1.Comparison of Job Performance, Job Satisfaction and Job Stress of Child Health Nurse Practitioners by Roles in the Work Place.
Hyejung LEE ; Eunjoo HUH ; Sanghee KIM ; Kieun KIM ; Minjeong SEO
Child Health Nursing Research 2015;21(3):253-260
PURPOSE: Child Health nurse practitioners (CHNPs) in Korea have important roles in disease management and health promotion for children and adolescents. Yet, practices of CHNPs licensed and employed in hospitals have not been adequately identified. Thus, in this study the scope of practice by CHNPs and job satisfaction and stress were investigated and compared according to the CHNPs' position in the working place. METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional survey design was used. All 53 licensed CHNPs participated in the mail survey which included a 71-item questionnaire on job performance and job satisfaction and a job contents questionnaire. Descriptive statistics, chi2 test, independent t-test and Mann-Whitney U test were used to compare CHNPs employed as nurse practitioner (NP) and CHNPs employed as staff nurses. RESULTS: Compared to CHNPs employed as staff nurses, CHNPs employed as NPs more frequently provided education, environment management, coordination and research in their practice areas. No significant difference was found in job satisfaction between the two groups except for the administration and income subdomains. Only the physical exertion subdomain in job stress was stressful to CHNP employed as staff nurse. Conclusions: Job performance of CHNPs in Korea needs to be revised to include more practical practice in education, coordination, and research related areas. CONCLUSIONS: Job performance of CHNPs in Korea needs to be revised to include more practical practice in education, coordination, and research related areas.
Adolescent
;
Child
;
Child Welfare*
;
Child*
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Disease Management
;
Education
;
Health Promotion
;
Humans
;
Job Satisfaction*
;
Korea
;
Nurse Practitioners*
;
Pediatric Nurse Practitioners
;
Physical Exertion
;
Postal Service
;
Statistics, Nonparametric
;
Task Performance and Analysis
;
Workplace*
2.Role and Effectiveness of Nurse Practitioner in Neurosurgical Field.
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 1996;25(7):1377-1382
The purpose of this article is to identify and explain the role and effectiveness of nurse practitioners(NPs) in the field of neurosurgery. The role of nurse practitioner has expanded over the past 15 years in the areas of administration, clinical activities, counseling, and surgical assistance. One primary activity of the NPs in our department is the frequent periodic neurological examination and rapid detection of deteriorating critical patients. They also improve the rapport between the patients and neurosurgery service and cover wevere manpower shortage or resident staffs. The department of neurosurgery in the hospital can maintain adequate coverage for the neurosurgical patients without increasing the number of residents. The author believes that NPs can improve the quality of care and outcome in a cost-effective manner. Concerns with acceptance and the role of neurosurgical NPs are clearly no longer on issue.
Counseling
;
Humans
;
Neurologic Examination
;
Neurosurgery
;
Nurse Practitioners*
3.Role-Identity of Home Care Nurse Practitioners.
Sung Jae KIM ; Myung Sun YI ; Young EUN ; Moon Hee KO ; Joo Hyun KIM ; Dong Ok KIM ; Haeng Mi SON ; Kyung Sook CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(1):103-113
INTRODUCTION: It is important to understand the nature of the identity through the live experiences of Home Care Nurse Practitioner(HCNP) because the role identity of a professional is constructed by continuous social interactions, This study aims to understand the construction of the role identity of HCNP. METHOD: Data was collected from 12 hospital based HCNPs. This study involved two focus group discussion sand four in-depth individual interviews. The main question was "what is the role of HCNP?" The debriefing notes and field notes were analyzed using consistent comparative data analysis method. RESULT: First, Home care (HC) is a small clinic. HCNP brings it to home to provide various services. Second, HC is the real nursing and HCNP is the 'genuine' nurse who actualizes the essence of nursing in practice. Third, HC is empowering activity to promote self-care ability of the patients and their caregivers. Forth, HC is like the dish-spinning required high-level mastery and HCNP is an expert who provides the most appropriate services to the patients. CONCLUSION: HCNPs have the role identity as a highly qualified professional who delivers services from hospital to home, actualizes the essence of nursing in practice, empowers the patients and their caregivers to have self-efficacy to recover, and offers the most appropriate nursing care.
*Nurse's Role
;
*Nurse Practitioners
;
Humans
;
*Home Care Services
;
Female
;
Adult
4.Role-Identity of Home Care Nurse Practitioners.
