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1.
Glob Qual Nurs Res ; 1: 2333393614549372, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28462290

ABSTRACT

We explored the perceptions of Italian nurses regarding their developing culture as a health profession. We sought to understand the ongoing evolution of the nursing profession and the changes that were central to it becoming an intellectual discipline on par with the other health professions in Italy. In 2010, the Regulatory Board of Nursing established a center of excellence to build evidence-based practice, advocate for interdisciplinary health care, and champion health profession reforms for nursing. In this study, focus groups-involving 66 nurse participants from various educational, clinical, and administrative backgrounds-were utilized to better ascertain how the profession has changed. Six themes, three of them metaphors-"vortex," "leopard spots," and "deductive jungle"-explain nurses' experiences of professional change in Italy between 2001 and 2011 and the multiple dimensions that characterize their professional identity and autonomy.

2.
J Sch Health ; 80(3): 146-52, quiz 160-2, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20236417

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Escalation of youth violence within a large geographic school-complex area in southeastern rural Hawaii became a major problem in 2006. How cultural forces impact the problem was an impetus to examine youth violence from perspectives of adults and children in rural communities. Gathering these data was an essential first step toward school-based youth violence prevention program development. METHODS: Eight focus groups involving 86 community stakeholders included 51 adults (parent, teachers, school staff, community leaders) and 35 children aged 8-15 years old (3rd- to 10-th grade). Qualitative narrative analysis elicited major themes. RESULTS: Five themes emerged: (1) School-community violence takes on many forms that become entrenched in local culture. (2) Disintegration of community resources and a sense of learned helplessness underlie the escalation of youth violence. (3) Inadequate role modeling coupled with behavioral ambivalence among adults has sustained a climate of local cultural acceptance with youth violence. (4) Connection to cultural values has diminished, leading to a sense of loss in cultural identity among students. (5) Cultural values and practices are potential strategies for youth violence prevention. CONCLUSIONS: Cultural and community contextual factors contributed to youth violence in rural Hawaiian communities. Study implications include the need to further investigate the impact of vigilant, community involvement of stakeholders in school-based youth violence prevention program development. Cultural revitalization at family, school, and community levels may be critical success factors of such programs.


Subject(s)
Culture , Schools , Social Control, Informal , Violence/prevention & control , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Child , Education, Continuing , Female , Focus Groups , Hawaii , Health Promotion , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Rural Population , Violence/ethnology
3.
Int J Nurs Pract ; 14(6): 486-94, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19126078

ABSTRACT

This qualitative study was conducted to define and describe what constitutes and contributes to near miss occurrences in the health-care system and what is needed to ensure safer processes of care. Nine health-care organizations (13 sites total) including six academic health sciences centres (acute care, mental health and geriatric) and three community hospitals participated in this study. The final sample consisted of 37 focus groups (86 in the nursing staff only; 62 in the pharmacy staff only; and 99 in the mixed nursing and pharmacy focus groups respectively) and 120 interviews involving 144 health-care consumers. Data were collected using focus groups (health-care professionals) and key informant interviews (health-care consumers). A multi-level content analyses schema (transcription, coding, categorizing, internal consistency, thematic analysis and community validation) was used. Six themes emerged from the multi-level content analyses that combined focus group (health-care professionals) and key informant interview (health-care consumers) data. These themes are discussed under the three original research questions with supporting data derived from codes and categories. Study findings implicate changes for the health-care landscape relative to system, health policy, professional development and quality improvement.


