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1.
Nurs Ethics ; 23(7): 743-753, 2016 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25977519

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Homeless persons in the United States have disproportionately high rates of illness, injury, and mortality and tend to believe that the quality of their end-of-life care will be poor. No studies were found as to whether nurses or nursing students require moral courage to help homeless persons or members of any other demographic complete advance directives. RESEARCH HYPOTHESIS: We hypothesized that baccalaureate nursing students require moral courage to help homeless persons complete advance directives. Moral courage was defined as a trait of a person or an action that overcomes fears or other challenges to achieve something of great moral worth. RESEARCH DESIGN: The hypothesis was investigated through a qualitative descriptive study. Aside from the pre-selection of a single variable to study (i.e. moral courage), our investigation was a naturalistic inquiry with narrative hues insofar as it attended to specific words and phrases in the data that were associated with that variable. PARTICIPANTS AND RESEARCH CONTEXT: A total of 15 baccalaureate nursing students at a public university in the United States responded to questionnaires that sought to elicit fears and other challenges that they both expected to experience and actually experienced while helping homeless persons complete advance directives at a local, non-profit service agency. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS: The study was approved by the Internal Review Board of the authors' university, and each participant signed an informed consent form, which stated that the study involved no reasonably foreseeable risks and that participation was voluntary. FINDINGS: Before meeting with homeless persons, participants reported that they expected to experience two fears and a challenge: fear of behaving in ways that a homeless person would deem inappropriate, fear of discussing a homeless person's dying and death, and the challenge of adequately conveying the advance directive's meaning and accurately recording a homeless person's end-of-life wishes. In contrast, after their meetings with homeless persons, relatively few participants reported having encountered those obstacles. So, while participants required moral courage to assist homeless persons with advance directives, they required greater moral courage as they anticipated their meetings than during those meetings. DISCUSSION: Our study breaks new ground at the intersection of nursing, moral courage, and advance directives. It might also have important implications for how to improve the training that US nursing students receive before they provide this service. CONCLUSION: Our results cannot be generalized, but portions of our approach are likely to be transferable to similar social contexts. For example, because homeless persons are misunderstood and marginalized throughout the United States, our design for training nursing students to provide this service is also likely to be useful across the United States. Internationally, however, it is not yet known whether our participants' fears and the challenge they faced are also experienced by those who assist homeless persons or members of other vulnerable populations in documenting healthcare wishes.


Subject(s)
Advance Directives , Courage , Ethics, Nursing , Ill-Housed Persons , Students, Nursing/psychology , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/methods , Fear/psychology , Female , Humans , Qualitative Research , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States
2.
J Pediatr Nurs ; 30(6): 896-907, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26072213

ABSTRACT

Culturally congruent care is satisfying, meaningful, fits with people's daily lives, and promotes their health and wellbeing. A group of staff nurses identified specific clinical challenges they faced in providing such care for Hispanic and underserved Caucasian children and families in the pediatric medical-surgical unit of an urban regional children's hospital in the southeastern U.S. To address these challenges, an academic-practice partnership was formed between a group of nurse managers and staff nurses at the children's hospital and nursing faculty and graduate students at a local, research-intensive public university. Using the culture care theory, the partners collaborated on a research study to discover knowledge that would help the nursing staff resolve the identified clinical challenges. Twelve families and 12 healthcare providers participated. Data analysis revealed five care factors that participants identified as most valuable: family, faith, communication, care integration, and meeting basic needs. These themes were used to formulate nursing actions that, when applied in daily practice, could facilitate the provision of culturally congruent care for these children and their families. The knowledge generated by this study also has implications for healthcare organizations, nursing educators, and academic-practice partnerships that seek to ensure the delivery of equitable care for all patients.


Subject(s)
Critical Care/organization & administration , Culturally Competent Care/organization & administration , Medically Underserved Area , Nurses, Pediatric/organization & administration , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Child, Preschool , Female , Hispanic or Latino/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Pediatric/organization & administration , Humans , Infant , Male , Nurse's Role , Nursing, Team/organization & administration , Patient-Centered Care/methods , Treatment Outcome , United States , White People/statistics & numerical data
3.
Am J Orthopsychiatry ; 79(3): 375-86, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19839675

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this feminist interpretive study was to portray the experience of women thriving after childhood maltreatment (CM) through personal narratives. An interdisciplinary team conducted multiple in-depth interviews of 44 women survivors of CM who identified themselves as successful and doing well. The interviews focused on "what worked" and "what did not" with the aim of exploring aftereffects of CM; strengths and strategies; interactions helpful in overcoming abuse; and related sociopolitical contexts. Narrative analyses revealed a distinct, dynamic process of becoming resolute characterized by six dimensions that were not sequential steps but characteristics, actions, and interactions. This study offers a new understanding of the experience of women gaining solid footing in their lives, the peace of knowing the abuse is over, and power to move in an upward trajectory.


Subject(s)
Adult Survivors of Child Abuse/psychology , Child Abuse/psychology , Drive , Women/psychology , Adult , Aged , Child , Child Abuse, Sexual , Family Relations , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Power, Psychological , Self Concept , Young Adult
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