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1.
J Adv Nurs ; 2024 Mar 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38450840

RESUMEN

AIMS: To explore youth, caregiver and staff perspectives on their vision of trauma-informed care, and to identify and understand potential considerations for the implementation of a trauma-informed care programme in an inpatient mental health unit within a paediatric hospital. DESIGN AND METHODS: We applied the Interpretive Description approach, guided by complexity theory and the Implementation Roadmap, and used Applied Thematic Analysis methods. FINDINGS: Twenty-five individuals participated in individual or group interviews between March and June 2022, including 21 healthcare professionals, 3 youth and 1 caregiver. We identified two overarching themes. The first theme, 'Understanding and addressing the underlying reasons for distress', related to participants' understanding and vision of TIC in the current setting comprising: (a) 'Participants' understanding of TIC'; (b) 'Trauma screening and trauma processing within TIC'; (c) 'Taking "a more individualized approach"'; (d) 'Unit programming'; and (e) "Connecting to the community". The second theme, 'Factors that support or limit successful TIC implementation' comprises: (a) 'The need for a broad "cultural shift"'; (b) 'The physical environment on the unit'; and (c) 'Factors that may limit successful implementation'. CONCLUSION: We identified five key domains to consider within trauma-informed care implementation: (a) the centrality of engagement with youth, caregivers and staff in trauma-informed care delivery and implementation, (b) trauma-informed care core programme components, (c) factors that may support or limit success in implementing trauma-informed care within the mental health unit and (d) hospital-wide and (e) the importance of intersectoral collaboration (partnering with external organizations and sectors). IMPACT: When implementing TIC, there is an ongoing need to increase clarity regarding TIC interventions and implementation initiatives. Youth, caregiver and healthcare professional participants shared considerations important for planning the delivery and implementation of trauma-informed care in their setting. We identified five key domains to consider within trauma-informed care implementation: (a) the centrality of relational engagement, (b) trauma-informed care programme components, (c) factors that may support or limit successful implementation of trauma-informed care within the mental health unit and (d) hospital-wide and (e) the importance of intersectoral collaboration. Organizations wishing to implement trauma-informed care should consider ongoing engagement with all relevant knowledge user groups throughout the process. REPORTING METHOD: Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research (SRQR). PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: The local hospital research institute's Patient and Family Advisory Committee reviewed the draft study methods and provided feedback.

2.
Nurs Res ; 73(3): 237-247, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38329977

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: It is uncommon to combine critical ethnography with critical discourse analysis (CDA) in health research, yet this combination has promise for managing challenges inherent in critical mental health nursing research. OBJECTIVES: This article describes a methodologically innovative way to address issues that arise in the context of critical mental health nursing research. METHODS: This article draws on two studies that each employed a combination of critical ethnography and CDA in the context of mental health nursing research, discussing the challenges and implications of this approach. RESULTS: Although the combination critical ethnography and CDA presents several challenges, it also provides a framework for researchers to sustain a critically reflective stance throughout the research process. This facilitates the process of reanalyzing and reflecting on how healthcare practices and knowledge both support and are constrained by hegemonic discourses. DISCUSSION: This combination has the potential to facilitate the production of new, emancipatory knowledge that will assist nurses in understanding issues of structural inequity within the healthcare system.


Asunto(s)
Antropología Cultural , Investigación en Enfermería , Enfermería Psiquiátrica , Antropología Cultural/métodos , Humanos , Enfermería Psiquiátrica/métodos , Investigación Metodológica en Enfermería
3.
Trauma Violence Abuse ; : 15248380231193444, 2023 Sep 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37694809

