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Experiences of professional nurses with regard to accessing information at the point-of-care via mobile-computing devices at a public hospitalBenjamin, Valencia January 2013 (has links)
Mobile computing devices are capable of changing how healthcare is delivered in the future, since they aim to merge and integrate all services into one device that is versatile, customisable, and portable. The aim of this study was to explore and describe the experiences of professional nurses with regard to accessing information at the point-of-care of the patient, in order to develop guidelines that could assist other professional nurses with implementing the mobile computing device for accessing information at the point-of-care of patients. To achieve the purpose of the study, a qualitative, explorative, descriptive, and contextual design was used to conduct this research – to gain an understanding of how the professional nurses experienced accessing information at the point-of-care via mobile computing devices. The study was conducted among the professional nurses employed at the public hospital, who were trained and provided with the mobile computing device for accessing information at the point-of-care for more than two years. In-depth interviewing was conducted to obtain the data. Data analysis was done using Tesch‘s method to make sense out of text and data. Four themes were identified, namely, the professional nurses‘ expression of various experiences regarding the training received; the need for support in implementing the mobile computing device; the accessing of information at the point-of-care as beneficial for educational purposes; and the accessing of information at the point-of-care as beneficial to patient care. Two main guidelines were developed. The study concludes with recommendations made with regard to the areas of nursing practice, education and research. Throughout the study, the researcher abided by the ethical considerations. The aspects of trustworthiness implemented in this study, included dependability, credibility, transferability and confirmability (Holloway & Wheeler, 2010:298).
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A study of the interdependence of medical specialists in Quebec teaching hospitals /Gosselin, Roger January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Designing and developing an intervention to maximise the coping resources of doctors working with trauma patients at Johannesburg General Hospital06 November 2008 (has links)
M.A. / This research aimed to design and develop an intervention that would maximise the coping resources of doctors working with trauma patients at Johannesburg General Hospital. Intervention Research methodology was used in order to achieve this objective. The study was divided in to three phases, namely, Diagnosis, Feedback and Discussion and Evaluation. The initial intervention comprised the Diagnostic as well as the Feedback and Discussion phase. The findings from the Diagnostic phase suggested that the doctors who had been working in the unit for less than three months, as well as the doctors who had less than four years medical practice experience, were most likely to show areas of vulnerability. This vulnerability related to their under-use of coping resources accompanied by elevated negative mood states, as identified by the Coping Resource Inventory and the Profile of Mood States questionnaire respectively. Other groups of doctors that shared this vulnerability included interns, medical officers, females and single doctors. The Feedback and Discussion phase brought to light themes relating to the stressors that the doctors’ experience in their work context. These themes along with the results of the Evaluation phase where used in order to re-design the Intervention for future use with doctors working with trauma patients. The findings from the Evaluation phase also confirmed that the doctors found the intervention to be beneficial.
