1.Clinical Experiences as Related to Standard Precautions Compliance among Nursing Students: A Focus Group Interview Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior.
Asian Nursing Research 2015;9(2):109-114
PURPOSE: During clinical placements, nursing students who come into close contact with patients and provide nursing interventions may be exposed to harmful pathogens. However, little is known about nursing students' experiences with standard precautions (SP) in clinical settings. METHODS: We conducted interviews with six focus groups of nursing students (n = 38) from two universities in South Korea. The focus group interviews each took 90e120 minutes and included 6e7 participants from two different universities. The meetings used semi-structured interview protocols. Qualitative content analysis was employed. RESULTS: Four themes and 9 subthemes were identified: (a) attitudes (knowledge deficit, sensitivity), (b) subjective norms (negative role models, classroom and in-field gaps, blind spots), (c) perceived behavioral control (psychological barriers, physical barriers, lack of information), and (d) intention (changes in compliance awareness). CONCLUSIONS: These focus groups revealed that many nursing students worked in vulnerable environments and risked pathogen exposure. Nursing students expressed the importance of SP but reported witnessing many instances of failure to comply with established measures. Several barriers were explored as reasons of SP noncompliance. By removing the barriers presented in this study, nursing students would be able to perform their duties in a safe clinical environment.
Focus Groups
;
*Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
Humans
;
Infection Control/*methods
;
Interviews as Topic
;
*Nursing Methodology Research
;
Republic of Korea
;
Students, Nursing/*psychology
;
Universities
2.Problems of Clinical Nurse Performance Appraisal System: A Qualitative Study.
Nasrin NIKPEYMA ; Zhila ABED_SAEEDI ; Eznollah AZARGASHB ; Hamid ALAVI_MAJD
Asian Nursing Research 2014;8(1):15-22
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to explore problems of clinical nurse performance appraisal system. METHODS: This study employed a descriptive qualitative approach. The participants were purposively selected from clinical nurses working across all of the hospital units in a large metropolitan teaching hospital in Tehran, Iran in 2012. Data were collected using five focus group interviews, which were audio taped. The number of participants in each group ranged from 7 to 10. The semi-structured interviews were guided by a set of nondirective questions, and continued until the data reached saturation. Data were analyzed using framework analysis. RESULTS: Four major themes regarding the problems of clinical nurse performance appraisal system emerged from the analysis of textual data. These themes were contextual problems, problems related to performance appraisal structure, problems related to performance appraisal process and those related to performance appraisal results. CONCLUSION: The findings of this study reveal that the nurse performance appraisal system confronts with various problems. Some of these problems are related to organizational context while the others concerned structure, process and results of the performance appraisal system. In order to achieve high quality of patient care as the final goal of performance appraisal, changing and revision of this system is necessary.
Adult
;
*Clinical Competence
;
Employee Performance Appraisal/*standards
;
Female
;
Focus Groups
;
Humans
;
Iran
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Nurse Clinicians/*standards
;
*Nursing Methodology Research
;
Nursing Staff, Hospital/*standards
;
Qualitative Research
3.Development and Validation of a Knowledge Scale for Lymphedema in Patients with Breast Cancer.
Min Young KIM ; Eunkyung HWANG
Korean Journal of Rehabilitation Nursing 2012;15(2):117-125
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to develop and validate of a knowledge scale for lymphedema in patients with breast cancer. METHODS: 34 preliminary items were made according to literature review, then verified content validity, construct validity, and reliability of the scale. 28 items among them were confirmed through content analysis by 4 experts. After a preliminary test, a survey for 156 breast cancer patients was performed for confirming construct validity and reliability. The data were analyzed using factor analysis, independent t-test, and KR-20. RESULTS: This scale had 28 items consisting of 2 categories: prevention and self-care of lymphedema. Construct validity was confirmed by known-group technique because there were some categories consisted of just one or two items, and some mismatches between categories and items in factor analysis. Women who were educated about lymphedema scored significantly higher than women who had not (t=-3.92, p<.001). Reliability was appropriate (KR-20=.81). A percentage of correct answers was 74.6%, but it was from 31.8% to 96.1%. CONCLUSION: The study shows that this scale is reliable and valid to measure the knowledge of lymphedema. This scale can be effective to assess and educate the patients with breast cancer.
Breast
;
Breast Neoplasms
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Lymphedema
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Self Care
4.Attitude of Korean Lawyers toward Withdrawal of Life Sustaining Treatment.
