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Your search for all content returned 3,798 results

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  • Sexual Teen Dating Violence Victimization: Associations With Sexual Risk Behaviors Among U.S. High School StudentsGo to article: Sexual Teen Dating Violence Victimization: Associations With Sexual Risk Behaviors Among U.S. High School Students

    Sexual Teen Dating Violence Victimization: Associations With Sexual Risk Behaviors Among U.S. High School Students

    Article

    Adolescent dating violence may lead to adverse health behaviors. We examined associations between sexual teen dating violence victimization (TDVV) and sexual risk behaviors among U.S. high school students using 2013 and 2015 National Youth Risk Behavior Survey data (combined n = 29,346). Sex-stratified logistic regression models were used to estimate these associations among students who had dated or gone out with someone during the past 12 months (n = 20,093). Among these students, 10.5% experienced sexual TDVV. Sexual TDVV was positively associated with sexual intercourse before age 13, four or more lifetime sexual partners, current sexual activity, alcohol or drug use before last sexual intercourse, and no pregnancy prevention during last sexual intercourse. Given significant findings among both sexes, it is valuable for dating violence prevention efforts to target both female and male students.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Partnering in Interprofessional Education to Design Simulation Programs to Promote Collaboration and Patient SafetyGo to article: Partnering in Interprofessional Education to Design Simulation Programs to Promote Collaboration and Patient Safety

    Partnering in Interprofessional Education to Design Simulation Programs to Promote Collaboration and Patient Safety

    Article

    Interprofessional education (IPE) using simulation strategies is a rewarding way to promote teamwork and interprofessional collaboration. The benefits of collaboration far outweigh the challenges that arise from differences in educational culture and scheduling logistics.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • They Told Us We Would ChangeGo to article: They Told Us We Would Change

    They Told Us We Would Change

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • The Role of the Clinical Nurse Specialist as Clinician and Advocate in a Primary Health Care ClinicGo to article: The Role of the Clinical Nurse Specialist as Clinician and Advocate in a Primary Health Care Clinic

    The Role of the Clinical Nurse Specialist as Clinician and Advocate in a Primary Health Care Clinic

    Article

    The clinical nurse specialist (CNS) functions as an expert clinician to disseminate knowledge and apply evidence-based practice in his or her role. The framework of CNS practice competencies (patient, nurse, and system) reflects an opportunity to advocate for disadvantaged and underserved populations when providing care. Strategies, techniques, and tools to advance CNS practice in the primary care setting are discussed.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Challenging Assumptions, Demanding JustificationGo to article: Challenging Assumptions, Demanding Justification

    Challenging Assumptions, Demanding Justification

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Transformative Advance Care Planning: The Honoring Choices Minnesota ExperienceGo to article: Transformative Advance Care Planning: The Honoring Choices Minnesota Experience

    Transformative Advance Care Planning: The Honoring Choices Minnesota Experience

    Article

    In the United States, discussing end-of-life wishes and preferences has been taboo ever since death and dying moved from a stage of life to a medical condition. This article describes the transformative nature of a Minnesota health care initiative, Honoring Choices Minnesota (HCM). As the world’s largest nongovernmental, voluntary community-centered initiative, HCM is changing the culture around speaking of death and dying, one conversation at a time.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Creating a Team That Thrives: An Annotated Conversation With Marlene Williamson, MSN, RN, NE-BCGo to article: Creating a Team That Thrives: An Annotated Conversation With Marlene Williamson, MSN, RN, NE-BC

    Creating a Team That Thrives: An Annotated Conversation With Marlene Williamson, MSN, RN, NE-BC

