1.Development of Standard of Educational Equipment for Fundamental Nursing Practice in BSN Programs.
Jong Im KIM ; Nan Young LIM ; Keum Sun KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2003;10(3):415-426
PURPOSE: This study was done to develop standards for educational equipment in fundamental nursing practice courses in BSN programs. METHOD: The participants in this study were 30 professors who taught fundamental nursing in colleges or departments of nursing. The data were gathered between December 2002 and May 2003 using a questionnaire on the present state of fundamental nursing practice and the educational equipment list for fundamental nursing practice. RESULT: There was variety in the content of the courses of fundamental nursing practice in BSN programs, and the environment for fundamental nursing practice was in diverse setting. A standard for educational equipment was developed consisting of 93 pieces of equipment for fundamental nursing practice. CONCLUSION: The standard for educational equipment for fundamental nursing practice in BSN programs provides the basics for fundamental nursing practice. Of these 72 were selected and the authors suggests establishing an educational committee of fundamental nursing practice and holding a workshop on educational equipment for fundamental nursing practice in BSN programs every 5 years.
Education
;
Nursing*
;
Questionnaires
2.The Analysis of Trends in Complementary and Alternative Therapy (CAT) in Nursing Research in Korea.
Kyung Soon HAN ; Nan Young IM ; Kyung Ae SONG ; Young Hye HONG ; Jong Im KIM ; Kyung Hee KIM ; Nam Ok CHO
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2003;10(3):392-398
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to analyze trends in complementary and alternative therapy in nursing research in Korea. METHOD: The researchers examined academic theses and dissertations published from 1990 to 2002, and 151 articles were used for the analysis. RESULT: Nursing research on CAT increased rapidly from 1995. Articles with quantitative research designs made up 93.9% of the total and there were more experimental studies than non-experimental studies. Patients who had surgery, mental disorders, renal failure, hypertension, arthritis, dementia & cancer were the most frequently participants in studies on CAT. The type of CAT used in nursing research were mind-body therapy (65.8%), manual healing therapy (28.7%), phamacologic & biological therapy (3.7%), bioelectromagnetics (0.9%) and herbal therapy (0.9%). In 44 articles both psychological and physiological parameters were used as dependent variables. In 34 articles only physiological parameters were used and in 13 only psychological parameters. The most frequently used physiological parameters in CAT were pain, physiological function and vital signs, while the most used psychological parameters were anxiety, depression and stress. CONCLUSION: More studies about CAT are needed to extend the role and fields for professional nursing. There is a need to conduct qualitative studies in nursing about the experiences of patients who receive CAT and nurses who use CAT.
Animals
;
Anxiety
;
Arthritis
;
Biological Therapy
;
Cats
;
Dementia
;
Depression
;
Humans
;
Hypertension
;
Korea*
;
Mental Disorders
;
Mind-Body Therapies
;
Nursing Research*
;
Nursing*
;
Phytotherapy
;
Renal Insufficiency
;
Research Design
;
Vital Signs
3.Plasma Carotenoid Levels in Healthy men and Acute Cardiovascular Disease Patients in Taegu.
Sung Hee CHO ; Nan Hee LEE ; Suna IM ; Jung Gyo IM ; bok Seon BAE ; Young Sun CHOI
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 1997;2(5):728-734
Plasma carotenoid levels were compared among 64 healthy male subjects (control) and 38 patients of ischemic heart disease(IHD) and 20 ones of cerebral infarction(CI) all of whom were over 50years of age. Another 98 healthy male subjects aged 23 to 58 were selected to compare their plasma carotenoid levels by age groups, Levels of lutein, zeaxanthin and crpytoxanthin were lower in IHD(34+/-2, 13+/-1 and 62+/-7 microgram/dl)and CI(36+/-3, 12+/-2 and 41+/-6 microgram/dl)patient groups than in control group (84+/-5, 16+/-2 and 69+/-3 microgram/dl) while those of lycopene, alpha-and beta-carotene varied little among the three groups. The sum of the six carotenoid levels were levels were, therefore,highest(205+/-14 microgram/dl) in the control group followed by IHD(155+/-15 microgram/dl) and CI(128+/-17 microgram/dl) patient groups, Among the 98 healthy male subject for the age group study, levels of the three major carotenoids increased with age from the twenties to the fifities ; lutein, from 64+/-6 to 89+/-8 microgram/dl, cryptoxanthin, 57+/-8 to 73+/-4 microgram/dl and beta-carotene were more significantly correlated(r=0.30 to 0.61, p<0.01), whereas levels of lycopene and alpha-caroteme were significantly(r=0.21 - 0.23, p<0.05) correlated.