Subject(s)
Medical Errors , Focus Groups , Humans , Ontario
4.
Public Health Nurs ; 24(5): 400-8, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17714224

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To enhance our understanding of what community violence means to a multiethnic school community in rural Hawaii and obtain people's perspectives of how to deal with and prevent violence-related behaviors among children. DESIGN AND SAMPLE: An exploratory design was used to collect qualitative data from a purposive sample of 150 key stakeholder participants, including 84 school children aged 5-10 years and 66 adults. MEASUREMENT: Focus group methodology via Hawaiian island-style (culturally adapted techniques) of "talk-story" and a metaphor of introduction were used to elicit contextual data on the experiences, meanings, and perceptions of youth violence. Qualitative narrative analyses were used to analyze the data. RESULTS: Five higher order themes were found, including the need to: build a common understanding of what violence looks like; develop school-based identification, management, and prevention efforts; develop comprehensive school health services; develop state-level school health policies; and conduct outreach to make violence prevention a community affair. CONCLUSION: The findings will inform the development of a school-based culturally adapted violence-prevention program led by teachers, in partnership with parents, students, and community-cultural leaders.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health/ethnology , Community Participation , Leadership , Parents/psychology , Rural Health , Violence , Adult , Child , Community-Institutional Relations , Cooperative Behavior , Cultural Characteristics , Female , Focus Groups , Hawaii , Humans , Interinstitutional Relations , Male , Narration , Needs Assessment , Nursing Methodology Research , Psychology, Child , Qualitative Research , Rural Health/statistics & numerical data , School Health Services/organization & administration , Violence/ethnology , Violence/prevention & control
5.
Can Nurse ; 102(8): 30-2, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17094366

ABSTRACT

Given how important care processes are to the nursing profession, it is imperative that nurses take a lead role in building capacity for nursing research and that they make a strong contribution to building the body of knowledge in the area of patient safety. The authors present an overview of a current nursing-led patient safety study in which building capacity for research is a core component.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Interprofessional Relations , Medical Errors/prevention & control , Nursing Research/organization & administration , Safety Management/organization & administration , Data Collection , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Humans , Medical Errors/methods , Medical Errors/nursing , Ontario , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Philosophy, Nursing , Pilot Projects , Planning Techniques , Qualitative Research
6.
Public Health Nurs ; 23(1): 27-36, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16460418

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this research was to understand the cultural meanings of cancer among American Indian women from Northern Plains tribes living in western South Dakota and their experiential view of breast and cervical cancer screening. DESIGN AND SAMPLE: Using an exploratory design, a purposive sample of 28 women, 35-75 years of age, were recruited into three Talking Circles. MEASUREMENT: Talking Circle and focus group methodology, combined with Affonso's Focus Groups Analytic Schema, were used to generate contextual data sets including thematic findings. RESULTS: Ten themes emerged indicating interrelationships between cultural traditions and health structures of care. The themes provided a unique perspective for conceptualizing women's experiences with breast and cervical cancer screening. CONCLUSIONS: Incorporating women's cultural experiences into screening services is necessary to address clinical and policy challenges for reducing breast and cervical cancer mortality among American Indian women. Findings from this research will be used to guide a future study investigating breast-screening patterns related to mammography adherence and development of interventions specific to American Indian women.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/psychology , Cultural Characteristics , Indians, North American/psychology , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/psychology , Adult , Aged , Attitude to Health , Breast Neoplasms/ethnology , Female , Focus Groups , Group Processes , Health Education , Humans , Mass Screening/psychology , Medicine, Traditional , Middle Aged , South Dakota , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/ethnology
7.
Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont) ; 17(1): 22-34, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15503913

ABSTRACT

Currently, the Academy of Canadian Executive Nurses (ACEN) is working with the Association of Canadian Academic Healthcare Organizations (ACAHO) to develop a joint position paper on patient safety cultures and leadership within Academic Health Science Centres (AHSCs). Pressures to improve patient safety within our healthcare system are gaining momentum daily. Because AHSCs in Canada are the key organizations that are positioned regionally and nationally, where service delivery is the platform for the education of future healthcare providers, and where the development of new knowledge and innovation through research occurs, leadership for patient safety logically must emanate from them. As a primer, ACEN provides an overview of current patient safety initiatives in AHSCs to date. In addition, the following six key areas for action are identified to ensure that AHSCs continue to be leaders in delivering quality, safe healthcare in Canada. These include: (1) strategic orientation to safety culture and quality improvement, (2) open and transparent disclosure policies, (3) health human resources integral to ensuring patient safety practices, (4) effective linkages between AHSCs and academic institutions, (5) national patient safety accountability initiatives and (6) collaborative team practice.


Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Leadership , Nurse Administrators/organization & administration , Patient Advocacy , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Safety Management/organization & administration , Total Quality Management/organization & administration , Canada , Cooperative Behavior , Humans , Interinstitutional Relations , Medical Errors/prevention & control , Medical Errors/statistics & numerical data , Needs Assessment , Nurse's Role , Organizational Culture , Patient Care Team/organization & administration , Societies, Hospital/organization & administration , Societies, Nursing/organization & administration , Truth Disclosure
8.
J Adv Nurs ; 45(6): 568-78, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15012634

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has impacted heavily on both Canada's society and its health care system. Quite unexpectedly, hospitals and health care workers became facilitators of disease diffusion. This experience has demonstrated the need for a comprehensive disease control strategy. AIMS: The aims are threefold. First, to examine the subtle and changing spatial characteristics of SARS during the short but critical period of its rapid spread in the Greater Toronto Area. Second, to make salient three paradoxes, and their associated dilemmas, faced by nurses and other health care professionals challenged with caring for the sick and containing the rapid spread of the disease. Third, to propose some ways of approaching these dilemmas, as well as some broader preventative and mitigating strategies. METHODS: The crosscutting concepts of 'clinical uncertainty' and 'flow of human contacts' are used to explain disease transmission characteristics and urban spatial diffusion and to guide the particular strategies developed. Evidence for the paper comes from public health records, governmental and non-governmental health statements and the initial epidemiological research on SARS. Direct insights are also gained from recent first-hand experiences of Toronto's health care system during the crisis. DISCUSSION: The concepts of clinical uncertainty and the flow of human contacts provide in-depth insights that complement the findings of large-scale epidemiological studies, and help operationalize their general calls for enhanced control measures. The comprehensive disease control strategy proposed includes the creation of a hospital infrastructure specific to the containment of biological threats; an advisory coalition of disease control specialists; the development of a biological threat-and-containment simulation laboratory and three specific programmes in patient safety, risk assessment and community mobilization. CONCLUSION: It is argued that containment alone, while a necessary and urgent priority, cannot be seen as an end in itself and might better be understood as one possible trajectory within a comprehensive problem-solving strategy. The experiences in Toronto may offer insights to other cities and countries that currently lack such strategies and hence may be vulnerable to similar outbreaks of dangerous infectious diseases.


Subject(s)
Health Personnel , Infection Control/standards , Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome/transmission , Canada/epidemiology , Cross Infection/epidemiology , Cross Infection/prevention & control , Cross Infection/transmission , Humans , Infectious Disease Transmission, Professional-to-Patient/prevention & control , Quarantine/methods , Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome/epidemiology , Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome/prevention & control
9.
Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont) ; 16(4): 69-81, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14983925

ABSTRACT

Canadian nursing leadership is called to advance a national patient safety agenda for the delivery of safe, quality care in professional practice environments. Yet, the nursing discipline is burdened by issues and challenges related to clinical practice and workplace dilemmas that contribute to barriers and obstacles to safe, quality and humane care. We propose that the many clinical challenges faced by nurses in Canada can be more fully understood when framed by a patient safety perspective. Nurse executive leaders and nurse scientists are called to reform clinical practice and conduct research to reconcile patient care safety issues. This paper applies findings obtained from nurses via focus groups led by the Academy of Canadian Executive Nurses (ACEN) and integrates these findings into a patient safety perspective via a conceptual framework.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Leadership , Nurse's Role , Patient Advocacy , Safety Management/organization & administration , Attitude of Health Personnel , Canada , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Focus Groups , Health Care Reform/organization & administration , Humans , Models, Nursing , Models, Organizational , Needs Assessment , Nurse Administrators/ethics , Nurse Administrators/organization & administration , Nurse Administrators/psychology , Nursing Staff/ethics , Nursing Staff/organization & administration , Nursing Staff/psychology , Philosophy, Nursing , Quality Assurance, Health Care/ethics , Quality Assurance, Health Care/organization & administration , Safety Management/ethics
10.
Asian Am Pac Isl J Health ; 7(1): 10-24, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11567478