    Article

    How do successful leaders do that? In this interview with Marlene Williamson, director of Inpatient Nursing Services at Winchester Hospital in Winchester, MA, she describes the leadership behaviors that created a float team that thrives, provides highly valued care, continually improves their individual performance, and usually has a waiting list of internal applicants. Barbara Balik’s analysis of Marlene Williamson’s comments are in indented paragraphs.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Book ReviewsNursing, the Finest Art: An Illustrated History (3rd ed.)A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the FutureGo to article: Book ReviewsNursing, the Finest Art: An Illustrated History (3rd ed.)A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future

    Book ReviewsNursing, the Finest Art: An Illustrated History (3rd ed.)A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Evaluating Shared Governance: Measuring Functionality of Unit Practice Councils at the Point of CareGo to article: Evaluating Shared Governance: Measuring Functionality of Unit Practice Councils at the Point of Care

    Evaluating Shared Governance: Measuring Functionality of Unit Practice Councils at the Point of Care

    Article

    Measuring the functionality of Unit Practice Councils (UPCs) in institutions on the Magnet journey is a rare occurrence. The Jackson Health System Unit Practice Council Functionality Measurement Tool is one of the first such attempts to provide an objective way to assess whether UPCs function in the way they were envisioned to perform.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • The Interaction of Resources in TimeGo to article: The Interaction of Resources in Time

    The Interaction of Resources in Time

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • A Salon for Facilitators of Re-Igniting the Spirit of CaringGo to article: A Salon for Facilitators of Re-Igniting the Spirit of Caring

    A Salon for Facilitators of Re-Igniting the Spirit of Caring

    Article

    Four nurses from University of California Davis Medical Center, facilitators of the Re-Igniting the Spirit of Caring curriculum that engages, grounds, renews, and unifies staff from all disciplines within health care organizations, traveled to Minnesota for recertification, and attended a Nursing Salon at “the home of the master,” Marie Manthey. They experienced the progress from superficial chat to deeper, heartfelt conversations—being present with each other and collectively held by peers.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Diversity, Inclusion, and Storying: Connecting Across Cultures to Give Meaning to Patients’ Whole HealthGo to article: Diversity, Inclusion, and Storying: Connecting Across Cultures to Give Meaning to Patients’ Whole Health

    Diversity, Inclusion, and Storying: Connecting Across Cultures to Give Meaning to Patients’ Whole Health

    Article

    Transcultural nursing inspires us for humanness. The breadth of a culture is handed down through stories. Storytelling creates understanding and mutuality within a culture and between cultures. Deeper understanding can lead to better patient outcomes across variances in health, wellness, and social standing. The intentional use of storying by six nurses in a project called Story Care led to more appreciative understanding of the other’s culture and raised awareness of self in interaction with another. The nurses, patients, and their families had deliberate opportunities to learn more about another who was culturally different, to understand how historical perspectives influence the dynamics of interactions, and to explore a sense of commonality and mutuality in nurse–patient engagements. As we strive for cultural intelligence, diversity, and inclusion in our organizations, transcultural nursing helps nurses connect to and be mindful of cultural ways in which we understand a patient’s or population’s vulnerability, determination, spirit, and strengths that give meaning to their whole health.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Book ReviewGo to article: Book Review

    Book Review

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Finding and Creating Opportunity: Nurses Married to Members of the MilitaryGo to article: Finding and Creating Opportunity: Nurses Married to Members of the Military

    Finding and Creating Opportunity: Nurses Married to Members of the Military

    Article

    Nursing is a profession that affords many avenues in which to practice. Nurses who are married to military service members have unique challenges as they progress through their careers. A military spouse shares a personal perspective of challenges and insight on how to overcome and persevere that may be relevant to others within the greater nursing community.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Educational Innovation: Collaborative Mentoring for Future Nursing LeadersGo to article: Educational Innovation: Collaborative Mentoring for Future Nursing Leaders

    Educational Innovation: Collaborative Mentoring for Future Nursing Leaders

    Article

    This article discusses a unique educational partnership between nurse leaders and a university baccalaureate nursing program that nurtures future nursing administrators. A structured mentoring process in which students are guided through an internship with nursing administrators and executives promotes development of a career focus, leading novices to a more mature role on their career journeys.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Sharing Governance: A Pathway to Interdisciplinary ExcellenceGo to article: Sharing Governance: A Pathway to Interdisciplinary Excellence

