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*1926, August 12 New Jersey*

1 [zooming in the house with baby crying sfx (edit)]

2 (Mom carrying her baby): Ooohhh what do you want baby?

[Dad coming in, and their (mom) eyes will meet and smile (looking at their baby)]

3 Orlando desired to study nursing from an early age, but her mother was opposed to her
leaving home without first marrying, as was the custom at the time.

[KITCHEN]
4 Orlando: Mom?
Mom: What is it?

5 Orlando: Whatever I say after this, you won’t get mad, promise?

6 Mom: Yeah, promise.

7 Orlando: I want to study…nursing…


8 Mom: No!
9 I’m not allowing you to leave this house without marrying first. It is a custom.
Orlando: But I’m not ready yet! I don’t want my dreams to be ruined just because of our
customs. Please allow me, mom.

[ROOM]
10 (Orlando writing on her study table) Dad: {Knock the door 3x} Orlando? Are you there?
Orlando: Yes, come in!
11 (Door open)
12 Mom: Hi, Dear! (deep breath) Mom and Dad have decided, and we’re giving you our
permission.
Orlando: (Drop her pen on the table) Really!? Oh my God! (hug parents while saying)
13 Thank you mom, dad. I promise I will study hard and make you proud.

14 {insert picture of New York Medical College} She began her studies at the New York Medical
College after obtaining permission from her parents.

15 She began her professional career in 1947, the year she received her diploma and began
working in the obstetrics department of {insert picture of Shore Road Hospital} Shore Road
Hospital. 16 She quickly relocated to another institution after determining that patients were
not receiving adequate care at that health center.

17 {picture of St. John's University} Meanwhile, she was enrolled at St. John's University in
Brooklyn, New York, 18 where she earned a Bachelor of Science in public health nursing in
1951. She had hoped that dedicating herself to this area would allow her to focus more on the
patient's needs and less on the protocol, however, to her disappointment, 19 {black and white
vid and slowmo with disappointed sfx} it did not turn out to be the case.

20 {picture of Teachers College, Columbia University} Continuing her search, she enrolled at
Teachers College, Columbia University in New York, 21 where she earned a Master's degree in
mental health nursing three years later.

22 From 1954 to 1961, she was an associate professor and director of the graduate program in
mental health psychiatric nursing at Yale University.

23 She also devoted time to research during her years at Yale. Her primary project required her
to process over 2000 interactions between nurses and patients in order to integrate mental
health concepts into a basic nursing curriculum.

24 (3 clips) She married Robert J. Pelletier in mid-1961 and relocated to the Boston area.
Additionally, she left Yale University shortly thereafter to begin her consulting career.

25 {picture of McLean Hospital} She began providing clinical nursing advice in 1962 at McLean
Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts. 26 That same year, she received a research grant from the
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), making her the first psychiatric nurse to receive
such a grant in the United States.

27 Throughout that period, she devoted herself to an exhaustive study of the deliberative
nursing process via the project 'Two nursing systems in a psychiatric hospital'. For the first time
in history, the nursing process was examined scientifically.

28 In 1972, she published "The discipline and teaching of the nursing process," which included
the findings of her study. 29 Since that year, she has been conducting dissemination and
training programs on her theory for nearly a decade.

30 There were over 60 seminars held in the United States and Canada combined. Her
commitment to consulting continued in the United States and expanded internationally.
Despite her 1992 retirement, Orlando remained a mentor and consultant to colleagues and
alumni. 31 That year, she was presented with the Massachusetts Nurses Association's Legend of
Life Award in Nursing.

32 In November 2007, at the age of 81, Ida Jean Orlando died.


THE CAST AND CREW OF THIS VIDEO HAS OBSERVED COVID-19 SAFETY PROTOCOLS BY
WEARING OF FACE MASKS AND FREQUENT USE OF ALCOHOL

APPLICATIONS

-----JK----- start

[Video communicating with patient asking for any symptoms before vaccination]
Orlando’s Theory of Deliberative Nursing Process focuses exclusively on the interpersonal
process between people and facilitates identification of the nature of patients’ distress and
their immediate needs for help through a deliberative nursing process.

[Video putting thermometer into patient’s axillary]


It has five stages which are assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation.

