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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Health Outcomes For Better Information And Care (Hobic): Integrating Patient Outcome Information Into Nursing Undergraduate Curricula, Carole Orchard, Cheryl Reid-Haughian, Rick Vanderlee Mar 2015

Health Outcomes For Better Information And Care (Hobic): Integrating Patient Outcome Information Into Nursing Undergraduate Curricula, Carole Orchard, Cheryl Reid-Haughian, Rick Vanderlee

Carole A Orchard, BSN, MEd, EdD (UBC)

Nursing-sensitive outcomes provide common information across sectors, thus eliminating duplication that frequently occurs as individuals move across settings. These outcomes also facilitate increased trust among colleagues and support common understandings of patient care needs, thus enhancing continuity of care. Outcomes-oriented information is also likely to increase patient safety and improve overall quality of care. Shared standards and data support consistent decision-making, as nursing decisions can be tracked back over time to assess patient care outcomes. Consequently, nurses will have the means to determine the impact of their interventions on patient outcomes. At the same time, adoption of common approaches to …


Integrating Palliative Care Content Into A New Undergraduate Nursing Curriculum: The University Of Notre Dame, Australia – Sydney Experience, John M. Ramjan, Catherine M. Costa, Louise D. Hickman, Margot Kearns, Jane L. Phillips Aug 2014

Integrating Palliative Care Content Into A New Undergraduate Nursing Curriculum: The University Of Notre Dame, Australia – Sydney Experience, John M. Ramjan, Catherine M. Costa, Louise D. Hickman, Margot Kearns, Jane L. Phillips

Catherine M Costa

Background: The majority of society's deaths occur in a health care environment. Regardless of whether a death occurs in acute care, hospice, residential aged care or community settings, nurses are the health professionals that will spend the largest proportion of time with the patient who has a terminal condition and their families. As few nurses have specialist palliative care qualifications it is essential that nursing education prepares graduates to achieve the core capabilities required for the delivery of best evidenced based palliative care. This reality makes the integration of palliative care content into the undergraduate nursing curricula an important priority. …


Physical Activity At Daycare: Issues, Challenges And Perspectives, Melissa Van Zandvoort, Patricia Tucker, Jennifer Irwin, Shauna Burke May 2013

Physical Activity At Daycare: Issues, Challenges And Perspectives, Melissa Van Zandvoort, Patricia Tucker, Jennifer Irwin, Shauna Burke

Trish Tucker

This study sought to examine London, Ontario‐based childcare providers’ perspectives of the barriers and facilitators to physical activity participation among preschoolers (i.e. children aged 2.5–5 years) attending daycare. A heterogeneous sample of childcare providers (n = 54; response rate 47%) working at public daycare facilities in London, Ontario participated. Using a qualitative methodology, eight semi‐structured focus groups were conducted between February and March 2009. Focus groups were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Inductive content analysis was used to code and categorize emerging themes. When asked to describe the barriers to engaging preschoolers in physical activity while at daycare, participants discussed …


Evaluation Of Postgraduate Healthcare Professionals' Learning In An Outcomes-Based Curriculum., Pauline Joyce Nov 2012

Evaluation Of Postgraduate Healthcare Professionals' Learning In An Outcomes-Based Curriculum., Pauline Joyce

Pauline Joyce

This study evaluated learning of postgraduate healthcare professionals. Their experiences, as insider stakeholders, are placed within the perspectives of their lecturers and external examiner, as external stakeholders.


Shaping The Future Of Nursing Education In Ireland, Pauline Joyce Nov 2012

Shaping The Future Of Nursing Education In Ireland, Pauline Joyce

Pauline Joyce

This paper presents core principles of curriculum design. These principles were used as categories following analysis of submissions made to the Nursing Education Forum in Ireland between 1999/2000. This forum was established following a Commission on Nursing, set up to examine the future of nursing in Ireland. The transition from curriculum design to curriculum development is considered and a summary of curriculum activities is outlined. The paper concludes by presenting questions to focus further discussion.


The School Health Curriculum Project: Its Theory, Practice, And Measurement Experience, Lawrence Green, Phil Heit, Donald Iverson, Lloyd Kolbe, Marshall Kreuter Jun 2012

The School Health Curriculum Project: Its Theory, Practice, And Measurement Experience, Lawrence Green, Phil Heit, Donald Iverson, Lloyd Kolbe, Marshall Kreuter

Don C. Iverson

The School Health Curriculum Project(SHCP), initiated over a decade ago to provide a health education curriculum package for elemen tary students, has been widely and variously evaluated. In analyzing studies designed to assess the effectiveness of the SHCP, it was recognized that the measured impact of this project (or any health education intervention) would derive from the adequacy of the theory upon which the program is based, the adequacy of its implementation, and the adequacy of its measurement. Hence, an examination of the theoretical base of the SHCP and its variance in practice was conducted. In addition, a metaevaluation of …