Sung Jae KIM ; Myung Sun YI ; Young EUN ; Moon Hee KO ; Joo Hyun KIM ; Dong Ok KIM ; Haeng Mi SON ; Kyung Sook CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(1):103-113
INTRODUCTION: It is important to understand the nature of the identity through the live experiences of Home Care Nurse Practitioner(HCNP) because the role identity of a professional is constructed by continuous social interactions, This study aims to understand the construction of the role identity of HCNP. METHOD: Data was collected from 12 hospital based HCNPs. This study involved two focus group discussion sand four in-depth individual interviews. The main question was "what is the role of HCNP?" The debriefing notes and field notes were analyzed using consistent comparative data analysis method. RESULT: First, Home care (HC) is a small clinic. HCNP brings it to home to provide various services. Second, HC is the real nursing and HCNP is the 'genuine' nurse who actualizes the essence of nursing in practice. Third, HC is empowering activity to promote self-care ability of the patients and their caregivers. Forth, HC is like the dish-spinning required high-level mastery and HCNP is an expert who provides the most appropriate services to the patients. CONCLUSION: HCNPs have the role identity as a highly qualified professional who delivers services from hospital to home, actualizes the essence of nursing in practice, empowers the patients and their caregivers to have self-efficacy to recover, and offers the most appropriate nursing care.
*Nurse's Role
;
*Nurse Practitioners
;
Humans
;
*Home Care Services
;
Female
;
Adult
5.A Study for Curriculum Development for Advanced Nurse Practitioner Program.
Won Jung CHO ; Tae Wha LEE ; Soyaja KIM ; Soon Bok CHANG ; Won Hee LEE ; Gwang Suk KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2002;32(6):917-928
PURPOSE: The traditional nursing roles have become increasingly blurred. Nurses are now working in different ways and at higher levels of practice that enable nurses to adapt their roles and take on new responsibilities. The advanced role of nurses requires a different kind of master-level prepared education. METHOD AND RESULT: This article describes an curriculum development process in preparing registered nurses for their advanced nurese' roles in the area of acute adult health nursing, geriatric nursing, pediatric nursing, neonatal intensive care nursing and oncology nursing. Several important issues to be solved regarding introduction of APN were also discussed. CONCLUSION: The curriculum that was proposed in the study will equip nurses to meet the challenges of future healthcare provision and will be a model to other areas of nursing practice and curriculum development.
Adult
;
Atrial Natriuretic Factor
;
Critical Care Nursing
;
Curriculum*
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Education
;
Geriatric Nursing
;
Humans
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Neonatal Nursing
;
Nurse Practitioners*
;
Nursing
;
Oncology Nursing
;
Pediatric Nursing
6.Study of Subjective View on the Meaning of Well-dying Held by Medical Practitioners and Nursing Students: Based on Q-Methodology.
Seon Young KIM ; Sung Soun HUR ; Boon Han KIM
Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 2014;17(1):10-17
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to examine understanding of the meaning of well-dying and types of such views held by medical practitioners and nursing students. METHODS: The Q-methodology was used to analyze the subjectivity of each item. The P-sample was made up of 22 medical practitioners or nursing students. The P-sample was instructed to rate 33 statements using a 7-point scale to obtain forced normal distribution. They were asked to make extra comments on the statements that were placed on both ends of the distribution curve. The PC-QUANL Program was used for the factor analysis of the collected data. RESULTS: The participants had three types of meaning of well-dying. Total variance explained by these types was 57.97%" where type 1 was "reality-oriented", type 2 "relationship-oriented" and type 3 "obeying-the-nature". CONCLUSION: The participants' subjective views on well-dying influences their medical practice on patients who are facing death. Therefore, medical practitioners should have profound insights concerning life and death. To that end, a training program is needed to help medical practitioners develop a proper view on well-dying by subjectivity type.
Education
;
Humans
;
Nurse Practitioners
;
Students, Nursing*
;
Terminal Care
7.The Difference of the Nurses' Perception on the Importance and Performance of Rehabilitation Nursing Service.
Ji Won PARK ; Yeon Ok SUH ; Jung In LEE ; Jeong Wha KIM
Korean Journal of Rehabilitation Nursing 2009;12(1):30-38
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare the rehabilitation nursing services what nurses recognize to be important and what they do in practice of the industrial workers. METHOD: The subjects were 150 nurses who were working at the industrial hospital. The questionnaire was made up with 43 items about the perception on importance and performance of rehabilitation services. RESULT: The highest services in the perception on importance and performance subscale were physical and therapeutic services. The highest difference between perception on importance and performance was the social and occupational services. The perception on importance of rehabilitation services had positive correlation with performance. The group take care of general patients had a higher level of perception on importance than the other group, and level of performance had significant difference with age and position. CONCLUSION: We need to develop the strategy for promoting the performance of services that recognize it will be important services, but not to do. Further study on system for promoting the nurse practitioner who responsible for rehabilitation nursing.
