Article Content

AJN's Web site, http://www.ajnonline.com, offers access to current and past issues (from 1900 on), podcasts, article collections, news alerts-and much more. Bookmark our blog, Off the Charts (http://ajnoffthecharts.com), to read frequent updates and share your thoughts on what you see in your nursing world. Join us on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/AJNfans), follow us on Twitter (http://twitter.com/AmJNurs), and be sure to download the new AJN app on your iPad.

 

WHAT WE'RE BLOGGING ABOUT

 

* In "'Let Patients Help': Nurses and e-Patients," Joy Jacobson offers a supportive perspective on "participatory medicine," praising patients who use Facebook and other social networking sites to push for the funding of research into treatments that the science may not support (http://wp.me/prthD-2QK).

 

* Is two weeks adequate time to grieve over the loss of a loved one? In "Grief: The Proposed DSM-5 Gets It Wrong," clinical managing editor Karen Roush tells a poignant personal story (http://wp.me/prthD-2QA).

 

* Should a person with high cholesterol get meds or get healthy? Read "The Elusive Strict Diet" by associate editor Amy M. Collins for a patient perspective (http://wp.me/prthD-2OJ).

 

WHAT READERS ARE SAYING ON FACEBOOK AND OUR BLOG

"I have always believed that empowering patients would lead (or force) the way to better quality health care and ultimately better outcomes." "Though therapy isn't for everyone, for many it's what prevents that natural process of grief from turning into something bigger." "It seems to me that if we want to help patients have the best possible outcomes, the question becomes this: Should we handcuff the strong to 'protect' the weak?"

 

MAY PODCASTS

 

* Monthly highlights: Listen to AJN editors discuss the contents of the May issue.

 

* Behind the article: Editor-in-chief Shawn Kennedy speaks with

 

* Marilyn H. Oermann, lead author of this month's clinical feature, "Competence in CPR."

 

* Ellen Davidson Baer, author of "Key Ideas in Nursing's First Century."