San Francisco Career Fair Speaker ‘Taps Into’ Crucial Need
Monday March 23, 2009
Print This- Select Text Size:

Comments
More Info
Masoorli to Speak On Infusion Therapy
Assessing Implanted Ports
8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.
This program will include current nursing practice regulations and information on nursing management of implanted ports. Masoorli will also discuss tips and techniques for accessing ports.
Central Venous Catheter Infections
Noon to 1 p.m.
Information will be presented on the central venous catheter (CVC) types. Masoorli will also address symptom identification and clinical management of patients with CVC infections, as well as the impact of the Medicare 2008 regulations.
IV Therapy: Complications and Documentation
2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Masoorli will focus on proper assessment techniques for peripheral venous access devices and guidelines for legally acceptable documentation. Additionally, she will discuss three common peripheral IV complications.
For more information, visit http://events.nursingspectrum.com.
advertisement
In 1987, Masoorli, who had been the nurse manager of an IV team for 10 years and done home infusion for the previous five, founded Perivascular Nurse Consultants Inc., whose staff set up infusion therapy at home visits. She was thrown a curve ball in the 1990s when insurance companies stopped reimbursing home care nurses for the insertion of peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) lines. But by then, the company had also started an education component. Although the home care component of the business had generated most of the revenue, the market had changed — so Masoorli’s business changed along with it.
Perivascular Nurse Consultants’ focus on education has paid off. Three of the company’s training videos — ones on venipuncture, phlebotomy, and PICC line insertion — earned awards from the American Nurses Association.
With the company’s success has come individual success for Masoorli, who received an award from the American Cancer Society for her volunteer work. Additionally, she serves as an expert witness in nursing malpractice infusion cases.
Since Masoorli found her niche, she says what she likes best is seeing the students in her classes gain both knowledge and confidence. At the beginning of a session, some healthcare professionals doubt their ability to learn how to perform an infusion. “But then you see the light bulb go on, and they really get it,” she says. “At the end of the day, they learn how to find the vein and insert the catheter.”
After all, “there are always advances, always changes [in nursing],” she says. “There is always something exciting happening.”
Rebecca Ray is the managing editor of NurseWeek’s California edition. To comment, e-mail editorCA@nurseweek.com.

Reader Comments
Login
Be the first to comment!