beta Carotene
;
Cardiovascular Diseases*
;
Carotenoids
;
Cerebral Infarction
;
Daegu*
;
Heart
;
Humans
;
Lutein
;
Male
;
Myocardial Ischemia
;
Plasma*
4.A Comparison of Learning Objectives in Fundamentals of Nursing between 2000 and 2004 year.
Nan Young LIM ; Kyeong Yae SOHNG ; Young Hee SHON ; Jong Im KIM ; Mee Ock GU ; Kyung Hee KIM ; Hwa Soon KIM ; Hoon Jung PAIK ; Young Soon BYEON ; Yoon Kyoung LEE
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2005;12(3):278-283
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare changes in learning objectives in Fundamentals of Nursing which were established between 2000 and 2004. METHOD: 2000, 2004 learning objectives were analyzed with frequencies and percents. RESULTS: There was an increase in the total number of learning objectives used in 2004(n=534) over 2000(n=527). In 2004 compared to 2000, there was an increase in learning objectives related to nursing process, need of oxygenation, need of nutrition, need of temperature regulation, need of activity and exercise, need of comfort, medication, preoperative care. According to Bloom's taxonomy, learning objectives established in 2004, mainly consisted of three domains, 35.5% for comprehension, 23.6% for synthesis, 20.4% for knowledge. Changes in learning objectives established in 2004 compared to 2000 decreases in the comprehension domain and increases in the synthesis domain. CONCLUSION: The learning objectives established in 2004 showed remarkable change when compared to those established in 2000. But the learning objective domains in Bloom's taxonomy were distributed unevenly. For better learning objectives in Fundamentals of Nursing, constant revision will be needed.
Classification
;
Comprehension
;
Learning*
;
Nursing Process
;
Nursing*
;
Oxygen
;
Preoperative Care
5.Education on Nosocomial Infection Control within the Content of Courses in Fundamentals of Nursing.
Nan Young LIM ; Kyeong Yae SOHNG ; Young Hee SHON ; Jong Im KIM ; Mee Ock GU ; Kyung Hee KIM ; Hwa Soon KIM ; Hoon Jung PAIK ; Young Soon BYEON ; Yoon Kyoung LEE
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2005;12(1):66-72
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to explore the content related to nosocomial infection control in the course on Fundamentals of Nursing. METHOD: Participants were 49 faculty who were teaching courses in Fundamentals of Nursing in universities and colleges in Korea. The questionnaire was composed of 55 items related to nosocomial infection control. RESULTS: Eighteen items out of 55 items were taught in more than 80% of the universities and colleges. These included principles of infection control, principles and effect of hand washing, method of hand washing, hand scrubs, and donning sterile gown and gloves. CONCLUSION: The most effective interventions for infection control, including asepsis, hand washing, infection control for urinary catheterization, and infection control for IV sites were taught in most universities and colleges. However, the time assigned for teaching these items and the importance placed on practice were not considered sufficient.
Asepsis
;
Cross Infection*
;
Education*
;
Hand
;
Hand Disinfection
;
Infection Control
;
Korea
;
Nursing*
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Urinary Catheterization
;
Urinary Catheters
6.The Nurses' Experiences of Clinical Practice.