    Sharing Governance: A Pathway to Interdisciplinary Excellence

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Exploring the Changing Landscape of Jobs for New Graduates: Practice, Education, and New Graduate ImperativesGo to article: Exploring the Changing Landscape of Jobs for New Graduates: Practice, Education, and New Graduate Imperatives

    Exploring the Changing Landscape of Jobs for New Graduates: Practice, Education, and New Graduate Imperatives

    Article

    Numerous expert sources have reported a reduction in positions available for new graduate nurses, largely because of general economic conditions, although there are conflicting data and significant geographic variances. Nursing education, nursing practice, and new graduates themselves must develop partnerships to better prepare graduates for more challenging employment searches so that these newest members of the nursing workforce are retained and available for practice in preparation for the expected shortage of nurses in the near future.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Talked Over As If I Weren't There: Reflections From a Nurse and EducatorGo to article: Talked Over As If I Weren't There: Reflections From a Nurse and Educator

    Talked Over As If I Weren't There: Reflections From a Nurse and Educator

    Article

    Most nurses were taught in nursing school to avoid talking over a patient as if the patient were not there. This manuscript describes the author's experience of being talked over as a patient—what it meant to her as a nurse relating to the ethics of the situation and as an educator of future nurses. The American Nurses Association's Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements (2015) addresses the responsibility of nurses at all levels within an organization to sustain a work environment that ensures quality, safe patient care. Nurses who embody this responsibility are knowledgeable, skilled, and mindful of what they say and how they act and interact around, with, and over patients and toward each other.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • “I Am the Professor of Myself”: How Our Patients and Their Loved Ones Become Our Teachers and ModelsGo to article: “I Am the Professor of Myself”: How Our Patients and Their Loved Ones Become Our Teachers and Models

    “I Am the Professor of Myself”: How Our Patients and Their Loved Ones Become Our Teachers and Models

    Article

    As health care professionals, we commit ourselves to lifelong learning. In that quest, wise professionals know that our patients and their loved ones become our most important teachers.

    In no uncertain terms my new patient, who also was a long-standing friend, challenged me and put me in my place as I continually urged her to change her previous antihypertensive medicines that just weren’t working. Finally closing the discussion as she declined to make a change, she said, “Larry, I am the professor of myself.”

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Interprofessional Communication and Teambuilding Using Applied Improvisational ExercisesGo to article: Interprofessional Communication and Teambuilding Using Applied Improvisational Exercises

    Interprofessional Communication and Teambuilding Using Applied Improvisational Exercises

    Article

    According to The Joint Commission (TJC), the most frequently cited root cause of sentinel events is ineffective communication or miscommunication (TJC, 2002, 2012). The need to improve communication among health care professionals is a high priority because of the serious consequences of poor communication for everyone involved, on both personal and corporate levels. Applied improvisational exercises (AIEs) comprise a strategy for enhancing interprofessional communication (IPC). This article asks: What are the challenges inherent in IPC and teambuilding in the health care setting, and how can AIE help bridge the communication gap?

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Leader Interview: End-of-Life and Palliative Care: barriers, myths and misconceptionsGo to article: Leader Interview: End-of-Life and Palliative Care: barriers, myths and misconceptions

    Leader Interview: End-of-Life and Palliative Care: barriers, myths and misconceptions

    Article

    In today’s health care environment, end-of-life issues frequently recur with patients, families and those who care for them. And, as with many such issues, some health care teams address them well and others do not. Accordingly, we gathered three hospice nurses, an ICU nurse and a retired internist to discuss the myths, misconceptions and obstacles to patients receiving appropriate palliative care. Hospice care veteran Jane Robles, a member of the Creative Nursing Journal editorial board, led the roundtable discussion.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Virtual LearningGo to article: Virtual Learning

