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1.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing ; : 976-982, 2006.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-27818

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare the feeling state guided imagery(FSGI) and end state guided imagery(ESGI) on stress and performance of an intramuscular injection of nursing students. METHOD: The design was a time series with a nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest study. Data was collected from the 23 rd to the 25th of Nov. 2004. The subjects of this study were 40 female sophomores (21 for the ESGI, 19 for the FSGI). The instruments used in this study were the Visual Analogue Scale for Stress and the Nursing Skill Performance Check-list on Intramuscular Injection developed by the researchers(10 items). Guided imagery was provided through audiotapes for 8 minutes. A pretest was given before applying the guided imagery, posttest 1 was performed after the intervention, posttest 2 was performed before the intramuscular injection and then evaluation of the performance of the intramuscular injection was done. Data was analyzed using t-test, and Repeated Measures ANOVA. RESULT: The level of stress for those who received the ESGI and FEGI was not significant and the level of the nursing skill performance for those who received the ESGI was significantly higher than that of students who received the FEGI. CONCLUSION: The use of ESGI has an effect on learning psychomotor nursing skills and further research is needed on stress.


Subject(s)
Adult , Humans , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate , Imagery, Psychotherapy , Injections, Intramuscular/psychology , Stress, Psychological/prevention & control , Students, Nursing/psychology , Task Performance and Analysis , Teaching/methods
2.
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing ; : 381-391, 2005.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-101291

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this research is to develop and classify district visiting nursing standards and to standardize visiting nursing service pathways. METHOD: This research was conducted as a focus group study and analyzed visiting nursing records. We surveyed 201 recipients at urban health centers, who were selected through convenient sampling, from April 2003 to November 2003. RESULT: First, visiting nursing service recipients were classified into four groups according to household and financial characteristics, existence of disease, ability of self-care, and existence of home care service needs. Standardized pathways of the selected items were assessment. nursing care plan, disease management and promotion of self-care ability for Level I (mean=12.2 visits). For Level II (7.3 visits) were offered assessment. disease management. health education. and health promotion services. For Level III (5.2 visits) were offered assessment. disease management. health education and health promotion services, and for Level IV (2.7 visits) were offered thorough assessment, education for self-care and health promotion. CONCLUSION: The visiting nursing service pathways identified in this research need to be developed further as basic materials applicable to quality assurance and agency evaluation. For this, we suggest repeated research and test to apply the derived standardized visiting nursing services pathways in visiting nursing programs.


Subject(s)
Classification , Disease Management , Education , Family Characteristics , Focus Groups , Health Education , Health Promotion , Home Care Services , Nursing , Nursing Records , Nursing Services , Patient Care Planning , Public Health , Self Care , Urban Health
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