Nurses on the Lavender Response Team Deliver Emotional Support & Sustenance to Colleagues in Need

The Lavender Response Team delivers wellness support in the form of a āfirst aid kitā that includes stress-busting essentials, from snacks and water to aromatherapy and prayer cards.
Photo: Devon Jarvis
In January 2022, a team of staff volunteers organized at each of °µĶųTV Langone Healthās campuses began responding to calls across the enterprise. These requests, though, werenāt coming from patients, and the responders werenāt wielding medical supplies. Instead, they toted lavender bags brimming with snacks and waterāessentials during stressful eventsāand even relaxation tools, such as aromatherapy packets and prayer cards. The teams are trained to help frontline workers through the emotional crises they face on the job every day, providing them with a caring, comforting presence.
The Lavender Response Team comprises specially trained volunteers from different disciplinesāthe group varies in number depending on available personnelāwho serve as a kind of psychological first aid unit for hospital employees. āThe pandemic reinforced what we already knew: healthcare workers have to face stressful, even traumatic, situations,ā says Debra Albert, DNP, MBA, RN, NEA-BC, chief nursing officer and senior vice president for patient care services at °µĶųTV Langone. āWe have to put the days of āputting on a brave faceā in the past.ā
Team Lavender was developed collaboratively through the nursing, social work and care management, integrative health services, and spiritual, religious, and chaplaincy teams at °µĶųTV Langone. Anyone in the hospital can summon a Lavender response, but most of last yearās 128 calls were spurred by a stressful care situation or patient death. When a call comes in, a volunteer responds to provide immediate support. āWhere the magic happens is having someone standing in front of you asking, āWhat can I do for you right now?āā says Kathleen DeMarco, MSN, NE-BC, CPHQ, RN, system senior director of nursing wellness and resilience. Team Lavender follows up after a visit as needed.
Each response not only assists a healthcare worker in distress, but also generates data that help the program improve its performance. For example, when several nurses reported in late March 2022 that they felt overwhelmed without the assistance of support staff who could spend time with patients to meet their nonmedical needs, hospital leadership restored the volunteer services that had been suspended due to COVID-19 precautions.
āThe ultimate goal,ā says DeMarco, āis for employees to know that the institution cares for them and that we are going to be physically present for them.ā