RESUMEN

Trauma-informed care (TIC) is an approach to care emerging in research and in practice that involves addressing the needs of individuals with histories of trauma. The aim of this scoping review was to examine the current literature relating to TIC interventions used in pediatric mental health inpatient and residential settings. We sought to answer the following two research questions: (a) What are the TIC interventions used in pediatric inpatient and residential treatment mental healthcare settings and what are their components? and (b) What are the implementation goals and strategies used with these TIC interventions? We conducted this scoping review according to JBI (formerly Joanna Briggs Institute) methodology for scoping reviews. We included any primary study describing a TIC intervention that was implemented at a specific site which identified and described implementation strategies used. Of 1,571 identified citations and 54 full-text articles located by handsearching, 49 met the eligibility criteria and were included, representing 21 distinct TIC interventions. We present the reported aim, ingredients, mechanism, and delivery (AIMD) of TIC interventions as well as the implementation goals and strategies used, which varied in detail, ranging from very little information to more detailed descriptions. In the context of these findings, we emphasize the complexity of TIC and of TIC interventions, and the importance of identifying and clearly reporting TIC intervention goals, intervention details, and implementation strategies. We suggest applying intervention frameworks or reporting guidelines to support clear and comprehensive reporting, which would better facilitate replication and synthesis of published TIC interventions.

4.
Health (London) ; : 13634593231185263, 2023 Jun 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37391908

RESUMEN

Significant barriers remain regarding the implementation of family-centred approaches in the domain of forensic psychiatry despite their effectiveness at increasing adherence to treatment, improving attendance to medical appointments, decreasing readmission rates and reducing episodes of relapse. We attribute these barriers to a fundamental gap in our understanding of the family function and its role within the forensic psychiatric system. Despite requesting to be included and considered as partners, some families feel excluded and sidelined, which causes distress, incomprehension and disengagement. We approached this tension at the discursive level through a critical ethnography of the Review Board and the work of Foucault on psychiatric power, which provided us with a unique opportunity to understand how the role of families are constructed and sustained in the Canadian forensic psychiatric system. To do so, we mobilized data stemming from ethnographic observations and documentary artifacts entitled 'reasons for disposition'. Data analysis allowed us to identify two discursive constructions of familial functions: (1) families as repositories of information and (2) families as supervisory agents. These results have implications for health care professionals and administrators in forensic psychiatry who are increasingly adhering to family-centred care models without questioning what such care or what such family engagement entails.

5.
J Forensic Nurs ; 19(1): 21-29, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35363647

RESUMEN

ABSTRACT: Forensic psychiatric nursing is a specialty at the junction of two well-researched intersecting systems with two mandates: criminal justice and health care. Nurses' involvement at one of the systems' points of juncture, review board (RB) hearings, has largely been left unexplored. At RB hearings, a panel of legal and healthcare professionals determines if persons unfit to stand trial (UST) or not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder (NCR) represent significant threats to the safety of the public and orders conditions aimed at keeping the community safe. The aim of this article is to present the results of a critical ethnography that explored how psychiatric and public safety discourses construct the identity of persons UST or NCR during RB hearings as well as nurses' contribution to such identity construction. The main finding is that the forensic psychiatric structure leverages nursing interventions and documentation as evidence of deviancy, so that persons UST or NCR can be objectified and produced as dangerous. Structures sustaining the forensic psychiatric system inscribe nursing care within a disciplinary scheme, rendering the care-and-custody dichotomy insufficient to explain the complex processes at play in forensic psychiatry. These findings have implications for the practice of nurses working in forensic psychiatric settings and for that of other nurses who practice on the medicolegal borderland.


Asunto(s)
Enfermeras y Enfermeros , Atención de Enfermería , Enfermería Psiquiátrica , Humanos , Psiquiatría Forense , Documentación , Enfermería Forense
6.
Nurs Inq ; 30(2): e12521, 2023 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36049045