Gyeong Nam LEE ; Boon Han KIM ; Hun Hee LEE
Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 2010;13(2):81-88
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to study the attitude of Korean lawyers toward withdrawal of life sustaining treatment, and compare and analyze different types of their attitudes. METHODS: Research design of this project was Q methodology approach. The study population was 24 lawyers, aged from 32 to 69 years. Q sample to investigate the attitude of the lawyers toward withdrawal of life sustaining treatment included 34 statements obtained from literatures, TV debate, and depth interviews of 5 lawyers among the lawyers included. After listening to the purpose and method of the study, the 24 lawyers agreed to fill out a survey asking sociodemographic information, and the information was distributed in 9 scale Q-sample. RESULTS: The collected data were processed through QUANL PC program and sorted into 5 types as follows: The first type was 'Choosing to withdraw life sustaining treatment', the second 'Withholding life sustaining treatment' regardless of the cost, the third is neutral type that claims that humans have the right to decide the death and life, and demands the proper legalization to protect such rights, the fourth type agrees to withdrawal of life sustaining treatment, nevertheless, admits that one has a rigt to withhold one's own life treatment, categorized as self contradiction type. The fifth type believed that 'Life and death are providential' with the faith, therefore, such authority to decide life and death belongs to God, but not human beings. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, the lawyer's attitudes toward withdrawal of life sustaining treatment were grouped into five different types as follows: 'Choosing to withdraw life sustaining treatment', 'Withholding life sustaining treatment', 'Demanding legalization', 'Self contradiction type', and 'Life and death are providential'.
Aged
;
Human Rights
;
Humans
;
Lawyers
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Q-Sort
;
Research Design
;
Withholding Treatment
5.Effects of an Early Nursing Intervention Program for Infants' Development and Mother's Child Rearing in Poverty.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2009;39(6):796-804
PURPOSE: This quasi-experimental study was performed to evaluate the effectiveness of an early nursing intervention program to support mothers of children aged 0-3 yr living in poverty. METHODS: In this study, mothers who received financial support from the government were recruited from one city and assigned to an intervention group (24) and comparison group (18). They completed a baseline questionnaire about depression, child rearing burden, agreement on physical punishment, and child temperament. Also, Denver II screening of the children was performed by the researcher. Mothers in the intervention group received a home visit intervention every two weeks for three months. At 3-months post-baseline, questionnaire and Denver II screening were reused to compare these two groups. RESULTS: Mother's depression, child rearing burden, agreement on physical punishment, and child temperament were not significantly different between the two groups. However, the percentage of depression declined only in the intervention group. Mothers in the intervention group showed higher Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) scores than mothers in the comparison group. CONCLUSION: The findings of the study show that this nursing intervention is an effective parenting program. The early nursing program for mothers with infant and toddlers in poverty is effective in promoting HOME, the child rearing home environment.
Adult
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Child Abuse
;
*Child Rearing
;
Child, Preschool
;
Depression
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Interviews as Topic
;
Male
;
Mother-Child Relations
;
Mothers/*psychology
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Parenting
;
*Poverty
;
Program Evaluation
;
Questionnaires
;
Social Support
6.Health Experience of Depressive Adolescents: Reflected from Newman's Praxis Methodology.
Young Ran KWEON ; Chung Sook LEE
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2009;39(2):217-228
PURPOSE: Guided by Newman's theory of health as expanding consciousness, this study was done to explore the health experience of adolescents having depression. METHODS: The researcher engaged in six to eight in-depth interviews with six adolescents. To begin the dialog, the researcher asked each participant to recount the first important memory he/she had. All the narrative and diagram sharing between the researcher and participants were summarized according to recognized patterns and later elaborated in following interviews based on Newman's praxis methodology. RESULTS: The significant individual pattern of early health experience was during the binding stage. At the turning point, individual patterns for participants revealed a personal journey of self-discovery and then emergence of reflecting behaviors. After the turning point, the participants changed as they evolved from the initial period of disruption and disorganization to organization at a higher level. The results suggest that adolescents who are depressive find new ways of relating to friends, family, healthcare providers, and the community by expanding their consciousness. CONCLUSION: Newman's praxis methodology is a good way of helping and studying adolescents with depression because it emphasizes participant-nurse/researcher partnership and pattern recognition as nursing practice.
Adaptation, Psychological
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Adolescent
;
*Adolescent Psychology
;
Attitude to Health
;
Consciousness
;
*Depression
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Interviews as Topic
;
Male
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Young Adult
7.Analysis of Conversation between Elderly Patients with Dementia and Nurses: Focusing on Structure and Sequential Patterns.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2009;39(2):166-176
PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to identify functional structure and patterns of dialogue sequence in conversations between elderly patients with dementia and nurses in a long-term care facility. METHODS: Conversation analysis was used to analyze the data which were collected using video-camera to capture non-verbal as well as verbal behaviors. Data collection was done during February 2005. RESULTS: Introduction, assessment, intervention, and closing phases were identified as functional structure. Essential parts of the conversation were the assessment and intervention phases. In the assessment phase three sequential patterns of nurse-initiated dialogue and four sequential patterns of patient-initiated dialogue were identified. Also four sequential patterns were identified in nurse-initiated and three in patient-initiated dialogues in the intervention phase. In general, "ask question", "advise", and "directive" were the most frequently used utterance by nurses in nurse-initiated dialogue, indicating nurses' domination of the conversation. At the same time, "ask back", "refute", "escape", or "false promise" were used often by nurses to discourage patients from talking when patients were raising questions or demanding. CONCLUSION: It is important for nurses to encourage patient-initiated dialogue to counterbalance nurse-dominated conversation which results from imbalance between nurses and patients in terms of knowledge and task in health-care institutions for elders.
