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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Unit managers' role in improving nursing teamwork in a mental health care facility / Mariska Elizabeth Oosthuizen–Van Tonder

Oosthuizen–Van Tonder, Mariska Elizabeth January 2014 (has links)
The nursing team in a mental health care facility is a known dynamic at every hospital, rehabilitation centre and out-patient unit which enables these units to be functional. Currently nursing teams function in a challenged environment in mental health care facilities. The National Department of Health in South Africa states that one of the priority areas in the core standards of health care is to improve values and attitudes of health care professionals. One of the ways to accomplish this is that leaders at all levels should be positive role models to staff to encourage a culture of caring and positive attitudes that supports service delivery. However, mental health care in practice is in contradiction to this ideology of how mental health should function. In reality, regular involuntary treatment, minimal patient contact with therapists, negative attitudes, pressure of beds not being available as well as regular seclusions due to unmanageable situations are experienced in practice. The aim of this study is to explore and describe the role of the nursing unit manager to improve nursing teamwork in a mental health care facility in Gauteng in order to improve the quality of health care. A qualitative, explorative, interpretive descriptive and contextual design was selected to address the research question at hand. Non-probability, purposive sampling was used. A focus group discussion was held (n=8) and graphic team sculptings were done with each participant (n=9). The state of the current nursing team was described and explored as well as the practical intervention aimed at improving nursing teamwork. Data of the focus group was analysed using content analysis. Graphic team sculptings were analysed by interpretation analysis. The results of this research study indicated that nursing teamwork is influenced by various factors that can be categorized as organisational-, unit specific- and unit manager specific factors. There might be a negative organisational culture and negative attitudes of team members. There is uncertainty in the hierarchy structures, below the unit manager that causes power struggles, this has an effect on the responsibility and accountability in the absence of the unit manager. Individual team member’s needs constant supervision and direction to complete their daily tasks. The unit managers feel like there is poor support from top management. The general ward assistants and administrative clerks is seen as part of the team, although they are not directly involved with patient care, they contribute to the teams functioning. Mental health care facilities are overcrowded and this increases the workload of the nursing team. Trust and cohesion within the teams is low with poor communication between team members due to clique formation. The unit manager plays a vital role through leadership, collaboration, fair delegation and guidance. Individualism and diversity should be embraced. The unit managers acts as a role model and leader that bring the teams together and solve problems, facilitates effective communication and involves all the team members in decision making. / MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
2

Unit managers' role in improving nursing teamwork in a mental health care facility / Mariska Elizabeth Oosthuizen–Van Tonder

Oosthuizen–Van Tonder, Mariska Elizabeth January 2014 (has links)
The nursing team in a mental health care facility is a known dynamic at every hospital, rehabilitation centre and out-patient unit which enables these units to be functional. Currently nursing teams function in a challenged environment in mental health care facilities. The National Department of Health in South Africa states that one of the priority areas in the core standards of health care is to improve values and attitudes of health care professionals. One of the ways to accomplish this is that leaders at all levels should be positive role models to staff to encourage a culture of caring and positive attitudes that supports service delivery. However, mental health care in practice is in contradiction to this ideology of how mental health should function. In reality, regular involuntary treatment, minimal patient contact with therapists, negative attitudes, pressure of beds not being available as well as regular seclusions due to unmanageable situations are experienced in practice. The aim of this study is to explore and describe the role of the nursing unit manager to improve nursing teamwork in a mental health care facility in Gauteng in order to improve the quality of health care. A qualitative, explorative, interpretive descriptive and contextual design was selected to address the research question at hand. Non-probability, purposive sampling was used. A focus group discussion was held (n=8) and graphic team sculptings were done with each participant (n=9). The state of the current nursing team was described and explored as well as the practical intervention aimed at improving nursing teamwork. Data of the focus group was analysed using content analysis. Graphic team sculptings were analysed by interpretation analysis. The results of this research study indicated that nursing teamwork is influenced by various factors that can be categorized as organisational-, unit specific- and unit manager specific factors. There might be a negative organisational culture and negative attitudes of team members. There is uncertainty in the hierarchy structures, below the unit manager that causes power struggles, this has an effect on the responsibility and accountability in the absence of the unit manager. Individual team member’s needs constant supervision and direction to complete their daily tasks. The unit managers feel like there is poor support from top management. The general ward assistants and administrative clerks is seen as part of the team, although they are not directly involved with patient care, they contribute to the teams functioning. Mental health care facilities are overcrowded and this increases the workload of the nursing team. Trust and cohesion within the teams is low with poor communication between team members due to clique formation. The unit manager plays a vital role through leadership, collaboration, fair delegation and guidance. Individualism and diversity should be embraced. The unit managers acts as a role model and leader that bring the teams together and solve problems, facilitates effective communication and involves all the team members in decision making. / MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
3