RESUMEN

In the Canadian forensic psychiatric context, the concepts of risk and dangerousness interact, intersect, and morph into the notion of significant threat to the safety of the public. Stemming from the results of a critical ethnography of the Ontario Review Board, this article unpacks the central role of forensic psychiatric nursing, as an example of a 'psych' discipline (e.g., psychiatry and psychology), in a system that is built to produce risky persons and to legitimize their detention and supervision. By using excerpt of interviews conducted with nurses, ethnographic observations of Review Board hearings, and other documentary artifacts, the findings illustrate how rationalizations of risk and dangerousness are contingent on space, time, and observer. Depending on the time of the assessment or on the health-care professional who performs it, different elements including, but not limited to, mental illness, interpersonal relationships, financial instability, and sexual vulnerability, are relied upon in very fluid, interchangeable, and discretionary ways to justify findings of dangerousness. Such a dynamic expands the reach of psychiatry's legitimacy at identifying risky conduct and controlling risky persons to domains very loosely associated with the notion of dangerousness. The work of Foucault and Castel provides the theoretical backdrop on which rests the discussion and the implications for nursing.


Asunto(s)
Psiquiatría Forense , Trastornos Mentales , Humanos , Trastornos Mentales/psicología , Antropología Cultural , Conducta Peligrosa , Ontario
7.
Int J Health Policy Manag ; 11(3): 269-276, 2022 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32772008

RESUMEN

Engaging knowledge users (KUs) as research team members throughout the research process helps generate relevant knowledge and may improve uptake of research results. The purpose of this article is to describe how an integrated knowledge translation (iKT) approach was embedded within a master's thesis project comprising a mixed-methods systematic review. KUs were engaged in four distinct phases of the systematic review process, including (1) proposal development; (2) development of the research question and approach; (3) creation of an advisory panel; and (4) an end of study meeting to interpret findings and plan dissemination of findings. The extent of each KU's engagement on the research team fluctuated during the study. Challenges included maintaining the same KUs throughout the project and maintaining the scope of the project to align with a master's thesis. Our suggestions for optimizing graduate student iKT projects include having regular team meetings and periodically checking in with team members to encourage reflection on overall engagement and progress of the project. Overall, KUs helped create a research project designed to address their needs and provided input on how results might translate into implications for clinical practice, education, academic policy, and future research within their respective contexts.


Asunto(s)
Salud Mental , Trastornos Psicóticos , Revisiones Sistemáticas como Asunto , Humanos , Conocimiento , Trastornos Psicóticos/terapia , Estudiantes , Investigación Biomédica Traslacional
8.
Rech Soins Infirm ; 150(3): 7-22, 2022.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36609467

RESUMEN

In forensic psychiatry environments, nurses are regularly confronted with the use of restrictive measures such as chemical restraints and are forced to constantly navigate between care and social control. The debate over the ethics of coercion and the use of control measures for violence in psychiatric settings is far from resolved. The objective of this study is to understand the ethical experience of nurses in a Canadian forensic psychiatry environment when administering PRN (when required) medication against the patient's will. The experiences of 14 nurses are analyzed from a critical ethical perspective through interpretive phenomenological analysis. Across the three main categories-certainties, paradoxes, and learning-the results show that nurses must simultaneously commit their allegiance to the patient, to the justice system, and to the culture of the "total" institution. These multiple allegiances generate paradoxes that affect the way nurses actualize their professional role.


En milieu psycholégal, les infirmières sont régulièrement confrontées à l'utilisation des mesures restrictives, telles que la contention chimique, et doivent constamment naviguer entre soin et contrôle. Le débat portant sur l'éthique de la coercition et de l'usage des mesures de contrôle pour la violence en contexte de psychiatrie est loin d'être résolu. L'objectif de cette étude est de comprendre le vécu éthique d'infirmières exerçant dans un milieu psycholégal canadien au moment d'administrer un pro re nata (PRN, médicament au besoin) contre le gré du patient. Le vécu de quatorze infirmières est analysé dans une perspective éthique critique grâce à l'analyse interprétative phénoménologique. À travers les trois catégories principales, certitudes, paradoxes et apprentissage, les résultats montrent que les infirmières doivent engager simultanément leur allégeance au patient, au système de justice et à la culture de l'institution totale. Ces allégeances multiples génèrent des paradoxes qui affectent la manière dont les infirmières actualisent leur rôle professionnel.