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
*Communication
;
Dementia/*psychology
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Long-Term Care
;
Male
;
Nurse-Patient Relations
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Video Recording
8.Understanding Qi: Its Development and Clinical Application to Nursing Practices.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2008;38(3):445-453
PURPOSE: This paper analyzed the historical origins of the Qi concept and assesses its possible contributions to the development of complementary therapy and new nursing practices. METHODS: In order to clarify the Qi concept and measure its theoretical/clinical potentials, this study analyzed both historical data and experimental research that adopt and apply the concept. These include modern/contemporary research measuring its effects in promoting mental and physical health. Using the method of cross-cultural comparison, this study analyzed diverse approaches to the Qi concept and sought to find common features among the approaches. RESULTS: A historical, cross-cultural analysis revealed several fundamental similarities between Qi theories that have developed in the east and the holistic concepts that have evolved in the western traditions. Especially, the analysis of the more recent research on the Qi concept shows ample possibilities of its future contributions to the development of new diagnostic applications and the promotion of overall human health. CONCLUSION: The historical study of the Qi concept found some key common factors in the diverse philosophical traditions in the east and the west. Considering the growing popularity of complementary therapy among health professionals and the general public, the Qi concept and its clinical applications are expected to promote human health. In this context, this research contributes to developing new nursing practices based on the concept by clarifying its philosophical origins and theoretical backgrounds.
Concept Formation
;
Humans
;
*Mind-Body Relations (Metaphysics)
;
Models, Nursing
;
Nurses/*psychology
;
Nursing Care
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Program Development
;
*Qi
;
*Yin-Yang
9.The Analysis of Intervention Studies for Patients with Metabolic Syndrome.
Eui Geum OH ; Soo Hyun KIM ; Sa Sang HYUN ; Myung Sook KANG ; So Youn BANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2007;37(1):72-80
PURPOSE: This study was to analyze the trend of research on intervention for patients with metabolic syndrome. METHOD: Using Pubmed, Medline, and CINAHL search engines, a randomized controlled trial(RCT) researching titles such as "metabolic syndrome", "intervention", "lifestyle modification", or "community-based" were collected. A total of 16 researches were analyzed based on the guidelines of the National Cholesterol Education Program-Adult Treatment Panel(NCEP-ATP III). RESULTS: 1) The total period of the intervention was from 12 to 24 weeks, the frequency was 3 to 5 times per week, and the duration of each session was from 45 to 60 minutes. The types of intervention included exercise, diet, and medication. Among these types, diet was performed most frequently. 2) The outcomes of the intervention was measured with physical aspects such as anthropometric measures, body composition, or biological markers. No studies have evaluated psychosocial outcomes such as quality of life. 3) In terms of effectiveness of the intervention, anthropometric indicators, body composition, or serological markers showed positive effects, whereas results on endothelial or urine indicators were inconsistent. CONCLUSION: Methodological research developing comprehensive therapeutic lifestyle modification programs and intervention studies are needed for patients with metabolic syndrome. In addition, effects should be evaluated with multidimensional perspectives.
Humans
;
Life Style
;
Metabolic Syndrome X/*nursing
;
*Nursing Methodology Research
;
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
;
Statistics, Nonparametric
10.Family Experiences of Living with Chronic Schizophrenic Patients: Application of Parse's Human Becoming Research Methodology.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2007;37(1):26-34
PURPOSE: This study was aimed at understanding the nature of the suffering of families with patients in mental health nursing homes and hoped to contribute to the rehabilitation process of those with a chronic mental disorder. METHOD: Research methodology was based upon Parse's human becoming research methodology. RESULTS: a) Despite the despair the family feels by the violence caused by their now-institutionalized relative, they also realize anew the importance of their role as protectors b) Although they fear social stigmatization they also try to be supportive, out of guilt feelings; c) They regret their severe rearing style and wish to be more sympathetic, d) They find courage and hope through family therapy, which leads to a better understanding of the illness, e) With hopes of rehabilitation, the family members feel happy and go through an emotional release, by sharing the pain with each other. CONCLUSION: Families of nursing home residents share a focus on the process of human-health-universe. This is a positive, 'human-becoming' process with which, based on past feelings of despair, fear, resignation, and pain, one can render meaning into his or her experiences in the present in the pursuit of love, conquest, hope, liberty and success.
Caregivers/*psychology
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Chronic Disease
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*Family Nursing
;
Family Relations
;
Humans
;
Mental Health
;
Nursing Homes
;
Nursing Methodology Research/*methods
;
Psychiatric Nursing
;
Schizophrenia/*nursing

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