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1.
Int Nurs Rev ; 33(1): 15-8, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3632954

ABSTRACT

Helen McDowell has had extensive experience working in other people's countries and helping them with their nursing organization. Here she provides useful information which should be helpful to anyone contemplating working abroad.


Subject(s)
International Cooperation , Nursing Services , Ghana , Haiti , Humans , West Indies
2.
Int Nurs Rev ; 31(6): 177-9, 1984.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6569038

ABSTRACT

The values of nursing must not get lost in the dominant medical culture. If they do, you justly risk the epithet of junior doctor. Patients do not need junior doctors. They need the knowledge and skills of both medicine and nursing. Dr. Barbara Bates, co-author of a test for family nurse practitioners, delivered at Cornell University a most important statement. This article touches on the history of the nurse practitioner movement and enlarges on its application in the West Indies.


Subject(s)
Nurse Practitioners , Community Health Services , Family Practice , Humans , Nurse Practitioners/education , Rural Health , West Indies
3.
Bull Pan Am Health Organ ; 17(4): 331-42, 1983.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6667363

ABSTRACT

PIP: In 1980, under the sponsorship of 7 Commonwealth Caribbean governments, a program to train family nurse practitioners was initiated on St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Trainees from Antigua/Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts/Nevis, Montserrat, Saint Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines were admitted to the program; these trainees were already district nurse/midwives in their home countries. The program's aim was to provide a mixture of classroom and clinical experience that would prepare the trainees for assuming an expanded role in the delivery of primary health care--a role including certain types of work traditionally performed by physicians. In all, the program provided 10 months of training on St. Vincent and the Grenadines followed by a 6-month internship period in the trainee's home country. As of July 1983, a total of 35 students had successfully completed the prescribed program of 10 months training, and all but 2 had been assigned to primary care settings in their home countries. Most of these graduated found that the job of interpreting their new roles to their communities and other health team members proved a challenge. However, the general level of their acceptance tended to improve once the internship phase terminated, so that by now a majority of the new family nurse practitioners have been well integrated into their countries' health systems. Indeed, it seems clear that the family nurse practitioner training program, designed to help with the improvement of primary health care services in the Commonwealth Caribbean, has come to play a key role in that important undertaking.^ieng


Subject(s)
Nurse Practitioners/education , Primary Health Care , Curriculum , Faculty, Nursing , Humans , West Indies , Workforce
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