A Nurse Analyzes “Kaze, Kaoru” Episode 14: Sudden Family Cohabitation, Mitsu’s Concern & the “Boundaries of Support” — Lessons from Naomi and Kohinata [Shi-chan’s Nurse Perspective]

A Nurse Analyzes "Kaze, Kaoru" Episode 14: Sudden Family Cohabitation, Mitsu's Concern & the "Boundaries of Support" — Lessons from Naomi and Kohinata [Shi-chan's Nurse Perspective] Japanese Nursing Philosophy

By reading this page…
✅ You will understand the plot of Episode 14 from a nurse’s perspective
✅ You will learn how to view Mitsu and An’s sudden arrival through the lens of family support and daily life adjustment
✅ You will understand the balance between concern and boundaries from Mitsu’s visit to Mizuhoya
✅ You will see Naomi meeting Kohinata outside the Rokumeikan as an exercise in building safe relationships
✅ You will learn observation points for new nurses when handling family situations

Hello, I’m Shi-chan, a working nurse!
I have 20 years of experience as a veteran nurse, and I work as a Certified Critical Care Nurse.

Hi, I’m Mirai-chan! I’m in my first year as a nurse, and I watch the morning drama “Kaze, Kaoru” every day and ask Shi-chan all kinds of questions.

Today, we’ll break down Episode 14 of “Kaze, Kaoru” from a nurse’s point of view — with plenty of detail!

※ At the end of this article, there is an “English Summary” with 10 lines summarizing Episode 14 in English. Feel free to use it for language practice or reviewing the content.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Shi-chan, in Episode 14, Rin’s mother Mitsu and her younger sister An suddenly showed up at her place, and I was surprised! I thought it might be reassuring to have family come, but they seemed to rush into Rin’s life all at once, and I felt a bit anxious about it.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

That’s right. Having family visit can be supportive, but at the same time it can greatly change the balance of someone’s daily life. Looking at Episode 14 from a nurse’s perspective, I think it was really a story about both “family support” and “respecting the person’s own way of living.”

Episode 14 is one where people from the outside come into the lives of both Rin and Naomi.

Into Rin’s life come her mother Mitsu and her younger sister An, suddenly and without warning.

Into Naomi’s world comes Kohinata — a new man she hadn’t known before.

Neither situation is simply joyful.

A mother’s worry. A daughter’s independence. Intrusion into the workplace. A change in living space. Hope and anxiety about new relationships. Safe boundaries.

All of these themes are packed into this episode.

Nurses look not only at the patient themselves, but also at the relationships around them — family, supporters, and new people entering their life.

Family can be a source of support. Family can also hinder someone’s recovery. Even when concern comes from love, it can disrupt a person’s own will and their pace of life.

Episode 14 was a deeply nurse-like episode that made us think about where “supporting someone” ends and “overstepping” begins.

