
The Power of Person-Centred Moments: A Nurse’s Patient Journey [PCC082]
Torsdag 7 maj 2026 10:25 - 10:45 G1
Rapportör: Ruth SmootherSpår: Art, Media, and Performance
Person-centred care is the foundation of meaningful healthcare—and its presence or absence can shape a patient’s entire experience. This 10-minute first-person monologue shares the story of a nurse with over 30 years of clinical experience who unexpectedly becomes a patient after suffering a heart attack. Told from the patient’s perspective, the narrative explores how moments of connection and disconnection within the hospital environment impacted her sense of safety, dignity, and identity. It recounts a prolonged period in the emergency department without a diagnosis, during which she chose not to inform her family—missing her niece’s wedding and receiving her diagnosis at the exact moment her niece walked down the aisle. The story highlights how not only interpersonal interactions, but also systemic factors—such as wait times and communication—play a critical role in shaping a person’s experience of care. These elements can either reinforce or undermine a sense of being seen, heard, and valued. This experience profoundly reshaped her understanding of person-centred care and its delivery. Now working as a nurse educator, she uses her story to highlight the importance of embedding compassion, presence, and attentiveness into clinical practice. The monologue invites reflection on how person-centred care must be supported not only in individual interactions, but also through organisational culture, leadership, and governance. By bridging personal experience with professional insight, this performance challenges healthcare professionals and leaders to consider how systems, behaviours, and values align to support truly person-centred care.
Konferens
GCPCC
GCPCC Seminarietyp
Art/media/performance
GCPCC Kod
PCC082
Föreläsare
Ruth Smoother Rapportör
Nurse Educator, Quality & Culture
Prince of Wales
Ruth Smoother is a Nurse Educator in Quality and Culture at Prince of Wales Hospital, Australia, with over 30 years of experience across public and private health services. Her work focuses on strengthening values‑based quality and safety practices and supporting ward‑level teams to embed person‑centred care in everyday clinical practice. Ruth collaborates with multidisciplinary teams on quality improvement and research initiatives, with a particular interest in leadership, workplace culture, and meaningful clinician engagement. She is motivated by supporting clinicians to reconnect with purpose and to translate person‑centred values into sustainable practice.