    Virtual Learning

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • The Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree: My JourneyGo to article: The Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree: My Journey

    The Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree: My Journey

    Article

    The Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree is a new terminal degree for nursing. This article reviews the essentials of the DNP degree as published by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing and describes the author’s personal journey toward completion of the DNP degree in December 2008.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Improving Patient Safety Within the Context of Everyday Chaos and ComplexityGo to article: Improving Patient Safety Within the Context of Everyday Chaos and Complexity

    Improving Patient Safety Within the Context of Everyday Chaos and Complexity

    Article

    Complexity and chaos inherent in health care initiate opportunities for errors and make it difficult to improve patient safety. Effectively improving patient safety requires embracing the complex health care environment, care processes, and patients.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Finding Abundance in a World of ScarcityGo to article: Finding Abundance in a World of Scarcity

    Finding Abundance in a World of Scarcity

    Article

    We can choose to approach life with an attitude of abundance instead of an attitude of scarcity. Abundance is a conscious choice that can promote happiness and lead to more positive outcomes.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Tekicihila Unpo (Love One Another): Confronting Human Trafficking With the Guidance of Traditional Lakota Wisdom in Nursing PracticeGo to article: Tekicihila Unpo (Love One Another): Confronting Human Trafficking With the Guidance of Traditional Lakota Wisdom in Nursing Practice

    Tekicihila Unpo (Love One Another): Confronting Human Trafficking With the Guidance of Traditional Lakota Wisdom in Nursing Practice

    Article

    Human trafficking emerged as a serious social issue in North Dakota during the Bakken oil field boom in the western part of the state. The oil industry has seen a dramatic decrease in production in recent years. However, the presence of human trafficking continues to dominate the scene in the state. As the RN Case Manager and Community Outreach Nurse for a Healthcare for the Homeless grantee clinic in Fargo, the author is the only nurse outside of a traditional environment who works with victims of trafficking in the largest metropolitan area of North Dakota. The majority of the current targets for this heinous industry are young Native American women. The author, a Lakota woman, employs an approach with trafficking victims that seeks to reestablish the view of self as a being with significant value and ability to contribute to the world in a way that no other being can. In advocacy, she teaches professionals about the Lakota view of the Earth as a living being whose destruction may be correlated with the increased violence against women.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Consequences of AdversitiesGo to article: Consequences of Adversities

    Consequences of Adversities

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Communication Challenges Faced by Foreign-Born FacultyGo to article: Communication Challenges Faced by Foreign-Born Faculty

    Communication Challenges Faced by Foreign-Born Faculty

    Article

    Foreign-born educators face unique challenges teaching in American nursing schools. The purpose of this article is to create awareness about communication challenges they encounter and provide strategies they can implement to enhance teaching effectiveness and improve cross-cultural communication.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Reflections on an Innovative Approach to Studying Abroad in NursingGo to article: Reflections on an Innovative Approach to Studying Abroad in Nursing

    Reflections on an Innovative Approach to Studying Abroad in Nursing

    Article

    Nursing students are largely excluded from travel-abroad studies because of demanding curricula, lack of time, and cost. A poll was conducted and distributed to bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) and master of science in nursing (MSN) students who participated in 8-day observational trips. Questions were framed around the themes of cultural awareness, global health care perspective, translating theory into practice, and personal and professional growth. The results were compared with traditional long-term study-abroad outcomes. Participants reported increased cultural awareness through personal interactions and personal growth through continued reflection. Perceived impact on nursing practice was rated as neutral, but narrative comments implied actual influence on practice.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Guided Imagery as a Resource to Decrease Test AnxietyGo to article: Guided Imagery as a Resource to Decrease Test Anxiety