  1. Plot Summary: Episode 14
  2. Nurse Point ①: Family Arrival Can Be Both Support and Burden
  3. Nurse Point ②: Sudden Cohabitation Greatly Disrupts Daily Rhythms
  4. Nurse Point ③: Mitsu’s Worry Is Love — But Boundaries Are Also Needed
  5. Nurse Point ④: How Family Watches Over a Person’s Independence
  6. Nurse Point ⑤: In Family Care, Identify “Whose Anxiety Is This?”
  7. Nurse Point ⑥: What It Means When Family Comes to the Workplace
  8. Nurse Point ⑦: The Meaning of “Outside the Rokumeikan” for Naomi and Kohinata
  9. Nurse Point ⑧: Romance and Marriage Are Also Life-Support Issues
  10. Nurse Point ⑨: New Relationships Should Center on the Person’s Own Will
  11. Nurse Point ⑩: Boundaries Are Not Coldness
  12. Clinical Observation Points for New Nurses
    1. 1. Is family a support, a burden, or both?
    2. 2. Can the patient’s own wishes be confirmed?
    3. 3. Are the family’s anxiety and the patient’s anxiety being separated?
    4. 4. Is privacy being protected?
    5. 5. Is the new relationship safe for the patient?
  13. Report Examples: For Seniors, Doctors, and MSWs
    1. When family intervention is strong
    2. When it’s unclear whether family can be a support
    3. When unsure how much information to share with family
    4. When there are safety concerns about a new relationship
  14. Frequently Asked Questions
    1. Q. When family is worried, how far should I listen?
    2. Q. If family asks about the patient’s condition, should I answer right away?
    3. Q. If a patient has family, are they safe after discharge?
    4. Q. Won’t having boundaries make me a cold nurse?
  15. Summary: Episode 14 Is About Finding the Right Distance in Support
  16. English Summary: Episode 14 in 10 Lines
  17. 🛒 しーちゃんのおすすめ情報
    1. 🛌 看護師の疲れた体に。特許取得の整体枕で熟睡できる眠りを
    2. 💼 転職を考えているナースへ。MCナースネットで理想の職場を探そう
    3. ✨ 夜勤明けのむくみ・疲れ顔に。自宅でできるEMS美顔器「BIOAESTECH」
    4. ✨ 看護師のスキルアップに。スキンケアアドバイザー資格を自宅で取得
    5. 📚 しーちゃんのおすすめ看護本・国試参考書【Amazon】

Plot Summary: Episode 14

In Episode 14, one night Rin is visited without warning by her mother Mitsu and her younger sister An.

Rin has just started a new life at Mizuhoya together with her daughter Tamaki.

She had found a place to live, a place to work, received her first paycheck, and was finally starting to see the foundation of her life take shape.

Then Mitsu and An come barging in.

A new four-person family life begins in Tokyo — Rin, Tamaki, Mitsu, and An all living together.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Having more family around seems like it could be a good thing, but Rin had just started getting her life on track. It sounds like a lot to suddenly change everything.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Exactly. Having family come can be reassuring, but it can also mean more demands on daily life. As nurses, we need to look not just at whether family is present, but at what kind of support — or what kind of burden — they actually bring.

Mitsu becomes worried about the shop where Rin works.

She goes to Mizuhoya to speak with Uzaburo.

As a mother, it is natural to want to know where her daughter is working, who is taking care of her, and what kind of place it is.

But for Rin, Mizuhoya is not just a workplace.

It is the place that supports her and Tamaki’s life. The place where she earned her first paycheck with her own hands. The foundation of her independence.

Her mother stepping directly into that space carries complex meaning.

Meanwhile, Naomi is about to meet Kohinata outside the Rokumeikan.

Two people who met inside the Rokumeikan, now facing each other in the outside world.

For Naomi, this is the beginning of a new kind of relationship.

Kohinata is a naval lieutenant with a background studying in America.

He may be a potential marriage partner for Naomi — and also someone who might change the course of her future.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Naomi getting to meet Kohinata outside is exciting, but it also feels like there are risks, right?

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

That’s right. From a nurse’s perspective, new relationships always come paired with “expectation” and “a need to confirm safety.” Whether it’s romantic, a support relationship, or a patient-nurse relationship — keeping a safe sense of distance is always important.

What are the key themes in Episode 14? This episode raises questions that are deeply relevant to nursing:

Does family presence always mean support? What are the boundaries of concern? How do we respect a person’s independence? How do we protect privacy? How do we see new relationships through a lens of both hope and safety?

These are questions that come up in real clinical settings too.

Nurse Point ①: Family Arrival Can Be Both Support and Burden

When family arrives, it is easy to think: “Great, she has support now.” But nursing does not work that simply.

Rin had finally found her footing. A job. An income. A routine with Tamaki. A community around her at Mizuhoya.

Into this carefully balanced life, her mother and sister arrive without warning.

More people in the house means more noise, more needs, more decisions to make together.

From a nursing perspective, we call this a “change in the patient’s living environment.” And any environmental change — even a positive one — requires adjustment.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Having family around seems good on the surface, but Rin had just started getting her life on track. Suddenly having that change must be hard.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Exactly. Family can be reassuring, but they can also add to daily demands. As nurses, we don’t just note “has family” — we need to understand whether that family is a support, a burden, or both.

