Relational Coordination

Relational Coordination
Author: Clare Lamontagne
Publisher:
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

The purpose of this study was to describe and measure student nurses' and nursing faculty experiences and perceptions of relational coordination during their most recent clinical experience in a hospital setting. The complexity of healthcare settings in the United States necessitates a coordinated approach to patient care in order to meet the divergent needs of its citizens. Healthcare students and professionals need to be prepared to work collaboratively and communicate proficiently and effectively. The theory of relational coordination states that, in a well-functioning organization, members of the healthcare team engage in frequent, timely, accurate, and problem-solving communication and have high levels of shared knowledge, shared goals, and mutual respect. This descriptive, exploratory study, conducted between May 2012 and December 2013, utilized Gittell's relational coordination instrument to explore the relational coordination experienced by nursing students at several levels in their program in two pre-licensure schools of nursing in Massachusetts, which included a community college offering an associate degree in nursing and a university offering a bachelor of science degree in nursing. Participants were a convenience sample from each of these institutions. Nursing students and faculty in these programs completed the study survey. Data were collected through Survey Monkey. An analysis of variance and thematic review were used for data analysis. The analysis of variance performed to analyze student nurse reports of relational coordination with other student nurses, unlicensed assistive personnel, staff nurses, and nursing faculty in traditional clinical hospital settings revealed significant results. Post-hoc analyses revealed that student nurses in the traditional clinical setting reported lower relational coordination scores with staff nurses than those in the dedicated educational unit (p = .015). This study indicates that both nursing faculty and student nurses are experiencing ineffective communication in some clinical environments. Since student nurses in this study reported that increased time and familiarity with staff improved communication and relationships, nurse educators should develop educational models that increase that opportunity.

Mentoring in Nursing

Mentoring in Nursing
Author: Sheila C. Grossman, PhD, FNP-BC, APRN, FAAN
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2007-02-19
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0826153860

2007 AJN Book of the Year Winner! Designated a Doody's Core Title! Mentoring in Nursing will help inspire a more cohesive, flexible, and empowered nursing force, whether in academia, the hospital unit, or health care facility. Featuring: Definitions and components of the mentoring process Models and strategies: classic, multiple, and peer mentoring; precepting, coaching, or shadowing models Mentor and mentee perspectives Best practices in nurse mentoring, including multicultural competency Mentoring evaluation tools "It is incumbent then on all of us in the helping professions to be cognizant of the need for continued support and guidance of the elders, but the elders must also listen and learn from the young, and the young must help each other if the profession's covenant with the public is to be kept."--From the Foreword by Grayce Sills, PhD, RN

Impact of Academic Appointment on Learning Guide Perceptions of Support who Teach Undergraduate Nursing Students on a Dedicated Education Unit

Impact of Academic Appointment on Learning Guide Perceptions of Support who Teach Undergraduate Nursing Students on a Dedicated Education Unit
Author: Donna Koestler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2014
Genre: College teachers, Part-time
ISBN:

Surveyed learning guides (that is, those adjunct clinical nursing faculty and clinical nurses who guide undergraduate nursing students) in a Dedicated Education Unit (DEU), a collaborative partnership between a school of nursing and a community healthcare agency. The Support Instrument for Nurses to Facilitate the Learning of Others (SINFLO) was used to survey learning guides in the states who are members of the Southern Regional Education Board, plus Portland, Oregon, to determine the support services for learning guide respondents with academic appointment (that is, adjunct faculty status) versus those without academic appointment. The SINFLO was interrelated with the Roy Adaptation Model (RAM) theory of nursing to determine the proportions of respondents with and without academic appointment that achieved adaptation in the RAM areas of role performance, nursing care group, interdependence, and self-concept.

Faculty Perceptions of Human Patient Simulation and Student Learning for Clinical Practice

Faculty Perceptions of Human Patient Simulation and Student Learning for Clinical Practice
Author: Sherry Silvia
Publisher:
Total Pages: 12
Release: 2013
Genre: Curriculum planning
ISBN:

Human patient simulation has become an integral facet in preparing student nurses for practice across the United States. However, it was not known how well human patient simulation augments the critical thinking and skill acquisition that is required for safe, component nursing practice as perceived by the nursing instructors who are required to utilize this form of technology in the classroom. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to explore how the human simulation interactive environment influenced the execution of safe, competent nursing practice as a means of enhancing critical thinking and skill acquisition for undergraduate nursing students as perceived by undergraduate nursing educators in the state of Arizona. The study population was 14 baccalaureate nursing faculty who had experience with the use of simulation in the classroom. Data collection consisted of interviews and optional qualitative questionnaires from these nursing faculty plus field notes for primary data collection. Secondary data of existing information on the use of simulation in baccalaureate nursing programs in the state of Arizona was also used. Student involvement theory was used for the theoretical framework that guided this study. Four themes emerged pertaining to safe environment, enhancement of student learning for safe clinical practice, assisting with critical thinking skills, and helps with skill acquisition through repetition. The results provide practitioners and faculty with a better understanding of how student nurse learning is influenced by human patient simulation and its use in safe, clinical practice. Further research on this