[Video putting sphygmomanometer into patient’s chest]


Nurses use the standard nursing process in Orlando's nursing process theory to produce
positive outcomes or patient improvement.

[Get the thermometer and record in a piece of paper]


Regardless of how well thought out a nursing care plan is for a patient. [Video removing the
cover of syringe] Obstacles for the patient's recovery may come up at any time so it is the
nurse's job to know how to deal with those obstacles [pulling up sleeves of the patient and
rubbing with cotton with alcohol] so that the patient can continue to recover and stay on the
path of health.

[Video inserting the syringe to the patient] The deliberative nursing process allows nurses to
create an effective nursing care plan that can also be easily adopted when and if any
complications arise with the patient.

-----JK----- end

1 (2 clips) [SIR experiencing dizziness and will pass out]

2 NURSE 1: Sir, are you okay sir? What happened sir? (Get cellphone and call)
Hi! Good Morning! I’m state your name, there’s an emergency right here. Yes, in the
hallway. Please hurry. Okay okay.

[FADE]
[Door knocking sfx]

3 (Door opening) NURSE 2: Good morning sir! We will just check your vital signs. Let me get
your blood pressure sir. (perform)
4 [SIR pulling up sleeves]
5 NURSE 3: Sir, How are you feeling?
6 SIR: Well I’m fine, I think?
7 NURSE 3: Are you sure are you feeling alright? [Pretend to be writing something on a piece of
paper]
8 SIR: Yes
9 NURSE 2: Sir your blood pressure is a bit low.
10 NURSE 3: Can we ask you something sir?
11 SIR: Yes, what is it all about?
12 NURSE 2: Has someone visited you already?
13 SIR: Well, technically, I am living alone here. My family is in the province, and I have no
relatives living nearby, so I don’t know who to account on.
14 NURSE 3: Do you remember anything that happened before you passed out?
15 SIR: The last thing I remember is… actually, I am on my way home. My vision just got blurry,
and I knocked myself out; then, when I woke up, I'm already here, I guess, in the hospital. Is
that it?
16 NURSE 2: Yes sir. We will get back to you as soon as we get the lab results.
17 SIR: Okay
18 NURSE 3: We will see you again sir!

[FADE]

19 NURSE 2: Sir according to the lab results, you are positive for HIV.
20 SIR: What?! I am positive to what?! No! that can’t be real. Maybe that’s not mine. [Crying]
NO! NO! NO! Get out! Get out of this room! [Continue crying]

[FADE]
[SIR calms down]

21 NURSE 2: Sir, you’ll be seeing one of our doctors, and he will tell you what to do.
22 (Parang may tinatapik sa likod ng isang tao) NURSE: Don’t worry sir, we will still be your
nurses that will be assisting you.

[FADE]
[OFFICE]

23 SIR: Good morning doc! One of the nurses here told me to seek consultation about my
condition.
24 DOCTOR: Yes, based on your laboratory tests, I've seen that you are positive for HIV, and HIV
nowadays is not yet curable, so there's no definite medications for your condition. Still, we
could do some medications that would lower the risk of your condition progression to AIDS. I
am advising you to have a regular check-up for us to be updated about your condition, and it is
important for you to prioritize the practice of doing regular exercise and eating foods that
would improve your immune system and that is good for your health and avoid things that will
make your condition worst. So I think that's it and so see you on your next checkup.

25 SIR: Okay, thank you doc!

AFTER APPLICATIONS / CLOSING

-----JK----- start

[VIDEO (SPEECH)] A deliberative nursing process incorporates elements of continuous reflection


as the nurse attempts to comprehend the patient's meaning for the observed behavior and
what he requires of her to be helped. This process is stimulated by the nurse's growing
awareness of the particulars of the patient's situation.

-----JK----- end

CLOSING QUOTE
HIV DOES NOT MAKE PEOPLE DANGEROUS TO KNOW, SO YOU CAN SHAKE THEIR HANDS AND
GIVE THEM A HUG: HEAVEN KNOWS THEY NEED IT.

- PRINCESS DIANA

NURSE 1: Kiara
NURSE 2: Roselyn
NURSE 3: Elizabeth
DOCTOR: LJ
SIR: Mark
GREEN = VOICEOVER (JK)

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