In clinical practice, nurses do not simply write “has family support” in the chart and move on.

They ask: What does the family actually do? How much time can they give? Is there tension in the relationship? Does the patient feel safe with this family? Is the family themselves well enough to help?

In Episode 14, Mitsu loves Rin deeply. But Rin has just started building a life of her own. That love, arriving unannounced, may shake her new foundation.

Nurses see this kind of situation often: a caring family whose good intentions create more difficulty for the patient.

This is not a moral failure. It is a structural challenge — and recognizing it is part of good care.

Nurse Point ②: Sudden Cohabitation Greatly Disrupts Daily Rhythms

When the number of people in a household suddenly increases, daily life routines are disrupted.

Sleep times change. Meals become more complex. Noise levels go up. Privacy decreases.

For Rin, this is especially significant. She had been managing her life with just herself and Tamaki. She had found a rhythm.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Tamaki might be happy to see her grandmother and Aunt An, but her daily routine will change too, right?

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Yes. Children are very sensitive to changes in environment. Some feel comforted by having more family around; others become unsettled and lose their routines. The impact on children is often greater than adults expect.

In nursing, when we think about a patient’s life after discharge, we try to imagine daily details: Who does what, and when?

In the Episode 14 four-person household: Who watches Tamaki? Who prepares meals? Can Rin focus on work? How much will Mitsu interfere? What role does An play?

Life starts from those details.

Nurses doing discharge planning consider the same questions — not just whether family exists, but what life will actually look like. That specificity is what makes planning useful.

Rin’s situation reminds us that “having more people around” does not automatically mean “things are better.”

Nurse Point ③: Mitsu’s Worry Is Love — But Boundaries Are Also Needed

Mitsu visits Mizuhoya to speak with Uzaburo because she is worried about the shop where Rin works.

As a mother, that feeling is completely natural.

Her daughter is working in an unfamiliar city, relying on people she doesn’t know, raising a child alone.

Not worrying would be harder.

But there is a boundary issue here.

Rin has already started working on her own. Mizuhoya is Rin’s workplace.

It is the space she has built within her own relationships.

Her mother entering that space directly has the potential to affect Rin’s independence.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

It’s wonderful that she’s so concerned, but having your mother come to your workplace might feel a bit awkward.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

That’s true. A family member’s concern matters. But we also need to protect the person’s own wishes, their privacy, and their standing in the workplace. This is something nurses struggle with in family situations too.

In modern healthcare settings, there are many scenes where family members intervene strongly.

Family members ask more questions than the patient. Family members try to make decisions about treatment in front of the patient. Family asks the nurse to explain things to them but not to the patient. Family decides where the patient will go after discharge. Family restricts the patient’s choices out of excessive concern.

In these situations, nurses do not need to treat the family as adversaries.

But confirming the patient’s own wishes is essential.

“What does the patient think about this?” “Let’s hear the family’s concerns, but let’s also check what the patient wants.” “Could I have some time to speak with the patient alone?”

These are phrases that protect both family support and the patient’s autonomy.

Mitsu’s visit to Mizuhoya came from love. But the person who decides what to do with her own workplace, her own relationships, her own life — is Rin.

Nurse Point ④: How Family Watches Over a Person’s Independence

Rin is working hard to become independent.

At Mizuhoya, she has received her first paycheck. She is learning the work. She is finding her place.

In this situation, how does having her mother and sister around affect Rin’s independence?

If Mitsu takes over daily management — cooking, childcare, finances — Rin does not get to practice those skills.

If Mitsu makes all the decisions about Tamaki, Rin does not get to experience making those choices herself.

This happens in clinical nursing too.

A patient who could do things themselves ends up doing nothing because family does everything.

Rehabilitation progress slows. Confidence does not grow. The patient becomes more dependent.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

“Watching over” someone is different from “not interfering,” isn’t it?