The Effect of Family Sculpting on Perceptual Agreement Among Family Members

Jessen, John Bruce 01 May 1979 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of family sculpting on perceptual agreement among family members. Thirty families, each consisting of a father, a mother, and a child twelve years old or older, from areas of northern Utah and eastern Idaho participated in the study. The following instruments were administered to all individuals: a biographical questionnaire containing items regarding age, sex, occupation, education, number of years married for parents, and birth order position for children; the Interpersonal Check List in which each family was to describe him/herself and the other members of the family; the Family Life Questionnaire which measures satisfaction in the family; and, finally, the experimental group was also administered the Subjective Check List which is a self report measure of the subject's experience with the experimental treatment. Three hypotheses were made regarding the effect that family sculpting would have on perceptual agreement among family members in the experimental groups: There would be no significant difference between experimental and control groups in terms of perceptual agreement among family members after family sculpting as measured by the Interpersonal Check List. There would be no significant difference between the low-satisfaction experimental qroup and the control group in terms of perceptual agreement among family members after family sculpting as measured by the Interpersonal Check List. There would be no significant difference between the high-satisfaction experimental group and the control group in terms of perceptual agreement among family members after family sculpting as measured by the Interpersonal Check List. To test the hypotheses, analyses of covariance were computed for pre and posttest scores on all eight scales of the Interpersonal Check List, and on the Family Life Questionnaire. It was found that when the pretest means were held constant there was a difference on posttest means between .the group which received family sculpting and the group that did not, on five of the twenty-four analyses. As a result of these findings all three hypotheses were rejected. However, notwithstanding a difference did exist, an examination of the unadjusted and adjusted means showed paradoxical results in that the level of perceptual agreement for the group which received family sculpting increased in three instances and decreased in two instances. Thus, it was determined that family sculpting may have facilitated changes in the perceptions of family members, however, it was not found to be effective in increasing perceptual agreement among family members . Further consideration would suggest that, in terms of a therapeutic approach, these possible changes in perception may be of value in breaking down maladaptive family communication patterns and establishing more adaptive ones.
4

Seeing the wood for the trees : the experience of genograms and family sculpting during clinical psychology masters training

Meese, Debra Gail 04 October 2006 (has links)
This study seeks to explore students’ subjective and collective experience of an experiential family therapy module within the Clinical Psychology Masters training programme. It looks at the perceptions of nine trainee therapists who used genograms and family sculpting to present their family of origin. The study takes place after the completion of the practical internship year with the purpose of exploring relevant emotional, cognitive, social and therapeutic effects of this module. A literature survey reveals that the use of genograms and family sculpting during training has received little research interest as most studies have primarily focused on their use during therapy with clients and in supervision. There is a scarcity of literature available that pertains directly to psychologists themselves and their wider social context. An exploratory review has been made to supplement the literature and pertains to experiential programmes in training in general and the psychologist’s self in training. The epistemology that directs this research falls within a postmodern frame. The experience is viewed from within the broad systems perspective. This approach acknowledges the dynamic and recursive interactions which occur between and within systems, and permits a broad perspective to be taken that is inclusive rather than exclusive. A qualitative research design was selected as it lends itself particularly well to the study of the ‘lived realities’ of people within their context and allows the information gained from the study to guide the research process. Semi-structured open-ended in-depth interviews were used as they allow for greater freedom and fewer restrictions regarding direction for the participant. A thematic analysis was carried out in order for the central themes of the experience to emerge. These themes were discussed extensively and integrated with the literature available. The multigenerational family presentation seems to create greater awareness of patterns and roles and these insights have a pervasive impact in many contexts. Understandably, the trainees feel emotionally overwhelmed as they become both observer and observed, viewing their interaction from a third-person perspective. This awareness of process results in a loss of spontaneous response and initial debilitation which is associated with feelings of loss and isolation. The self-exploratory behaviour gives rise to a reflexive reconstruction of self as a result of the access to new meanings regarding the dynamics and relationships within the family system, which enhances understanding of the complex interplay of systems, and ultimately facilitates the processes of integration, repair and resolution. / Dissertation (MA (Clinical Psychology))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Psychology / unrestricted

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