The Disavowed Curriculum: Understanding Student's Reasoning In Professionally Challenging Situations, Shiphra Ginsburg, Glenn Regehr, Lorelei Lingard Jun 2011

The Disavowed Curriculum: Understanding Student's Reasoning In Professionally Challenging Situations, Shiphra Ginsburg, Glenn Regehr, Lorelei Lingard

Lorelei Lingard

CONTEXT: Understanding students' perceptions of and responses to lapses in professionalism is important to shaping students' professional development. OBJECTIVE: Utilize realistic, standardized professional dilemmas to obtain insight into students' reasoning and motivations in "real time." DESIGN: Qualitative study using 5 videotaped scenarios (each depicting a student placed in a situation which requires action in response to a professional dilemma) and individual interviews, in which students were questioned about what they would do next and why. SETTING: University of Toronto. PARTICIPANTS: Eighteen fourth-year medical students; participation voluntary and anonymous. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: A model to explain students' reasoning in the face …


Perceptions Of Operating Room Tension Across Professions: Building Generalizable Evidence And Educational Resources, Lorelei Lingard, Glenn Regehr, Sherry Espin, Isabella Devito, Sarah Whyte, Douglas Buller, Bohdan Sadovy, David Rogers, Richard Reznick Jun 2011

Perceptions Of Operating Room Tension Across Professions: Building Generalizable Evidence And Educational Resources, Lorelei Lingard, Glenn Regehr, Sherry Espin, Isabella Devito, Sarah Whyte, Douglas Buller, Bohdan Sadovy, David Rogers, Richard Reznick

Lorelei Lingard

BACKGROUND: Effective team communication is critical in health care, yet no curriculum exists to teach it. Naturalistic research has revealed systematic patterns of tension and profession-specific interpretation of operating room team communication. Replication of these naturalistic findings in a controlled, video-based format could provide a basis for formal curricula. METHOD: Seventy-two surgeons, nurses, and anesthesiologists independently rated three video-based scenarios for the three professions' level of tension, responsibility for creating tension and responsibility for resolution. Data were analyzed using three-way, mixed-design analyses of variance. RESULTS: The three professions rated tension levels of the various scenarios similarly (F=1.19, ns), but rated …


The Sum Of The Parts Detracts From The Intended Whole: Competencies And In-Training Assessments, Elaine Zibrowski, S. Singh, Mark Goldszmidt, Christopher Watling, Cynthia Kenyon, Valerie Schulz, Heather Maddocks, Lorelei Lingard Jul 2009

The Sum Of The Parts Detracts From The Intended Whole: Competencies And In-Training Assessments, Elaine Zibrowski, S. Singh, Mark Goldszmidt, Christopher Watling, Cynthia Kenyon, Valerie Schulz, Heather Maddocks, Lorelei Lingard

Lorelei Lingard

OBJECTIVES: Despite the fact that Canadian residency programmes are required to assess trainees' performance within the context of the CanMEDS Roles Framework, there has been no inquiry into the potential relationship between residents' perceptions of the framework and their in-training assessments (ITA). Using data collected during the study of ITA, we explored residents' perceptions of these competencies.

METHODS: From May 2006-07, a purposive sample of 20 resident doctors from internal medicine, paediatrics, and surgery were interviewed about their ITA experiences. Data collection and analysis proceeded in an iterative fashion consistent with grounded theory. In April 2008, a summary of recurrent …


Catalyzing And Sustaining Communities Of Collaboration Around Interprofessional Care: An Evaluation Of Four Educational Programs, Eileen Egan-Lee, Elisa Hollenberg, Dale Dematteo, Stasey Tobin, Ivy Oandasan, Mary-Agnes Beduz, Debbie Kwan, Karen Leslie, Jacques Lee, Maria Tassone, Jane Merkley, Lorelei Lingard, Lynne Sinclair, Mandy Lowe, Danny Nashman, Cate Creede, Doreen Day, Ivan Silver, Scott Reeves May 2008

Catalyzing And Sustaining Communities Of Collaboration Around Interprofessional Care: An Evaluation Of Four Educational Programs, Eileen Egan-Lee, Elisa Hollenberg, Dale Dematteo, Stasey Tobin, Ivy Oandasan, Mary-Agnes Beduz, Debbie Kwan, Karen Leslie, Jacques Lee, Maria Tassone, Jane Merkley, Lorelei Lingard, Lynne Sinclair, Mandy Lowe, Danny Nashman, Cate Creede, Doreen Day, Ivan Silver, Scott Reeves

Lorelei Lingard

No abstract provided.