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Yes, very different. Watching over someone doesn’t mean letting them struggle alone. It means being ready to support them when they need it, while leaving room for the person to make their own decisions. That’s the difficult part.

In nursing, this is the difference between “doing for” the patient and “enabling” the patient.

The goal is to support what the person cannot do themselves, while not taking over what they can.

For Rin’s situation, a good balance might look like this: Mitsu provides emotional support when Rin is tired, but Rin manages Tamaki’s daily care. An handles household tasks she can help with, but Rin controls her own schedule and workplace relationships.

The key is: whose life is this? Decisions belong to Rin. Support belongs to everyone.

Nurse Point ⑤: In Family Care, Identify “Whose Anxiety Is This?”

Behind Mitsu’s visit to Mizuhoya is anxiety.

But whose anxiety is it?

Rin’s anxiety. Mitsu’s anxiety. Tamaki’s anxiety. An’s anxiety. They are all different.

The key in family care is not to lump everyone’s anxiety together.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

When family seems anxious, I tend to assume the patient must also be anxious.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

It can look that way, but they aren’t necessarily the same. Sometimes the patient wants to move forward but the family’s anxiety holds them back. Other times, the patient can’t voice their own anxiety, so the family speaks for them. That’s why it’s important to separate and listen to each person.

Nurses can check in this way: “How does the patient feel about her current situation?” “What aspect worries the family most?” “Are there any concerns about the child’s wellbeing?” “Let’s identify each person’s anxiety and address them one by one.”

Mitsu’s anxiety in Episode 14 comes from her love for her daughter.

But Rin herself is beginning to find meaning in working at Mizuhoya.

If Mitsu’s anxiety becomes too dominant, it could snuff out the first shoots of Rin’s independence.

Nurses need the skill to receive the patient’s and the family’s anxieties separately.

Nurse Point ⑥: What It Means When Family Comes to the Workplace

The scene of Mitsu coming to Mizuhoya is, in modern terms, like “a family member coming directly to a workplace or care facility to check things out.”

Family members’ concern is legitimate. But the person’s workplace is their social environment and their means of earning a living.

There is information that should not be shared with family. There is a relationship with the employer that belongs to the employee.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

It’s appreciated that she’s so worried, but having someone come directly to your workplace could make things awkward.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

That’s right. A family member’s concern matters. But we also need to protect the person’s own wishes, their privacy, and their standing at work. This is something nurses often struggle with in family situations too.

In healthcare, when a family member contacts the hospital or clinic about a patient, the nurse must think carefully:

Has the patient consented to sharing this information with this family member? What is the extent of what we can share? What does the patient want the family to know?

Family support and privacy protection are both important — and they sometimes pull in different directions.

Nurse Point ⑦: The Meaning of “Outside the Rokumeikan” for Naomi and Kohinata

The key here is that they are meeting “outside.”

Inside the Rokumeikan, Naomi has her face as a server.

Kohinata has his face as a guest.

But when they meet outside, that relationship shifts slightly.

Away from the workplace, personal time opens up — time for them to face each other as individuals.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Meeting inside work and meeting outside must feel very different in terms of how close you feel.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Exactly. In nursing too, when location or roles change, the boundaries can blur. That’s precisely why — in any relationship — being conscious of maintaining a safe sense of distance is so important.

For Naomi, Kohinata may be an attractive encounter.

But she doesn’t know him well yet.

He has a title. He is polite. He studied in America. He seems approachable.

Even so, trust takes time to build.

In modern support settings too, safety must be confirmed when building new relationships.

Can I trust this person? Will this not put me in a disadvantaged position? Is this a relationship where I can say no? Is it safe to meet alone? Is there someone I can consult if things go wrong?

Naomi’s initiative is admirable, but from a nursing perspective, we also hope she is developing the ability to protect herself.

Nurse Point ⑧: Romance and Marriage Are Also Life-Support Issues

Naomi is looking for a marriage partner at the Rokumeikan.