Asunto(s)
Coerción , Enfermeras y Enfermeros , Humanos , Canadá , Violencia , Psiquiatría Forense
9.
Rech Soins Infirm ; 150(3): 79-88, 2022.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36609468

RESUMEN

Introduction: Language and communication are pivotal to the safe care and management of people with mental health disorders, particularly when these patients are linguistic minorities. Objectives/Method: To explore these experiences within linguistic minority populations by completing a literature review and qualitative interviews. Interviews were conducted in Ottawa, Canada, with francophone patients. The studies included in the review represented the international literature on linguistic minorities in general. Results: Overall, the experiences described in the published articles were similar to the participants' own experiences, suggesting that barriers to care exist even in settings mandated to provide services in both official languages. Discussion/Conclusion: There are many barriers to the provision of mental health care services, regardless of the dominant language. However, we identified an internalized sense of responsibility felt by linguistic minority patients, who feel compelled to compensate for or fill in the language gaps of providers.


Introduction: La langue et la communication sont essentielles à la sécurité des soins et à la gestion des personnes aux prises avec un trouble de santé mentale, en particulier lorsque ces personnes sont des minorités linguistiques. Objectifs/méthode: Explorer ces réalités au sein d'une population en situation minoritaire linguistique en complément d'une revue de la littérature et des entrevues qualitatives. Les entrevues ont été menées à Ottawa, au Canada, auprès de patients francophones. Les études incluses dans la revue représentaient la littérature internationale sur les minorités linguistiques en général. Résultats: Dans l'ensemble, les expériences décrites dans les articles publiés étaient semblables aux expériences vécues des participants, ce qui suggère que des obstacles aux soins existent, même dans les contextes ayant pour mandat de fournir des services dans les deux langues officielles. Discussion/conclusion: Il y a de nombreux obstacles à la prestation de services de soins de santé mentale, et ce, quelle que soit la langue dominante. Toutefois, nous avons identifié comme distinct le sentiment intériorisé de responsabilité ressenti par les patients en situation minoritaire qui se sentent obligés de compenser ou de combler les lacunes linguistiques des prestataires.


Asunto(s)
Lenguaje , Salud Mental , Humanos , Canadá , Comunicación , Servicio de Urgencia en Hospital , Investigación Cualitativa
10.
J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs ; 28(6): 995-1004, 2021 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34322957

RESUMEN

WHAT IS KNOWN ON THE SUBJECT?: Discussion and documentation of a patient's resuscitation status are essential aspects of any hospital admission, and yet, they seldomly occur in psychiatry. Nurses play an important role in resuscitation status determination by being an information broker, supporter and advocate. Persons with mental illness may be competent to engage in the determination of their resuscitation status and deserve the same respect and autonomy as other patients during this process. There are no published qualitative studies exploring healthcare providers experiences in initiating resuscitation status conversations in the psychiatric setting. WHAT DOES THIS PAPER ADD TO EXISTING KNOWLEDGE?: An in-depth qualitative understanding of the complexity of resuscitation status determination in psychiatry. The shared experiences of nurses enacting their role in resuscitation status determination with patients admitted to psychiatry. The challenges of implementing a 'one-size fits all' approach to resuscitation status policies, and the ways in which depression and/or suicidal ideation influence the process. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE?: Role clarity and improved communication between providers about resuscitation status determination in psychiatry are needed. Hospital policies for resuscitation status determination must account for the psychiatric context to ensure patients' goals of care are known and upheld. Nurses working in psychiatry should initiate and more readily engage in resuscitation status conversations. ABSTRACT: Introduction Patients with mental illness experience stigma and marginalization, which affects the quality of their health care. In most settings, end-of-life decisions, including goals of care, must be discussed with all patients upon hospital admission, including determining cardiopulmonary resuscitation preferences in the event of a medical emergency. Despite this requirement, these conversations do not routinely occur in inpatient psychiatry. By default, patients become a 'full code status', mandating life-sustaining interventions. Aim To explore how and why resuscitation status conversations occur, or do not occur, in inpatient psychiatry from the perspectives of healthcare providers. Method Qualitative descriptive study using focus groups with nurses working in psychiatry. Results Nurses' experiences with initiating and engaging in resuscitation status conversations related to Working in Psychiatry, which represents the current practices and the participants' views of the nursing role; Caring for Psychiatric Patients, which describes how fluctuating competency and suicidality influence determination; and The Influence of Physical Health Status, which details how differences in physical health status affect how healthcare providers engage in resuscitation status determination. Discussion Although the importance of completing resuscitation status conversations with patients admitted to psychiatry was expressed by participants, they seldomly occur. There is ambiguity about when and how to determine patient wishes. Implications for practice Tailored strategies are needed to ensure patients' rights to self-determination are upheld when they are admitted to psychiatry. Nurses working in this setting would benefit from education, training and support to adequately initiate and engage in these conversations.


