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1.
J Prof Nurs ; 51: 97-100, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38614681

ABSTRACT

American healthcare reform efforts are driving healthcare organizations to demonstrate the ability to reduce costs while improving quality and optimizing healthcare outcomes. Nurses are the largest healthcare clinicians and need proper preparatory education to enter the profession as practice-ready clinicians; however, medical errors and reduced nursing board examination success rates highlight the need for improved nurse academic preparation standards. Evidence has elucidated an expanding nursing education-practice gap problem arising from inadequate integration of academic leadership and faculty within the clinical practice arena. The nursing education-practice gap has been exacerbated by governance structures in academia that limit opportunities for nursing faculty to remain actively engaged in clinical practice settings. To improve new graduate nurse practice readiness, healthcare quality, and cost-effectiveness, academic institutions must partner with healthcare delivery organizations within mutually beneficial models. The purpose of this article is to describe the expanding nursing education-practice gap problem in relevance to American healthcare quality and reform initiatives and to propose innovative solutions assigned with evidence-based standards.


Subject(s)
Organizations , Schools , Humans , Educational Status , Faculty, Nursing , Health Care Reform
2.
J Health Psychol ; 21(5): 770-80, 2016 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24934434

ABSTRACT

This descriptive cross-sectional study aimed to explore emotional representation and illness coherence, the understanding a person has about an illness which helps them make sense of the experience, in Russians with tuberculosis. In a secondary analysis of questionnaires from 105 Russians treated for pulmonary tuberculosis, social isolation and disease consequences were predictors of negative emotions related to tuberculosis and accounted for 49 percent of the variance. Participants who scored higher on illness coherence were less likely to experience negative emotions. Development of programs to help patients understand tuberculosis and to manage emotional responses and stigma is suggested.


Subject(s)
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Medication Adherence/psychology , Social Stigma , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Tuberculosis/psychology , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Russia/ethnology
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