Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 7 de 7
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Int J Nurs Educ Scholarsh ; 6: Article 32, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19883372

ABSTRACT

Two university-based schools of nursing and two healthcare regions, supported by a nurses' union, have formed an intersectoral collaboration to develop a practice educator curriculum. The curriculum is designed to increase educator capacity and practice-academic relationships. This article describes the preliminary groundwork among intersectoral partners. Practice and academic educators do not always recognize each others' expertise or share resources effectively. An online survey and focus groups were conducted to identify educators' similar successes and challenges, their perspectives of key criteria necessary to establish practice-academic collaborations and learning environments, and intent to leave. The findings revealed many similarities across sectors, although practice and academic educators had different foci or perspectives that will need to be bridged by the collaboration. Strategies are suggested to maximize educators' commonalities, provide better supports to minimize intent to leave, and ensure sustainability.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Cooperative Behavior , Education, Nursing, Continuing/organization & administration , Faculty, Nursing/organization & administration , Mentors/education , Nursing Staff/psychology , Attitude of Health Personnel , Curriculum , Focus Groups , Humans , Interinstitutional Relations , Mentors/psychology , Needs Assessment/organization & administration , Nurse's Role/psychology , Nursing Education Research , Nursing Methodology Research , Nursing Staff/education , Nursing Staff/organization & administration , Personnel Turnover , Preceptorship/organization & administration , Qualitative Research , Schools, Nursing/organization & administration , Surveys and Questionnaires , Workload
2.
Res Nurs Health ; 31(2): 130-40, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18213622

ABSTRACT

There is an emerging discourse of knowledge translation that advocates a shift away from unidirectional research utilization and evidence-based practice models toward more interactive models of knowledge transfer. In this paper, we describe how our participatory approach to knowledge translation developed during an ongoing program of research concerning equitable care for diverse populations. At the core of our approach is a collaborative relationship between researchers and practitioners, which underpins the knowledge translation cycle, and occurs simultaneously with data collection/analysis/synthesis. We discuss lessons learned including: the complexities of translating knowledge within the political landscape of healthcare delivery, the need to negotiate the agendas of researchers and practitioners in a collaborative approach, and the kinds of resources needed to support this process.


Subject(s)
Evidence-Based Medicine/organization & administration , Models, Nursing , Nursing Research/organization & administration , Research Design , Research Personnel/organization & administration , Attitude of Health Personnel , British Columbia , Diffusion of Innovation , Humans , Interprofessional Relations
3.
Can Nurse ; 103(8): 24-9, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17990402

ABSTRACT

Knowledge translation is an interactive, dynamic approach to the uptake of evidence-based knowledge. In this article, the authors present a collaborative model for knowledge translation that grew out of a program of research focusing on the experiences of patients from ethnoculturally diverse groups as they were discharged home from hospital. Research findings highlight issues around gaps in the continuity of services and language and communication. The authors discuss a number of knowledge translation initiatives that were developed to address these gaps. Key to the success of this process has been a collaborative relationship between researchers and practitioners that is grounded in the shared goal of knowledge translation to support ethically sound decision-making in the delivery of health-care services.


Subject(s)
Continuity of Patient Care , Diffusion of Innovation , Nursing Research , Patient Discharge , Canada , Humans , Models, Theoretical
4.
J Adv Nurs ; 55(4): 435-48, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16866839

ABSTRACT

AIM: This paper reports a review of the literature on the association between critical care nurse staffing levels and patient mortality. BACKGROUND: Statistically significant inverse associations between levels of nurse staffing and hospital mortality have not been consistently found in the literature. Critical care settings are ideal to address this relationship due to high patient acuity and mortality, high intensity of the nursing care required, and availability of individual risk adjustment methods. METHODS: Major electronic databases were searched, including MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature. The search terms included critical/intensive care, quality of health care, mortality/hospital mortality, personnel staffing and scheduling, and nursing staff (hospital). Only papers published in English were included. The original search was conducted in 2002 and updated in 2005. RESULTS: Nine studies were selected from 251 references screened. All nine were observational. Six were conducted in the United States of America, one in Austria, one in Brazil, and one in Scotland. The unadjusted risk ratio of nurse staffing (high vs. low) on hospital mortality were combined meta-analytically (five studies). The pooled estimate was 0.65 (95% confidence interval 0.47-0.91). However, after adjusting for various covariates within each study, the individually reported associations between high nurse staffing and low hospital mortality became non-significant in all but one study. CONCLUSION: The impact of nurse staffing levels on patients' hospital mortality in critical care settings was not evident in the reviewed studies. Methodological challenges that might have impeded correct assessment of the association include measurement problems in exposure status and confounding factors, often uncontrolled. The lack of association also indicates that hospital mortality may not be sensitive enough to detect the consequences of low nurse staffing levels in critical care settings.