Moon Ja SUH ; Haeng Mi SON ; Hyun Sook KANG ; Sung Bok KWON ; Joo Hyun KIM ; Young Sook PARK ; Eun Hee LEE ; Nan Young IM ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Sung Ai CHI
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 2002;14(4):564-572
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to describe qualitatively the entities of nurse's experiences in general hospitals and to suggest basic data guiding research on developing Standards of clinical nursing practice in Korea. METHOD: Fourteen nurses working at general hospitals with over 300 beds in Seoul were interviewed in-depth until saturation using tape-recorders and transcription. RESULT: The central theme of clinical nursing practice experienced by subjects was "being with clients" that means accepting client's personal character, solving client's needs and providing client-centered nursing. A also "being with clients" was felt to be the responsibility of nurses which was learned from their nursing schools. The nursing strategies performed in order to be with patients were proving skillful nursing techniques, accepting, educating, emotional support, advocating, and self-reflecting, the subjects experienced somewhat problematic affects such as difficulties in interpersonal relationship, work overload, negative image of nursing, deficit of self-confidence for nursing actions, poor working conditions, and unfair treatment. Nurses at the hospital practiced with pride when they felt that they were accepted by clients. CONCLUSION: Further research is needed to analysis problems in clinical practice and the comparison of nurses' experiences of clinical practice, with nurses' experiences in various settings.
Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Nursing
;
Schools, Nursing
;
Seoul
7.Research Trends in the Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing: Based on Analysis of the Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing from 2001 to 2007.
Kyeong Yae SOHNG ; Jong Im KIM ; Dong Won CHOI ; Ae Kyung KIM ; Seung Kyo CHAUNG ; Kyunghee KIM ; Sun Nam PARK ; Hoonjung PAIK ; Nan Young LIM ; Sung Ok CHANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2008;15(3):262-273
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to analyze articles published in the Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing from 2001 to 2007. METHOD: Three hundred articles were analyzed using descriptive statistics. The focus was on research type, methodolgy and keywords. RESULTS: Thirty percent of the research was supported financially. Ninety-four percent was quantitative research and of these the majority were surveys (73.2%). The rate of adoption for hypotheses in experimental studies were 55.07% but only 3% of the research included conceptual framework. The most common settings for data collection were clinical settings (51.99%), followed by community settings (43.71%). For data analysis, descriptive statistics (27.5%), t-test (17.1%), ANOVA (15.3%) and chi-square (7.9%) were most frequently used. Keywords were categorized into four nursing metaparadigms : human-beings, health, nursing, and environment. The most frequently used domain was health. CONCLUSION: The number of research papers published in the Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing has increased and the quality has improved compared with articles published before 2001 year. Research topics varied and were mostly conducted on the basis of logical positivism.
Adoption
;
Data Collection
;
Logic
;
Nursing Research
;
Statistics as Topic
8.An Analysis of Research Trends Published in the Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursing (JKAFN) based on Knowledge Development Classifications of Nursing: 2006 Year of Publication Articles in JKAFN.
Kyeong Yae SOHNG ; Jong Im KIM ; Nan Young LIM ; Sung Ok CHANG ; Kyu Eun LEE ; Seung Kyo CHAUNG ; Kyung Hee KIM ; Hoon Jung PAIK ; Sun Nam PARK ; Dong Won CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2007;14(2):150-156
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to identify the nature the research trends of articles published in the Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursing (JKAFN). METHOD: Comparison analysis between articles in JKAFN (Volume 13, Number 1-3) and articles in the Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing (Volume 36, Number 1-3, 5-7) based on knowledge development classification was used to identify the nature of research trends in JKAFN. RESULTS: Based on comparison with Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing, research trends in JKAFN were dominant; in personal knowledge in the pattern of knowing in nursing, in the desiderative focus in cognitive needs for nursing epistemology, in advancing of various aspects of nursing in the focus of knowledge, and practice domain in the domains for nursing. CONCLUSION: The major focuses on research trends in JKAFN were nursing practice, actions of nurses in practice and practice guideline applicable in nursing education.