Asunto(s)
Enfermeras y Enfermeros , Psiquiatría , Actitud del Personal de Salud , Comunicación , Humanos , Investigación Cualitativa
11.
Int J Ment Health Nurs ; 30(3): 590-609, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33694266

RESUMEN

The use of coercion in psychiatric and mental health nursing is a major challenge, which can lead to negative consequences for nurses and patients, including rupture in the therapeutic relationship and risk of injury and trauma. The concept of coercion is complex to define and is used in different ways throughout the nursing literature. This concept is defined broadly, referring to both formal (seclusion, restraint, and forced hospitalization), informal (persuasion, threat, and inducement), and perceived coercion, without fully addressing its evolving conceptualizations and use in nursing practice. We conducted a concept analysis of coercion using Rodgers' evolutionary method to identify its antecedents, attributes, and associated consequences. We identified five main attributes of the concept: different forms of coercion; the contexts in which coercion is exercised; nurses' justification of its use; the ethical issues raised by the presence of coercion; and power dynamics. Our conceptual analysis shows the need for more nursing research in the field of coercion to achieve a better understanding of the power dynamics and ethical issues that arise in the presence of coercion.


Asunto(s)
Investigación en Enfermería , Enfermería Psiquiátrica , Coerción , Humanos , Motivación , Restricción Física
12.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 44(4): 280-290, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33657021

RESUMEN

The various ways in which nurses relate and interact with patients, who are considered marginal, vulnerable, and in some ways "different," tend to revolve around the concept of othering. To date, much attention has been given to the immediate situation in which othering may take place, both in terms of process (occurring within interactions) and outcomes (exclusion and marginalization). Drawing on current literature from feminist studies and critical theory, we have drawn attention to broader historical, political, cultural, and social factors that come to shape nurse-patient relationships and propose a new dimension to the concept: structural othering.


Asunto(s)
Feminismo , Relaciones Enfermero-Paciente , Humanos
13.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (143): 118-126, 2021 Jan 13.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33485280

RESUMEN

Introduction : The caritative impact of nursing care provided in forensic mental health settings is rarely questioned.Context : Caritative nursing care is indirectly regulated by the Review Board (RB), a para-judicial court which ensures public safety.Objective : This study presents a critical reflection on the political and social effects of the RB, forensic psychiatry hospitals and practices of forensic mental health nurses.Method : The reflection is centered on the concepts of biopower, degradation ceremonies, moral career and identity (re)construction.Results : ‘Therapeutic’ nursing practices are useful for disciplinary purposes in the forensic psychiatric hospital, insofar as they permit the identification and management of dangerous persons. However, the practices also fall within the biopolitical scope of the RB, since they assist the latter in ensuring public safety.Discussion : The forensic psychiatric environment can prove problematic for nurses, requiring a double allegiance, whereby their responsibilities to patients (consent and confidentiality) and to the institution (protection of the public) can lead to tension.Conclusion : The analytical framework of the study allows for a reassessment of other presumed processes in psychiatric environments, which nonetheless constitute just as many rituals of identity (re)construction.