Humans
;
Nurse Practitioners
;
Occupational Health
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Rehabilitation Nursing
8.A Study on the Projection of Critical Care Advanced Practical Nurses(APNs).
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 2003;15(2):287-295
PURPOSE: This descriptive study was conducted to project the number of critical care APNs needed in critical care units in an acute care hospital setting, up to the year 2020. METHOD: Necessary data and information were collected from various funded reports, professional literature, web-sites and personal visits to national and private institutions. The demand of critical care APNs were projected based on two critical care APNs per critical care units. RESULT: The projected number of critical APNs for the critical care units in acute care hospital settings as follows: 1) The total projected number of critical care APNs needed for critical care units were 1,270 in 2001. 2) By the year 2020, total number of projected critical care APNs needed in critical care units will be 1,080-1,700. CONCLUSION: In order to match the supply to the need, the professional organization should direct their efforts toward enacting legislation. Educational systems should identify strategies in initiation of critical care APN programs in masters level as well as standardizing curriculums across the programs.
Critical Care*
;
Curriculum
;
Financial Management
;
Humans
;
Nurse Clinicians
;
Nurse Practitioners
;
Societies
9.Comparison of Job Tasks and Task Elements of Korean Nurse Anesthetists by Type of Medical Institution: Hospital, General Hospital and Higher General Hospital.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2013;19(2):239-253
PURPOSE: This study was done to identify job tasks and task elements of Korean nurse anesthetists according to type of medical institution. METHODS: A job task scale which consisted of 9 job tasks and 40 task elements was developed. Data were collected from December, 2009 to February, 2010 from 182 nurse anesthetists who were working in medical institutions (response rate: 75.8%). RESULTS: Forty-eight percent of nurse anesthetists were independent from anesthesiologists in anesthetic practice. Preanesthetic nursing assessment was much more frequent in small hospitals than in general hospitals (p<.05), and anesthetic nursing intervention, administering the anesthetics, monitoring the patient's status during anesthesia, and provision of safety and compliance with anesthetic ethics were much more frequent in general hospitals than medical centers (p<.001). There were no differences among the medical institutions for job tasks in post-anesthetic nursing interventions (p=.229), administering anesthetics (p=.354) and monitoring patients' status during anesthesia (p=.099), providing safe anesthetic environment (p=.896), and management of ancillary personnel/equipment (p=.617). CONCLUSION: Results indicate that nurse anesthetists contribute significantly to anesthetic practice in small hospitals and general hospitals. Therefore, it recommended that nursing leaders make efforts to enact legal nurse anesthetist-related policies for safe and high quality anesthetic nursing care.
Anesthesia
;
Anesthetics
;
Compliance
;
Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Job Description
;
Nurse Anesthetists
;
Nurse Practitioners
;
Nursing Assessment
;
Nursing Care
10.The Current Status of Professional Medical Support Staffs in General Hospitals less than 500 Beds
Mi Kyeong JEON ; Min Young KIM ; Su Jung CHOI ; Miee SEOL ; Hee Young KIM ; Jeong Hye KIM
Journal of Korean Clinical Nursing Research 2018;24(2):197-208
PURPOSE: This study aimed to investigate the current statistics of professional medical support staffs(PMSSs) working in general hospitals with less than 500 beds. METHODS: This study was conducted on 35 general hospitals with less than 500 beds from September 11th to October 27th, 2017. RESULTS: Four hundred fifty one PMSSs were currently providing medical support. The number of clinical nurse experts was the highest among the roles, followed by Physician Assistants(PA) and Advanced Practice Nurses. The mean job satisfaction score was 3.07 out of 5. In the case of PA group, most of the delegated prescriptions were performed, however the delegated roles were not much documented in written format. The paucity of documentation requires a development of a committee for PMSSs, including a development of selection criteria and a scope of practice in each institution. CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggested the composition of a committee for PMSSs in the medical institutions and renaming the specified titles of PMSSs.
Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Job Satisfaction
;
Nurse Clinicians
;
Nurse Practitioners
;
Nursing
;
Patient Selection
;
Physician Assistants
;
Prescriptions