    Guided Imagery as a Resource to Decrease Test Anxiety

    Article

    A pre-exam guided imagery intervention was implemented with 49 senior baccalaureate nursing students to address test anxiety. The intervention consisted of listening to a 10-minute recorded audio guided imagery exercise. Self-reported anxiety levels were measured using a Likert scale pre- and post-guided imagery. Most students demonstrated a reduction in test anxiety postintervention.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Essential Elements of Song for Grieving Young AdultsGo to article: Essential Elements of Song for Grieving Young Adults

    Essential Elements of Song for Grieving Young Adults

    Article

    Complications experienced by grieving young adults have developmental, mental, and behavioral components. Music offers opportunities to promote healthy grieving. While song writing has been widely used as an informal therapy for centuries, current researchers are beginning to explore its benefits. There is a noticeable lack of literature regarding the role of music in the grieving process. The aims of this study were to explore the grieving experiences of young adults who had lost a family member or friend, to identify song elements most helpful in promoting healthy grieving, and then to use these findings to compose a piece of music. Fifteen 20- to 23-year-old participants were interviewed about the death of a close friend or family member using a structured interview guide that included questions about their experience with the death and their grief, as well as questions about what song elements might help in grief. These questions included specifics about the song tempo (speed), dynamic (volume), and whether the song should contain lyrics (words). Thematic analysis was used to analyze interviews. Themes derived from the interview that should be relayed in a song included: Grief can include joy and pain together; It will get better; There is value in community; and, It is ok not to be ok. For song elements, participants elected a slow tempo, a mixed or soft dynamic, and inclusion of lyrical content. All findings were integrated into a song composition that may help promote healthy grieving.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Principles for Establishing Trust When Developing a Substance Abuse Intervention With a Native American CommunityGo to article: Principles for Establishing Trust When Developing a Substance Abuse Intervention With a Native American Community

    Principles for Establishing Trust When Developing a Substance Abuse Intervention With a Native American Community

    Article

    This article traces the development of a research project with a Native American community. Four principles were used to guide the development of the “Community Partnership to Affect Cherokee Adolescent Substance Abuse” project using a community-based participatory research approach. The principles suggest that establishing trust is key when developing and conducting research with a Native American community.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Addressing Workplace Incivility: Facilitating Nursing Students' Transition to the Health-Care SettingGo to article: Addressing Workplace Incivility: Facilitating Nursing Students' Transition to the Health-Care Setting

    Addressing Workplace Incivility: Facilitating Nursing Students' Transition to the Health-Care Setting

    Article

    Workplace incivility is a known cause of anxiety in the workplace, leading to the loss of many new members of the nursing field. This perpetual cycle of hiring and losing nurses, especially new graduates, contributes to the increasing nursing shortage. This study investigated whether the inclusion of prelicensure nursing education on workplace incivility is achievable and capable of improving the outcome for nurses when it occurs. Review of the literature revealed that inclusion of prelicensure education on this topic is possible through utilization of a zero-tolerance policy, Cognitive Rehearsal Technique (CRT), and simulation. Education on workplace incivility and the aforementioned formats for prelicensure education were presented to faculty of a Southeastern U.S. college. Respondents demonstrated interest in detailed instruction on incorporating it into their teaching.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • The 40th Anniversary of Primary Nursing: Setting the Record StraightGo to article: The 40th Anniversary of Primary Nursing: Setting the Record Straight

    The 40th Anniversary of Primary Nursing: Setting the Record Straight

    Article

    Since its development in the 1960s, primary nursing has become the model of care delivery in many health care settings. Over time, myths have developed about primary nursing’s relevance in environments with high acuity, varying skill mixes, diverse staffing patterns, and short lengths of stay. This article addresses those myths.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Healing the Grieving Heart: A Journey Toward WholenessGo to article: Healing the Grieving Heart: A Journey Toward Wholeness

