At his best when others suffer their worst

Brian Velasco
Brian Velasco. Courtesy photo.

In an extraordinary way, Brian Velasco is comfortable working during the coronavirus pandemic, even as it complicates his work as an assistant nurse manager at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.

鈥淵ou see people at their wits end and at their worst,鈥 Velasco said. Yet, this is a role for which he prepared by getting a Master of Nursing in the Administrative Leadership track from the School of Nursing & Health Studies.

鈥淚 feel like I鈥檓 better equipped in facing these types of challenges 鈥 and even enjoy it,鈥 he said.

Safety net hospital

Velasco worked as a bedside for nurse nine years at Harborview, Seattle鈥檚 鈥渟afety net鈥 hospital that treats everyone regardless of their ability to pay. After receiving his MN last June, he took on a leadership role this year as the assistant nurse manager in the orthopedic trauma clinic and the after-care clinic.

The after-care clinic treats county jail inmates, people who lack permanent residences, patients without insurance and those struggling to enter the health care system.

鈥淵ou can see why we are the safety net hospital through the services we provide in that clinic,鈥 Velasco said. 鈥淲e know they have their backs up against a wall and have nowhere else to turn.鈥

Velasco is responsible for making certain his team of about a dozen nurses is equipped, trained and prepared 鈥渢o perform their responsibilities and to take care of our patients well.鈥

With both access to treatment and follow-up care, he said, those patients don鈥檛 end up in the emergency room as often.

Inspiring leadership

Velasco said he was inspired to pursue the master鈥檚 degree by his managers and by 鈥渟eeing what formally trained leaders can do in the community, for our patients and for the organization as a whole.鈥

He decided to go beyond bedside nursing and have a bigger impact on how Harborview moves forward with patient care.

Velasco had received his Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 2015 from UW Bothell and also said he 鈥渨anted to continue there to get that excellent education.鈥

The MN program included meeting one day a week in class for two years while he continued working full time. 鈥淚t was a good kind of busy.鈥

Velasco also intends to keep busy. He鈥檇 like to develop even more business skills with an MBA and add advanced nursing credentials with a doctor of nursing practice.

Education matters

You can鈥檛 go wrong with more education, said Velasco.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e increasing your value as a person and as a working member of this profession,鈥 he said.

The pandemic has also demonstrated how nursing leaders can rapidly respond to new challenges. And while everyone hopes the pandemic will end soon, he noted, no one expects it will be the last time hospitals are forced to shift.

鈥淭hese types of things happen, and it鈥檚 up to us aspiring nurse leaders to choose how we want to change the direction of health care,鈥 Velasco said.

Read more recent news

See all news