpatient because we see our kids
about every three months, and so you actually get to know what's
going on in their life outside of just their disease process. When
you're in the ICU, it's more of what are we doing today? What are
we changing today? What happened overnight? Now in outpatient
world, it's, "Hey, my birthday was yesterday and the whole family
went to Chuck E. Cheese, and we're going to... Is it okay if we fly
this summer and go to Disney World?" There's just a lot more
positives that you get to see from the outpatient perspective and a
lot of just different social aspects that you don't think about
when you're just in the hospital. That part has been amazing to see
kids have normal lives as much as they can outside of their disease
process.
I have to admit, not all of it is great. Sometimes kids will come
in and their walk test is worse or their echo is worse, they're
having cyanosis or whatever the reason is. It does get tricky
because you want everything to be so great every time you see them.
There are times that there's not, and do we need to admit you? We
need to change your therapy. Things are getting a little bit worse.
Those conversations are really tricky. But at the end of the day,
the most important part is having that strong relationship with the
family where they can trust you and it all works out. It's nice to
have providers and nurse practitioners and the whole team, our
social worker, our nurses, our dieticians, everyone comes together
for that family and we bend over backwards for them. That part has
been really nice to see a whole team, because when you're in the
ICU, it's really the ICU team. You maybe see the consult teams
every once in a while, but you don't see the whole outside picture.
Just the amount of conversation that goes on about each of our
patients. I don't know how many meetings I was going to have in
this nurse practitioner role and so it's really cool to see
everything behind the scenes.
Just be honest and be open on what your family is going through.
Sometimes we get palliative care involved and the palliative care
team will come back and say, this mom is really struggling with X,
Y, Z, and it has nothing to do with the child. I think the best
advice is to be open about all of the ongoing issues that are going
on, because even if it's not about your kid with pulmonary
hypertension, we can still help in whatever way that your family is
needing, because it's an all or nothing type situation. I think
that piece is really important for families to just know our center
really wants the best for everybody involved.
My name is Claire Champion and I'm aware that my patients are
rare.
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