    Healing the Grieving Heart: A Journey Toward Wholeness

    Article

    We are usually drawn to what we love and need. This article describes how the author’s life experiences and her participation in grief counseling helped her find a calling helping others on their journey through the grief process, toward healing.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Strategies for Teaching Online RN-to-BSN Students the Health Impacts of Climate ChangeGo to article: Strategies for Teaching Online RN-to-BSN Students the Health Impacts of Climate Change

    Strategies for Teaching Online RN-to-BSN Students the Health Impacts of Climate Change

    Article

    The impact of climate change on human health is projected to worsen over the next century, threatening the world's population. Nurses need to be knowledgeable about the causes of climate change and its direct and indirect health consequences, to be able to provide appropriate care and to advocate for policy change. More now than ever, nursing faculty are charged with the responsibility to educate future health professionals about this important topic. This article provides an introduction to the impacts of climate change on nursing care delivery and shares the pedagogy of an introductory course developed for an online, postlicensure RN-BSN program based at a university with deep roots in environmental sustainability.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Compassionate Self-Awareness: A Hidden Resource for Nurses for Developing a Relationship With Self and PatientsGo to article: Compassionate Self-Awareness: A Hidden Resource for Nurses for Developing a Relationship With Self and Patients

    Compassionate Self-Awareness: A Hidden Resource for Nurses for Developing a Relationship With Self and Patients

    Article

    Sometimes nurses are too harsh on themselves because they truly want to provide compassionate care for their patients. This attitude can lead to feelings of emptiness, hopelessness, incompetence, frustration, and despair. In such situations, nurses can improve their well-being by developing compassionate self-awareness—becoming aware of one’s strengths and limitations without being over-critical and judgmental. This article describes the concept of compassionate self-awareness in light of the available anecdotal literature and personal experiences and argues that compassionate self-awareness can serve as a hidden resource for developing a therapeutic relationship with self and with patients.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Harold’s StoryGo to article: Harold’s Story

    Harold’s Story

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • See Me as a Person: Creating Therapeutic Relationships With Patients and Their FamiliesGo to article: See Me as a Person: Creating Therapeutic Relationships With Patients and Their Families

    See Me as a Person: Creating Therapeutic Relationships With Patients and Their Families

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Recipe for Success: Stories of Evidence-Based Practice ImplementationGo to article: Recipe for Success: Stories of Evidence-Based Practice Implementation

    Recipe for Success: Stories of Evidence-Based Practice Implementation

    Article

    Through a collaborative partnership with administrators at a university, nurse leaders at a local hospital worked to create a culture in which nurses could provide evidence-based practice (EBP). The Best Practice Series was started, and two participants’ experiences of implementing EBP in their units are described with encouraging results.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Learning Beyond the Classroom: A Student Teaches Peers About People With Mental IllnessGo to article: Learning Beyond the Classroom: A Student Teaches Peers About People With Mental Illness

    Learning Beyond the Classroom: A Student Teaches Peers About People With Mental Illness

    Article

    This essay describes an educator's desire to teach her nursing students that individuals with mental illness are people and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. During an informal discussion, she learned that one of her junior-level students has used art to educate nonnursing peers about the struggles that people with mental illness face every day and how to treat them with respect. The essay begins with a description of what the teacher hopes to convey to her students about people with mental illness. This is followed by a student essay that describes how she used photography to educate her nonnursing peers about the challenges that people with mental illness face, inviting them to act in ethical ways. In the end, both the teacher and the student are enlightened.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Implementing a Caring ModelGo to article: Implementing a Caring Model

    Implementing a Caring Model

    Article

    Caring is the essence of nursing; however, caring behaviors may not be identifiable in the health care environment today. Relationship-Based Care (RBC) provides an avenue to promote a caring environment. This article describes the process one hospital used to implement RBC in their organization.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Climate Change and Schools: Implications for Children's Health and SafetyGo to article: Climate Change and Schools: Implications for Children's Health and Safety

