[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 938 Introduced in House (IH)]
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117th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 938
Recognizing the important role America's forensic nurses play in
supporting survivors and addressing violence.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 22, 2022
Ms. Kuster (for herself, Mr. Katko, and Ms. Jayapal) submitted the
following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Energy and
Commerce
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Recognizing the important role America's forensic nurses play in
supporting survivors and addressing violence.
Whereas violence is a persistent health care issue and forensic nurses are the
bridge between the medical and legal needs of patients;
Whereas more than 2,000,000 people are treated for violence-related injuries
each year in the United States;
Whereas patients who experience violence sustain physical injuries, as well as
acute and chronic physical and mental health conditions, including
sexually transmitted infections, HIV, substance misuse, anxiety,
depression, and suicidal ideation;
Whereas the health consequences of violence cost hospitals and health care
systems approximately $2,700,000,000 annually;
Whereas forensic nurses are essential to America's health care because they
provide trauma-informed nursing care that focuses on patient populations
affected by violence and trauma, including victims and perpetrators of
violent crimes, across the lifespan and in diverse practice settings;
Whereas the International Association of Forensic Nursing (IAFN) was established
in 1992 and celebrates its 30th anniversary this year;
Whereas forensic nursing has been formally recognized as a specialty practice
area since 1995;
Whereas forensic nurses work independently, yet collaboratively within health
care and community systems ensuring the provision of care that extends
from the clinical setting to the courtroom;
Whereas forensic nursing encompasses caring for diverse patient populations,
including patients who have experienced sexual assault or abuse,
intimate or interpersonal violence, elder and child maltreatment, human
trafficking and accidental as well as nonaccidental trauma, in roles
that include sexual assault nurse examiner, forensic nurse examiner,
death investigator, correctional nurse, forensic psychiatric nurse,
legal nurse consultant, forensic geriatric specialist, nurse attorney,
and forensic clinical nurse specialists;
Whereas forensic nurses foster an understanding of the health consequences,
effective interventions, and prevention of violence and trauma in
individuals, families, and communities;
Whereas forensic nurses work in partnership with multidisciplinary stakeholders,
including Tribal organizations, advocacy, law enforcement, military
branches, and legal counsel; and
Whereas forensic nurses are facing unprecedented challenges in maintaining
patient access to care throughout the COVID-19 pandemic with the
changing demand for services as rates and severity of violence increase:
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) acknowledges that forensic nursing is more relevant now
than ever before, as this specialty practice evolves to address
the gaps in health care related to effective violence
intervention, reduction of long-term health consequences, and
prevention;
(2) honors forensic nurses for their commitment to
providing evidence-based, compassionate, trauma-informed care
encompassing the entire scope of nursing practice; and
(3) reaffirms its commitment to working alongside forensic
nurses to further their contributions to improve health
outcomes for patients experiencing violence.
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