In Episode 14, her relationship with Kohinata begins to move.

Romance and marriage seem like purely personal matters.

But depending on the era and environment, they are deeply connected to livelihood, social standing, safety, and the future.

For Naomi, marriage is not just about finding someone she loves.

It is also a choice about how she will live within society.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Even today, a partner relationship can have a big impact on someone’s health, right?

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Of course. A relationship that brings safety can be a real source of support. But a relationship that involves control or violence can severely damage a person’s health. Nurses need to look at romantic and family relationships not as gossip but as part of someone’s life background.

In clinical nursing, we assess “social factors” — not just physical condition, but social background and living environment.

Spouse, partner, cohabiting family members, income, housing, workplace environment — all of these affect how the patient lives and recovers.

The same kind of assessment is relevant for understanding Naomi’s situation.

Nurse Point ⑨: New Relationships Should Center on the Person’s Own Will

Whether it’s family moving in or a new romantic interest, new relationships require confirmation:

Does the person want this relationship? Did they choose it themselves? Or was it chosen for them?

Rin’s family arrived without asking first. Naomi is moving toward meeting Kohinata on her own initiative.

The difference is crucial.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

When family speaks up strongly, the patient’s own feelings can become hard to see.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

That’s right. That’s why nurses sometimes create time to speak with the patient directly. There are things they can’t say in front of family.

In nursing, checking for the patient’s genuine wishes — separate from the family’s wishes — is a core skill.

“What does the patient want?”

“Is the patient speaking freely, or are they holding back because family is present?”

“If I ask the patient privately, does the answer change?”

These questions matter. New relationships — a new family member in the home, a new caregiver, a new partner — are assessed by whether they are safe and chosen by the patient.

Nurse Point ⑩: Boundaries Are Not Coldness

The concept of “boundaries” appears in several moments in Episode 14.

Mitsu crossing the boundary into Rin’s workplace. Naomi meeting Kohinata outside the professional setting of the Rokumeikan.

In nursing, “boundaries” is a professional and ethical concept — it defines what a nurse’s role includes and what it does not.

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

I used to think having boundaries sounded cold.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

Many people feel that way. But boundaries exist to protect the other person too. A nurse cares deeply for patients, but doesn’t take on everything. The professional distance is what allows safe, sustainable support to continue.

Boundaries are not about shutting people out.

They are about defining the space in which genuine care can happen.

A nurse without boundaries may become over-involved, exhausted, and unable to give good care.

A nurse with clear, kind boundaries can support many patients over a long career.

For Rin, her workplace is her boundary. It is the space she built with her own hands.

Respecting that boundary — even for family — is a form of love.

Clinical Observation Points for New Nurses

Here are key points from Episode 14 that new nurses can apply in clinical practice.

1. Is family a support, a burden, or both?

Don’t judge based only on whether family is present.

Who is doing the supporting? How much can they realistically offer? Is the family themselves exhausted? How does the patient feel about the family? Is the family relationship safe?

These are the things that matter.

2. Can the patient’s own wishes be confirmed?

When family speaks up strongly, the patient’s hopes can become hidden.

What does the patient want? Can they say it in front of family? If not, creating private time to speak with the patient directly may be necessary.

3. Are the family’s anxiety and the patient’s anxiety being separated?

Family may be anxious even when the patient is ready to move forward.

Or the patient may not be able to express their anxiety, and the family is expressing it on their behalf.

Separating whose anxiety belongs to whom makes support more specific and useful.

4. Is privacy being protected?

Even when family contacts the hospital, nurses cannot share the patient’s information freely.

Always confirm the patient’s consent, the scope of what can be disclosed, and what information is appropriate to share.

5. Is the new relationship safe for the patient?

Post-discharge cohabitation, caregivers, partners, supporters, workplace environments.

Assess whether newly introduced people are a source of support or a source of risk for the patient.

Report Examples: For Seniors, Doctors, and MSWs

Here are sample report phrases that new nurses can use in clinical settings.

