1.Vaccination learning experiences of nursing students: a grounded theory study.
Eshagh ILDARABADI ; Hossein Karimi MOONAGHI ; Abbas HEYDARI ; Ali TAGHIPOUR ; Abdolghani ABDOLLAHIMOHAMMAD
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2015;12(1):29-
PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore the experiences of nursing students being trained to perform vaccinations. METHODS: The grounded theory method was applied to gather information through semi-structured interviews. The participants included 14 undergraduate nursing students in their fifth and eighth semesters of study in a nursing school in Iran. The information was analyzed according to Strauss and Corbin's method of grounded theory. RESULTS: A core category of experiential learning was identified, and the following eight subcategories were extracted: students' enthusiasm, vaccination sensitivity, stress, proper educational environment, absence of prerequisites, students' responsibility for learning, providing services, and learning outcomes. CONCLUSION: The vaccination training of nursing students was found to be in an acceptable state. However, some barriers to effective learning were identified. As such, the results of this study may provide empirical support for attempts to reform vaccination education by removing these barriers.
Education
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Humans
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Iran
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Learning*
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Nursing*
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Problem-Based Learning
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Schools, Nursing
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Students, Nursing*
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Vaccination*
2.Teaching methods in community health nursing clerkships: experiences of healthcare staff in Iran.
Eshagh ILDARABADI ; Hossein KARIMI-MOONAGHI ; Abbas HEYDARI ; Ali TAGHIPOUR ; Abdolghani ABDOLLAHIMOHAMMAD ; Azizollah ARBABISARJOU
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2014;11(1):25-
PURPOSE: Healthcare staff educate nursing students during their clerkships at community health nursing programs. Their teaching methods play an important role in nursing students' acquisition of competencies; however, these methods have not been studied thoroughly. Thus, this study aims to describe, interpret, and understand the experiences of healthcare staff's teaching methods in clerkships at a community health nursing program. METHODS: This study was conducted using purposeful sampling and semi-structured interviews with 13 members of the staff of three urban healthcare centers in Iran. The data were analyzed through qualitative content analysis and thematic analysis. RESULTS: Multiplicity of teaching was identified as the main category of teaching method, and the five subcategories were teaching through lecture, demonstration, doing, visits and field trips, and readiness. The most common method used by the healthcare staff was lecturing. CONCLUSION: The healthcare staff used multiple methods to teach students in the nursing clerkship of the community health program, which was the strength of the course. However, they should be familiar with, and utilize additional methods, such as discussion rather than lecture.
Clinical Clerkship
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Community Health Nursing*
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Delivery of Health Care*
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Humans
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Iran*
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Nursing
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Students, Nursing
;
Teaching*
3.Pain in β-thalassemia major patients: an important yet neglected issue
Amir Emami ZEYDI ; Abbas HEYDARI ; Hossein KARIMI MOONAGHI
The Korean Journal of Pain 2018;31(1):58-59
No abstract available.
Humans
4.Strategies for sustaining and enhancing nursing students’ engagement in academic and clinical settings: a narrative review
Mohammad Reza GHASEMI ; Hossein Karimi MOONAGHI ; Abbas HEYDARI
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2020;32(2):103-117
Students’ engagement in academic-related learning activities is one of the important determinants of students’ success. Identifying the best teaching strategies to sustain and promote nursing students’ engagement in academic and clinical settings has always been a challenge for nurse educators. Hence, it is essential to provide a set of strategies for maintaining and enhancing the academic engagement of nursing students. The purpose of this review was to explore and summarize the strategies that nurse educators use to sustain and promote nursing students’ engagement in academic and clinical settings. A narrative literature review was conducted. CINAHL (nursing content), ProQuest, Medline, the Cochrane, Google Scholar, and Scopus were searched. Of 1,185 retrieved articles, 32 teaching strategies were identified and extracted from the nursing literature. We used thematic analysis approach to organize these strategies into five main categories as follows: technology-based strategies (15 articles), collaborative strategies (10 articles), simulation-based strategies (two articles), research-based strategies (two articles), and miscellanea learning strategies (three articles). As a general comment, these strategies have the potential to promote nursing students’ engagement. Among the strategies discussed in this review, the use of technology, particularly the response system and online learning, was more common among nursing educators, which is in line with today’s advances in smart technologies. The collection presented in this review can be used as a starting point for future research to evaluate the effectiveness of an educational intervention on the academic engagement of nursing students. Nevertheless, due to the lack of experimental studies, the optimal strategies remain to be elucidated through future high-quality experimental study.