    Climate Change and Schools: Implications for Children's Health and Safety

    Article

    The predicted impacts of climate change are fast becoming a reality and are already adversely affecting human health and health systems. Events such as flooding, hurricanes, tornadoes, and wildfires are challenging communities to re-evaluate whether their schools provide a safe, healthy environment. Among the populations most vulnerable to the impacts of our changing climate are our children. Nurses are key to supporting mitigation and adaptation efforts to promote more resilient school environments, using approaches based on values of the common good and social justice.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Finding Community, Friendship, and SupportGo to article: Finding Community, Friendship, and Support

    Finding Community, Friendship, and Support

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Mitigating a Nursing School's Impact on Climate Change: A Quality Improvement ProjectGo to article: Mitigating a Nursing School's Impact on Climate Change: A Quality Improvement Project

    Mitigating a Nursing School's Impact on Climate Change: A Quality Improvement Project

    Article

    Background

    Mitigation is one approach to addressing climate change, which focuses on reducing carbon dioxide and greenhouse gas emissions. Nurses play a critical role in mitigation to prevent the health impacts of climate change. Recommendations to mitigate climate change in higher education institutions reflect four themes: policy, people, process, and practice. This quality improvement project aimed to mitigate a metropolitan nursing school's impacts on climate change.

    Methods

    A Sustainability Champion Workgroup was formed to address gaps identified in the organizational needs assessment. A No Waste November (NWN) campaign and a sustainability dashboard were created to engage participants and increase awareness about climate change and environmentally sustainable behaviors. A pre- and post-NWN survey, adapted from the Nurses' Environmental Awareness Tool, and waste disposal measurements over 6 weeks were used to assess the impact of these interventions.

    Results

    The post-NWN survey showed the greatest increases in mean scores for the following environmentally sustainable behaviors: biking, walking, carpooling, or taking public transportation to work; leading or participating in recycling initiatives; serving on committees that purchase sustainable supplies; and composting. Waste disposal measurements revealed a higher proportion of recycling to landfill waste during 5 out of the 6 weeks of measurement.

    Conclusion

    Nurses and higher education institutions play an important role in mitigating the human impacts on climate change through environmental sustainability initiatives. Barriers to adopting environmentally sustainable behaviors and incentives to support these behaviors also need to be examined and addressed in future projects.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Integrating Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Into HIV Care Systems in Indonesia: A Synthesis of Recent EvidenceGo to article: Integrating Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Into HIV Care Systems in Indonesia: A Synthesis of Recent Evidence

    Integrating Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Into HIV Care Systems in Indonesia: A Synthesis of Recent Evidence

    Article

    Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) has improved the health and life expectancy of people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Comorbidities and geriatric syndrome are more prevalent in patients with HIV than in the general population. As a result, people living with HIV may face unique characteristics and needs related to aging. Health-care systems need to prepare to encounter those issues that not only focus on virology suppression and cART management but also chronic non-AIDS comorbidities and geriatric syndrome. However, there are limited data on geriatric assessment among people living with HIV. The purpose of this article is to present findings of a literature search that integrate age-related issues in HIV care management for health-care professionals caring for people living with HIV in Indonesia to consider. Integrating comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) into HIV care is essential. However, some critical issues need to be considered prior to implementing CGA in HIV primary care, including social vulnerability, economic inequality, and aging-related stigma. Developing guidelines for implementing CGA in HIV primary clinics remains a priority. Studies of HIV in the aging population in Indonesia need to be conducted to understand the burden of geriatric syndrome.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Vulnerability in Health Care: A Concept AnalysisGo to article: Vulnerability in Health Care: A Concept Analysis