When family intervention is strong

“The family’s concern is strong, and it is primarily the family speaking about treatment plans. The patient has not been speaking much, so I believe we need time to separately confirm the patient’s own wishes.”

When it’s unclear whether family can be a support

“Discharge plan involves living with family, but family also has work commitments and available caregiving time appears limited. I don’t think we can say ‘family is present so there’s no problem’ — I’d like to specifically discuss what each person can do.”

When unsure how much information to share with family

“Family has contacted us asking about the patient’s condition. Before responding, I wanted to confirm — has the patient consented to sharing this information with the family, and to what extent?”

When there are safety concerns about a new relationship

“A new support person will be involved in the patient’s life after discharge. I’d like to confirm whether this person is safe for the patient.”

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. When family is worried, how far should I listen?

First, receive the family’s concern with care. Then, separately confirm the patient’s own wishes.

The family’s anxiety and the patient’s hope may not be the same, so it’s important to separate and address each one.

Q. If family asks about the patient’s condition, should I answer right away?

You need to first confirm the patient’s consent and the scope of what can be disclosed.

Family support is important, but the patient’s privacy must also be protected. If you’re unsure, check with a senior nurse or doctor first.

Q. If a patient has family, are they safe after discharge?

Not necessarily. Even with family present, what support is actually possible depends on the family’s caregiving capacity, finances, relationship quality, time availability, and their own health.

Confirming specifically who will do what is essential.

Q. Won’t having boundaries make me a cold nurse?

No, it won’t.

Boundaries are not about pushing people away — they are about sustaining safe support. Clarifying what you can and cannot do, and connecting patients to the right resources, is what professional care looks like.

Summary: Episode 14 Is About Finding the Right Distance in Support

In Episode 14, the relationships around both Rin and Naomi shifted significantly.

Mitsu and An suddenly arrive at Rin’s home, beginning a four-person family life together.

Mitsu goes to Mizuhoya to speak with Uzaburo about her concerns for Rin’s workplace.

Naomi is about to meet Kohinata outside the Rokumeikan.

Every scene carries the theme of support and boundaries.

✅ Family can be both support and burden
✅ Sudden cohabitation greatly changes daily rhythms
✅ Concern is love, but it can interfere with independence
✅ In family care, identify whose anxiety belongs to whom
✅ When family enters a workplace or care setting, protect the person’s standing too
✅ New relationships require both hope and safety checks
✅ Centering the person’s own will is the foundation of independence support
✅ Boundaries are not coldness — they are the foundation of safe care

Mirai-chan
Mirai-chan

Episode 14 doesn’t end with just “it’s nice that family came.” Having people who worry about you is important, but you also have to protect the person’s own life and their independence — that’s what I realized.

Shi-chan
Shi-chan

That’s right. A nurse’s job is to care for the family while also protecting the patient’s own wishes. Not one or the other — both. Episode 14 made me think very deeply about how difficult — and how important — that balance is.

English Summary: Episode 14 in 10 Lines

  1. In Episode 14, Rin’s mother Mitsu and sister An arrive suddenly, starting a four-person family life in Tokyo.
  2. While family presence can be reassuring, it can also disrupt the daily rhythms Rin had carefully built.
  3. Mitsu visits Rin’s workplace Mizuhoya out of concern — but this crosses a boundary that affects Rin’s independence.
  4. Nurses distinguish between whether family acts as support or as burden — having family is not automatically reassuring.
  5. Mitsu’s anxiety and Rin’s own feelings are separate — nurses need the skill to hear both independently.
  6. Naomi meets Kohinata outside the Rokumeikan, stepping into a more personal relationship outside professional roles.
  7. New relationships require both hope and safety checks — even when the other person seems trustworthy.
  8. Romance and marriage are not just personal matters but are part of the social background that affects health.
  9. Boundaries in nursing are not coldness — they define the space where genuine, sustainable care can happen.
  10. Episode 14 reminds us that the right distance in support — close enough to help, far enough to respect — is one of nursing’s most important skills.