Asunto(s)
Psiquiatría Forense , Trastornos Mentales , Enfermería Psiquiátrica , Conducta Peligrosa , Humanos , Trastornos Mentales/enfermería , Evaluación en Enfermería
15.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (142): 53-76, 2020 12.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33319718

RESUMEN

Introduction and background : The last decade has seen a steady and rising use of coercion in mental health care, as well as an increase in the number of forms it takes. The application of these measures frequently relies on the work of nurses, but few studies have analyzed the human rights issues raised by these practices.Aim : To produce a qualitative synthesis of how human rights are integrated into the practice of nurses who use coercion in mental health care.Methodology : A systematic review of qualitative scientific literature published between 2008 and 2018 was conducted and supplemented by a meta-ethnographic analysis.Results : The analysis of the forty-six selected studies revealed four distinct themes : coercion in mental health care as a socio-legal object, issues of recognition of human rights in mental health care, role conflict experienced by nurses, and the conceptualization of coercion as a necessary evil or a critical incident.Discussion and conclusion : Further research is needed to understand the specifics of the continuum of support and control that characterizes the coercive work of psychiatric nurses.


Asunto(s)
Coerción , Derechos Humanos , Trastornos Mentales/enfermería , Atención de Enfermería , Enfermería Psiquiátrica , Antropología Cultural , Humanos , Salud Mental , Servicios de Salud Mental
16.
Glob Qual Nurs Res ; 7: 2333393620913269, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32529002

RESUMEN

There is a called-for shift to an upstream provision of palliative care as an overall care approach within a health equity perspective. Our research explored how nurses in psychiatry engage with aging patients and mortality to discern enactment of ethical dimensions of care. Drawing from tenets of interpretative phenomenological analysis, forensic and geriatric psychiatry registered nurses working at a mental health facility in eastern Ontario completed interviews for analysis. Nurses engaged with mortality through a process of recognition and through the affirmation of their values. The affirmed values are aligned with the palliative care approach and within an ethics of finitude lens in that their enactment is partly premised on the recognition of patients' accumulated losses related to human facticities (social, temporal, mortal). This research underscores preliminary insights on a process identifying care practices aligned with the palliative approach and possibilities for expanding upon an ethics of finitude lens.

17.
J Nurs Meas ; 28(1): 185-199, 2020 04 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32295857

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Trauma-informed care (TIC) acknowledges the lasting effects of trauma on individuals. The Attitudes Related to Trauma-Informed Care (ARTIC-35) scale was developed to examine healthcare providers' attitudes related to TIC. Here, we present an item-level analysis of the ARTIC-35 scale for use with nurses and compare our findings to the current ARTIC-35 structure. METHODS: Principal components analysis, qualitative inter-item analysis, and qualitative intra-item analysis of the ARTIC-35. FINDINGS: Our principal component analysis structure supported a nine-factor solution, inter-item qualitative analysis structure supported five subscales, and intra-item qualitative analysis identified 13 acceptable items and 22 items requiring revision for use with nurses. DISCUSSION: When used with nurses, there are important considerations regarding scale validity and challenges with the design of the original ARTIC-35 scale.


Asunto(s)
Actitud del Personal de Salud , Personal de Enfermería en Hospital/psicología , Psicometría/estadística & datos numéricos , Psicometría/normas , Enfermería de Trauma/métodos , Enfermería de Trauma/estadística & datos numéricos , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Encuestas y Cuestionarios
18.
Int J Ment Health Nurs ; 29(4): 590-607, 2020 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32039562

