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1.
Nurse Educ Pract ; 62: 103336, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35430533

ABSTRACT

This paper reports on an evaluation of health visitor trainers' experience of a cascade training programme delivered in Wales, UK. Health visitors used Driscoll's model (What, So What, Now What) to organise their feedback and an integrated competence model developed by Weeks et al. was used to analyse the feedback via category analysis of free text. As well as feedback on the logistics of running the training, the evaluation allowed for cognitive and functional competence to be identified along with personal and meta competence. There was limited scope for identifying ethical competence in the Health Visitor cascade trainer feedback. Suggestions are made for how this may be addressed.


Subject(s)
Nurses, Community Health , Resilience, Psychological , Clinical Competence , Family Health , Feedback , Humans
2.
J Child Health Care ; 24(2): 195-206, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31340661

ABSTRACT

UK public health nurse assessment of family resilience is a necessary component of monitoring family health and children's development and identifying areas for change. This research was part of an exploration of Welsh public health nurses' understanding of 'family resilience' as a concept underpinning their practice. From it, the Family Resilience Assessment Instrument Tool (FRAITTM www.frait.wales/) was developed for public health nurses use. We report on a virtual commissioning process using focus groups and an immersive simulation suite to test a FRAIT prototype in a safe environment before field testing. Virtual commissioning design: Hydra-Minerva Immersive Simulation Suite - individual public health nurses presented with a multi-media scenario as they used the prototype FRAIT. Follow-up focus groups for usability insights before field testing. Virtual commissioning raised real-world issues which public health nurses discussed in focus groups. Issues were scoring, absence of information, focusing on family resilience, identifying adults caring for children, potential for use, identifying need and monitoring change, potential impact of using FRAIT and fitting it to everyday practice. Prototype testing like this allowed us to fine tune the FRAIT for field testing.


Subject(s)
Family Health , Focus Groups , High Fidelity Simulation Training , Public Health Nursing , Resilience, Psychological , Surveys and Questionnaires/standards , Adult , Child , Humans , Wales
3.
Rural Remote Health ; 18(4): 4604, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30433794

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: A health visitor's ability to assess and analyse aspects of family resilience in daily practice is essential to enable practitioners to support families and facilitate positive lifestyle choices, and improve child health and developmental outcomes. The purpose of this research was to undertake an in-depth exploration of the concept of family resilience as understood by health visitors in Wales and to develop a concept map. This knowledge has been used to develop the Family Resilience Assessment Instrument Tool (FRAIT). This is a standardised form of assessment, measuring instrument, guidance, training package and community of practice for use in health visitor daily practice. This article presents the first stage of the FRAIT research study, that of identifying the clusters within the concept map of what health visitors perceive as 'family resilience'. METHODS: A structured Group Concept Mapping (GCM) methodology using Concept Systems' Global Max online software was used to gain a consensus of the understanding of the concept of family resilience from 62 invited health visitors practising across Wales. This is an integrated qualitative and quantitative approach to brainstorming, idea synthesis, idea sorting, idea rating and group analysis. GCM has six clear steps, with four steps described in the method: 'preparing for concept mapping', 'generating ideas', 'structuring the statements' and 'concept mapping analysis'. Steps 5 and 6, 'interpreting the maps' and 'utilisation', are considered in the results section. RESULTS: Use of multi-dimensional scaling and hierarchical cluster analysis enabled point, cluster, rating and pattern matching maps to be presented to the study group. These were then interpreted, understood and consensus gained on how the concept of family resilience was constructed from both the study group and the health visitor participants. Family resilience understood by health visitors in Wales comprises five clusters: 'family health', 'responsive parenting', 'engagement', 'family support' and 'socioeconomic factors'. Each of the clusters has an identified number of underpinning statements from a total number of 117 statements. CONCLUSION: Family resilience as understood by health visitors is a multidimensional concept. Using online software such as Concept Systems' Global Max enabled health visitors working across Wales to achieve a consensus and generate the data in preparation for building FRAIT for use in their daily practice as required by Welsh Government policy.


Subject(s)
Community Health Workers , Family Health , Resilience, Psychological , House Calls , Humans , Professional-Family Relations , Software , Surveys and Questionnaires , Wales
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