Subject(s)
Critical Care , Hospital Mortality , Intensive Care Units , Nursing Staff, Hospital/supply & distribution , Austria , Brazil , Humans , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling , Quality of Health Care , Scotland , United States , Workforce , Workload
5.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 26(3): 196-214, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12945655

ABSTRACT

The concept of cultural safety, developed by indigenous nurses in the postcolonial climate of New Zealand, has not been widely examined in North America. In this article we explicate the theoretical and methodological issues that came to the forefront in our attempts to use this concept in our research with different populations in Canada. We argue that this concept prompts us to "think critically" about ourselves and our patients, and to be mindful of our own sociocultural, economic, and historical location. This critical reflection has implications for how we live, relate to one another, and practice in our various professional disciplines. On the basis of our findings, we discuss how the concept might be rewritten within a critical postcolonial and postnational feminist discourse.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Ethnicity , Feminism , Safety , Canada , Colonialism , Female , Health Services Research , Humans , Male , Nursing Research
6.
Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont) ; 16(1): 112-40, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12757311

ABSTRACT

This paper is developed from a research study that examined the hospitalization and helpseeking experiences of diverse ethnocultural populations in the era of healthcare restraint. Interview data were gathered from 60 patients while hospitalized and after their discharge home. Fifty-six healthcare professionals, the majority of whom were nurses caring for these patients while they were in hospital, were also interviewed. The data gathered in this study provides evidence to illustrate how restructuring associated with fiscal restraint designed to enhance efficiencies while ensuring the provision of medically necessary services, has had unintended consequences for some groups of patients and for nurses. These consequences have created a context for inequities in care delivery for those most vulnerable. In this paper we trace the ways in which the changed context of care delivery has exerted its effects on both nurses and patients and illustrate how each has sought to bridge gaps created when organizational supports are lacking. Our study data offer insight into the complexities of the practice setting and difficulties that arise when resources cannot be mobilized to match patients' needs. Our analysis examines how tensions between ideologies of efficiency and accessibility are navigated at the front lines, and draws attention to unintended consequences of the current policy context.


Subject(s)
Efficiency, Organizational , Health Care Reform/economics , Health Services Accessibility , Hospital Restructuring , Nursing Staff, Hospital/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Attitude to Health , Canada , Cost Control , Cultural Diversity , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Social Justice
7.
Res Nurs Health ; 25(3): 222-32, 2002 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12015784

ABSTRACT

The concept of culture has been widely applied as an explanatory concept within health care, often within a framework representing culture as a fixed, reified entity, with cultural groups existing in a binary sense vis-;-vis mainstream culture. However, if our scholarship is to generate knowledge that addresses longstanding patterns of inclusion and exclusion along lines such as race, ethnicity, class, and gender, interpretive frames are needed that account for culture as embedded in fields of power relations; as mediated by social forces such as economics, politics, and historical patterns of oppression and colonization; and as being constantly renegotiated. In this article we trace a series of theoretical explorations, centered on the concept of cultural safety, with corresponding methodological implications, engaged in during preparation for an intensive period of fieldwork to study the hospitalization and help-seeking experiences of diverse ethnocultural populations.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Ethnicity/psychology , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Models, Nursing , Nursing Methodology Research/methods , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/ethnology , Research Design/standards , Safety , Transcultural Nursing/organization & administration , Canada , Colonialism , Humans , Knowledge , New Zealand , Nursing Methodology Research/standards , Politics , Socioeconomic Factors
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...