Read More in This Series
Catch up on earlier episodes of “A Nurse Analyzes Kaze, Kaoru” — each one draws a practical nursing lesson from the drama.

🛒 しーちゃんのおすすめ情報

🛌 看護師の疲れた体に。特許取得の整体枕で熟睡できる眠りを

立ちっぱなしのシフト勤務、夜勤明けの肩こり・首こり……看護師のカラダって毎日本当にしんどいですよね。そんな私が出会ったのが、整体師が開発した特許取得の枕「Cure:Re THE MAKURA」。首・肩・背中のコリをほぐしながら寝られる設計で、翌朝の目覚めが全然違います。ふだん整体に行く余裕がない方にこそ試してほしい一品です。

ゴッドハンド整体師の作った『整体枕』

💼 転職を考えているナースへ。MCナースネットで理想の職場を探そう

「今の職場、なんかしんどいな」と感じたら、それはサインかもしれません。MCナースネットは看護師・保健師・助産師専門の転職支援サービス。担当コンサルタントが非公開求人を含めた情報をもとに、あなたの希望にあった職場を一緒に探してくれます。登録・相談は無料なので、転職を決めていなくても「話だけ聞いてみる」から始めてOKです。

  • 非公開求人も多数掲載
  • 専任コンサルタントが転職をサポート
  • 登録・利用は完全無料

。°+°。°+ °。°。°+°。°+ °。°。°+°。°+ °。°+ °。°
    ◇◆ 看護師の求人・転職ならMC─ナースネット ◆◇
    業界最大級!求人数20000件以上、会員数100,000人の実績!
    全国での拠点展開だから身近なコンサルタントに相談可!
    大人気の企業・健診・添乗のお仕事も豊富!
    登録・お問い合わせはこちら
⇒https://px.a8.net/svt/ejp?a8mat=4AVF01+3RQUPE+28MI+61JSJ
。°+°。°+ °。°。°+°。°+ °。°。°+°。°+ °。°+ °。°


MC─ナースネット

✨ 夜勤明けのむくみ・疲れ顔に。自宅でできるEMS美顔器「BIOAESTECH」

夜勤明け、鏡を見てため息……なんてこと、ありませんか?
看護師の仕事は不規則なシフト・立ちっぱなし・ストレスで、顔のむくみやたるみが気になりやすい。エステや美容院に行く時間もなかなか取れないですよね。

そこでしーちゃんが試してみたのが、BIOAESTECH DUAL ORB DEEP LIFT。EMSで深部の筋肉にアプローチして、顔のリフトアップ・引き締めを自宅でケアできる美容機器です。
月々2,191円(税込)のサブスクで始められるから、忙しいナースにもお財布にやさしい。

🌙 夜勤明けのスキマ時間でセルフケア
💆 エステ不要、自宅で本格EMS体験
💳 月々2,191円〜のサブスク形式で気軽にスタート

【BIOAESTECH】

テクノロジーと実証で肌を変える!高機能スキンケアの新定番【BIOAESTECH】

✨ 看護師のスキルアップに。スキンケアアドバイザー資格を自宅で取得

患者さんのスキンケア相談、自信を持って答えられますか?一般社団法人日本スキンケア協会のスキンケアアドバイザー通信講座なら、肌の仕組みから正しいスキンケア方法まで体系的に学べます。自宅学習だからシフト勤務でも無理なく続けられ、取得した資格は患者さんへの指導・美容系への副業・日常生活にも活かせます。

  • 自宅で学べる通信講座
  • 看護・医療現場での患者指導にも活用できる
  • 日本スキンケア協会が認定する公認資格

ワンランク上の看護師を目指すなら【スキンケアアドバイザー資格通信講座】

📚 しーちゃんのおすすめ看護本・国試参考書【Amazon】

「もっと深く勉強したい」「国試に向けてしっかり対策したい」という方へ。Amazonで購入できるおすすめの看護関連書籍をご紹介します。現役ナースの私が実際に使ったり、役立つと感じた本を厳選しています。

コメント