Classification*
;
Education, Nursing
;
Humans
;
Nursing*
;
Publications*
9.Investigation of Espoused Theories in Nursing Practice.
Moon Ja SUH ; Hae Sook KIM ; Eun Hee LEE ; Young Sook PARK ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Hyun Sook KANG ; Nan Young IM ; Joo Hyun KIM ; So Woo LEE ; Bok Hee CHO ; Myung Hwa LEE ; Sung Ai CHI ; Yang Sook HAH ; Young Hee SON ; Sung Bok KWON ; Hee Jin KIM ; Jin A CHOO
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 2001;13(1):53-69
As a nursing practice involves nurses'actions in a specific context of health care, this study has focused on exploring the espoused theories in nursing practice within the action science perspectives. Espoused theories are the belief, principles, and rationale expressed by the practitioner as guiding her/his actions in a situation of practice. The data were analysed qualitatively and 25 elements of espoused theories of nursing action were identified and clustered into 6 categories. The 25 elements of espoused theories are as follows: The clinical nurse worked in wholistic and individual nursing, focussed on the patient's needed, comfort and supportive nursing (5 theories of nursing goal); excellent skills, knowledge based, assessment and data collection, explaining, educating or a scientific basis(6 theories of nursing intervention): advocacy, value oriented, treatment, accountability and commitment(4 theories of nursing ethics); human respect, partnership, trust(3 theories of patient-nurse relationship) : knowledgable, accumulated clinical experiences and personally lived experiences, positive perspectives(4 theories of nurse), role of intervention, rewarding, peer relationship(3 theories of situations). The above mentioned espoused theories are similar to that of nursing textbooks which students learned through basic nursing education and almost the same as the Acts ofa Nurse in Korean. However, we are doubtful whether nurses actually do as they think. Therefore, it is recommended to review the theories-in-use in order to find any discrepancies between the espoused theories and the reality of nursing actions.
Data Collection
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Education, Nursing
;
Humans
;
Nursing*
;
Reward
;
Social Responsibility
10.Actual Disinfection and Sterilization Control in Korean Healthcare Facilities.
Sun Young JEONG ; Jeong Hwa CHOI ; Eun Kyoung KIM ; Su Mi KIM ; Hee Jung SON ; Nan Hyoung CHO ; Ji Youn CHOI ; Eun Suk PARK ; Jin Hee PARK ; Ji Young LEE ; Soon Im CHOI ; Jin Ha WOO ; Og Son KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2014;21(4):392-402
PURPOSE: This study was done to investigate the status of disinfection and sterilization in healthcare facilities. METHOD: A survey of 193 Korean healthcare facilities was conducted from February 8 to March 7, 2013. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, chi2 test, Fisher's exact test, one-way ANOVA, Scheffe with SPSS WIN 18.0. RESULTS: Of the healthcare facilities 93.2% had specific guidelines for disinfection/sterilization, but only 47.9% had a committee on disinfection/sterilization for decision-making, less than half (42.7%) conducted regular monitoring of actual practices, while 83.9% had established procedures for recovery in case of problems with the disinfection process and 89.0% kept records and archives of disinfection practices. Cleaning process, selection of chemical disinfectants and process of disinfection and sterilization were found to be inadequate in some healthcare facilities. Perception score for adequacy of medical instruments was 8.10, environmental disinfection was 7.20, and sterilizer management was 8.45 out of a possible 10. CONCLUSION: Compared to larger institutions, smaller healthcare facilities had less effective disinfection and sterilization management systems, while some facilities showed inadequate practices for medical equipment and general sterilization. Better academic and state-level support is recommended for smaller facilities in order to establish a better system-wide management system.
Delivery of Health Care*
;
Disinfectants
;
Disinfection*
;
Sterilization*