RESUMEN

Post-secondary students are at a heightened risk of psychosis, yet little is known about this population. The aim of this study was to conduct a mixed-methods systematic review of psychosis among post-secondary students, including student characteristics, overall prevalence, risk factors, interventions, and their reported experiences. Procedures were modelled on the Joanna Briggs Institute approach, while PRISMA guided conduct and reporting. A librarian created a systematic search of nine databases, and quality was assessed using JBI Critical Appraisal Tools. We pooled and analysed data according to objectives and recorded data using synthesis tables and narrative summaries. 26 articles published between 2006 and 2018 are included. The average age of participants was 21 years, and most identified as female and Caucasian. The prevalence of psychosis was often measured in a way that limited comparison across studies. Risk factors associated with symptoms of psychosis included substance use, depression, and younger age. Other risk factors trending towards a relationship included racial discrimination and anxiety. Protective factors included self-esteem and self-concept clarity. Five interventions were studied, with mixed results, and only three studies reported on the experience of students. While five promising interventions are identified, inadequate testing and replication limit confidence in their effectiveness and there is a notable deficit in qualitative evidence exploring the experiences of these students. Integrating knowledge on risk factors, interventions, and experiences of students with psychosis will help tailor and facilitate their health care while protecting their right to education.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Psicóticos , Femenino , Humanos , Recién Nacido , Trastornos Psicóticos/complicaciones , Trastornos Psicóticos/epidemiología , Estudiantes
19.
Nurse Educ Today ; 87: 104344, 2020 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31982799

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: High-quality and relevant nursing education is needed to ensure graduates meet entry to practice competencies. Despite the important role of curricula in the development of nurses and the nursing profession, there does not appear to be a consistent or widely accepted approach to nursing curriculum renewal. OBJECTIVE: To identify and synthesize existing curriculum renewal/redesign practices, create an aggregated logic model depicting an evidence-informed process for nursing curriculum renewal, and stimulate dialogue about how to keep nursing curricula relevant in an ever-changing healthcare context. DESIGN: An integrative review, modeled on the Joanna Briggs Methodology of Systematic Reviews, of the available published articles, including empirical research and discussion articles. DATA SOURCES: We searched for quantitative, qualitative, and non-research literature (English and French) on full nursing programs or curriculum revisions for pre-licensure nursing students enrolled in an undergraduate or associate degree program. Databases included CINAHL, Nursing and Allied Health, and Medline from January 2010 to January 2017. We then did a hand search for articles from January 2017 to April 2019. SYNTHESIS: Extracted data were synthesized into an aggregated logic model based on Yin's method of cross-case analysis. Data included information about the internal context, the external context, drivers, the preparatory phase, the active phase, outcomes, and evaluation methods of the described curriculum renewal process. RESULTS: Twenty articles were included, which were published between 2010 and 2018. The resulting logic model, The Ottawa Model for Nursing Curriculum Renewal, includes information on the context, process and outcomes of the renewal process, and how and when to evaluate curricula. CONCLUSION: This synthesis aids in defining the process of curriculum renewal for undergraduate nursing education. It stimulates systems level thinking and reveals gaps, such as the need for further research into curriculum evaluation. The Ottawa Model for Nursing Curriculum Renewal is a usable template to aid educators undertaking their own process of curriculum renewal.


Asunto(s)
Curriculum/normas , Bachillerato en Enfermería , Investigación en Educación de Enfermería , Humanos , Estudiantes de Enfermería
20.
J Res Nurs ; 25(8): 664-676, 2020 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34394689

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: According to the literature reviewed, although families living with a mentally ill relative often face violence, this issue has been little studied in nursing. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative research study to explore the experience of families dealing with this complex reality. We adopted Jacques Donzelot's theory of the government of family as our theoretical framework and used grounded theory as our research methodology. In total, 14 participants who had been victims of violence perpetrated by relatives with severe mental illness were interviewed. FINDINGS: Qualitative analysis led to the identification of five themes: (a) medico-legal apparatus; (b) experience of violence; (c) the family's responsibility toward the violent relative; (d) exclusion and stigmatisation; and (e) suffering and resilience. The present paper focuses on the study's central theme: the family's responsibility toward the violent relative.

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