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE. This study examines whether psychosocial perinatal care services developed through community partnerships and cultural deference with attention to individual women's health issues, had an assocaited impact on use of prenatal care, birth outcomes and perinatal care costs for the three participating Asian Pacific Islander American ethinc groups. METHODS. The use of prenatal care visits and birth outcomes for women in the Malama program were compared to those for women of the same etnic groups in the community prior to the introduction of the program. Data on program participants from 1992 to 1994 were compared to birth certificate data on Hawaiian, Filipino and Japanese women from 1988 to 1991. Costs of providing Malama prenatal services were determined from data provided by cost accounting and encounter data systems for the program. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT FINDINGS. The use of prenatal care visits and birth outcomes were significantly lower for Malama program participants than for women of the same ethnic groups prior to the introduction of the program. The costs of the prenatal program services were $846 to $920 per woman. The expected savings in medical costs per infant with the improved preterm birth rates were $680 per infant. Thus 75% to 80% of the costs of the services were likely to be saved in lower medical costs of the infants. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS. Programs that use community approaches and caring servies delivered in a cultural context, like the Malama model, have a potential for improving the use of prenatal care and birth outcomes at reasonable costs. RELEVANCE TO ASIAN PACIFIC ISLANDER AMERICAN POPULATIONS. The Malama approach to ascertaining cultural preferences for the content and delivery of care should prove useful in addressing public health goals of improved pregnancy outcomes for diverse groups of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. KEY WORDS. Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders, pregnancy, prenatal care, low birthweight, preterm birth, cultural competency, community partnerships, costs, cost effectiveness.

11.
Asian Am Pac Isl J Health ; 2(3): 181-194, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11567271

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE. This study examines ethnic-specific differences in associations of inadequate use of prenatal care with poor birthweight outcomes to determine whether ethnic specific improvements in the use of prenatal care in a rural district could potentially reduce infant morbidity or mortality there. METHODS. Data from 1988 to 1990 birth certificates of the state of Hawaii were used to study Filipino, Hawaiian and Japanese births. Stratified multivariate logistic regression analyses of the association of inadequate use of prenatal care visits with low birthweight were performed for each group adjusting for potentially confounding sociodemographic risk characteristics. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT FINDINGS. Results indicate that the adjusted odds of low birthweight for the Hawaiians in the rural district with inadequate amounts of prenatal care visits were higher than for those with adequate visits (OR 2.1; CI 1.4, 3.1) and those relative odds were higher than for Hawaiians in the rest of the state (OR 1.2; CI 1.1, 1.5). Births to Japanese women in the area had a similar pattern (OR 2.3, CI 0.97, 5.6; rest of state OR 1.2, CI 0.98, 1.5), but the ratios were not statistically significant. Births to Filipino women did not have the same pattern (OR 0.73, CI 0.34, 1.6; rest of state OR 1.4, CI 1.2, 1.6). MAJOR CONCLUSIONS. There is substantial heterogeneity in the associations of inadequate care use with poor birthweight outcomes in different groups of Asian Pacific women and in different locations in which they settle. RELEVANCE TO ASIAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER AMERICAN POPULATIONS. Communities need to determine the associations of poor birth outcomes with poor prenatal care usage of Asian Pacific women to determine whether ethnic specific improvements in prenatal care could potentially improve such outcomes in their areas. KEY WORDS. pregnancy, health services research, outcome and process assessment (health care), regression analysis (logistic models), low birth weight, patient compliance.

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