    Vulnerability in Health Care: A Concept Analysis

    Article

    This article introduces the concept of vulnerability in health care and explores the extant literature to determine its tenets. The debate over what constitutes ethical research is centered in part on the concept of vulnerability. The Belmont Report (National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research, 1978), the first human research ethics guideline to identify vulnerable groups, specified that those identified as vulnerable need extra protections during research participation. Identified limitations of the Belmont Report, especially with regard to racial minorities, led to the Heckler Report (Heckler, M. M., & U. S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1985), which laid the foundation for actionable steps to eliminate health disparities among racial and ethnic minority groups. The American Nurses Association's Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements (American Nurses Association, 2015), requires nurses to promote, advocate, and strive to protect the health, safety, and rights of all individuals and groups. A conceptual understanding of vulnerability allows nurses and researchers to advocate for and better serve individuals and groups deemed vulnerable. Nurse advocacy is paramount in reducing health disparities and improving health outcomes among vulnerable groups.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Environmental Health in Nursing, by Rachel KerrGo to article: Environmental Health in Nursing, by Rachel Kerr

    Environmental Health in Nursing, by Rachel Kerr

    Article
    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Community-Based Stroke Recognition Education and Response: An Evidence-Based Intervention ProjectGo to article: Community-Based Stroke Recognition Education and Response: An Evidence-Based Intervention Project

    Community-Based Stroke Recognition Education and Response: An Evidence-Based Intervention Project

    Article

    Background:

    Stroke has a significant impact on mortality and disability in the United States. This led the aforementioned master’s students to create a community-based educational intervention using stroke curriculum from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA).

    Purpose:

    The purpose of this evidence-based intervention project was to examine the effectiveness of public stroke education utilizing the AHA/ASA’s Face, Arm, Speech, Time (FAST) curriculum for stroke symptom recognition and response (Jauch, et al., 2013) at three central Connecticut senior centers.

    Design:

    This evidence-based intervention project was based on the theoretical framework of Dorothea Orem’s Self-Care Deficit Theory (Petiprin, 2016). Nurses can provide stroke based education to older adults in the community, ultimately empowering participants to recognize and respond to stroke symptoms.

    Methods:

    An educational session on the AHA/ASA FAST curriculum was presented by master’s students to groups of senior adults at three different senior centers, followed by a post teach-back session conducted by the students in smaller groups to assess learning. The total number of participants was 62 (n = 62).

    Results:

    The majority of participants (87%) were able to accurately teach back the four components of the FAST curriculum after the educational intervention.

    Conclusions:

    FAST was simple to teach and engaging for participants. Using the FAST curriculum in senior center populations increased the participants’ awareness of stroke signs and symptoms, and their willingness to activate the 911 emergency system.

    Implications for Practice:

    Educational interventions in the community with older adults can produce increased awareness of stroke symptoms and willingness to respond when necessary.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing
  • Seeing Beyond the Theory: Empowering Novice Nursing Students in Their Ability to Save Lives Through Primary and Secondary PreventionGo to article: Seeing Beyond the Theory: Empowering Novice Nursing Students in Their Ability to Save Lives Through Primary and Secondary Prevention

    Seeing Beyond the Theory: Empowering Novice Nursing Students in Their Ability to Save Lives Through Primary and Secondary Prevention

    Article

    Students in early-level nursing courses often doubt their ability to intervene effectively to impact health, much less save a life, due to lack of hands-on experience and confidence. Theoretical concepts introduced in early-level courses are abstract terms that can be difficult for the novice student to grasp. Two strategies were designed to take early-level nursing students beyond the theory and increase their awareness of the power of prevention through risk identification, advocacy, health education, and early intervention. Opportunities to apply concepts such as health education, role of the nurse, communication, growth and development, and family systems theory were provided through use of these strategies. Both assignments have been well received by early-level students and other instructors. Informal feedback indicates that these strategies can enhance students' confidence in their perceived ability to promote health and prevent adverse outcomes. The strategies presented in this article respond to the call to provide opportunities within the curriculum that facilitate application of theoretical content; they can empower novice students in their ability to impact lives and can set them up for success as they progress through the program.

    Source:
    Creative Nursing

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