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Training the trainer: A manual for Kaiser Permanente educators who teach employees to use computer systemsWard, Gary Ray 01 January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Student nurses' experience of clinical accompaniment in a public hospital in Gauteng ProvinceMntambo, Selina Ntombizodwa 11 1900 (has links)
Clinical practice is the core of nursing education during which the student is socialized
into the nursing profession. During this period, there is transfer of knowledge and skill
from qualified nurses and other members of the multidisciplinary team to student
nurses. The purpose of this study is to describe and explore student nurse’s
experiences of clinical accompaniment in a public hospital in Gauteng Province by
means of a qualitative approach that included the exploratory, descriptive and
contextual study. Three focus group interviews were conducted with students and one
with clinical accompanists. Qualitative methods included categorizing and coding. The
major findings of the research revealed that participants regarded relationships and
communication as important for clinical accompaniment. Both student nurses and unit
supervisors expected nurse facilitators to accompany students in clinical settings; but
some hospital staff members did not perceive clinical accompaniment to be their task. / Health Studies / M.A. (Public Health)
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Factors affecting voluntary nursing staff turnover in Mengo HospitalKatamba, Henry Stanley 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between perceived availability of opportunities for promotion, training, career progression, existing management style and voluntary staff turnover intention among the nurses working in Mengo Hospital. A quantitative, descriptive correlational design was used. Data collection was done using structured questionnaires. Full time staff nurses (N= 235) were surveyed. The findings revealed that all the four variables were significantly and negatively correlated to the intention to leave and predicted 16.8 percent of the variance in intention to leave scores. Management style was the strongest predictor of intent to leave (14.5%). Nurses perceiving their managers as participatory had lower intention to leave. To retain qualified personnel, hospital administrators should focus on participative management style and career development programs that address the needs of the staff and the hospital / Public Health / M.A. (Public Health)
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The development of a retention model for scarce-skilled professionals in the health sectorReddy, Shiksha 11 1900 (has links)
The shortage of skilled professionals in the health sector has been an ongoing problem. This has resulted in poor service delivery and ultimately increased patient deaths. The primary objective of this study was to develop a conceptual model to retain scarce skilled professional workers in the health sector. An exploratory study was conducted which included both professionals and non-professionals in the pathology sector. Recruitment was done from a population of 207 employees. In total 188 employees responded, of which 116 were professionals and a comparator group of 72 being the non-professionals. The study was conducted in three phases. In the first phase, quantitative data collection methods such as the job diagnostic survey, career orientation inventory, organisational commitment questionnaire and intention to quit questionnaire were used to assess the characteristics of the groups of interest. The relationship between the independent and dependent variables were calculated. The results revealed that only a few of the traditional predictors influenced retention in the professional group. The predictors worked much better for the non-professional group. It was concluded that traditional retention strategies are not suitable to retain professionals in the health sector. The second and third phases utilised qualitative methods. The second part of the study related to identifying factors which retain professional staff. Following interviews with 15 professionals, ten themes were identified which relate to the retention of professionals. The third phase of the study consisted of interviews with 3 managers, and this was to determine what the managers can do to influence retention. A retention model for the professionals was then developed. This model not only contributes to the body of knowledge, but is also a useful managerial tool to manage professionals in the health sector / Graduate School of Business Leadership (SBL) / D.B.L. (Business Leadership)
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Student nurses' experience of clinical accompaniment in a public hospital in Gauteng ProvinceMntambo, Selina Ntombizodwa 11 1900 (has links)
Clinical practice is the core of nursing education during which the student is socialized
into the nursing profession. During this period, there is transfer of knowledge and skill
from qualified nurses and other members of the multidisciplinary team to student
nurses. The purpose of this study is to describe and explore student nurse’s
experiences of clinical accompaniment in a public hospital in Gauteng Province by
means of a qualitative approach that included the exploratory, descriptive and
contextual study. Three focus group interviews were conducted with students and one
with clinical accompanists. Qualitative methods included categorizing and coding. The
major findings of the research revealed that participants regarded relationships and
communication as important for clinical accompaniment. Both student nurses and unit
supervisors expected nurse facilitators to accompany students in clinical settings; but
some hospital staff members did not perceive clinical accompaniment to be their task. / Health Studies / M.A. (Public Health)
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Factors affecting voluntary nursing staff turnover in Mengo HospitalKatamba, Henry Stanley 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between perceived availability of opportunities for promotion, training, career progression, existing management style and voluntary staff turnover intention among the nurses working in Mengo Hospital. A quantitative, descriptive correlational design was used. Data collection was done using structured questionnaires. Full time staff nurses (N= 235) were surveyed. The findings revealed that all the four variables were significantly and negatively correlated to the intention to leave and predicted 16.8 percent of the variance in intention to leave scores. Management style was the strongest predictor of intent to leave (14.5%). Nurses perceiving their managers as participatory had lower intention to leave. To retain qualified personnel, hospital administrators should focus on participative management style and career development programs that address the needs of the staff and the hospital / Public Health / M.A. (Public Health)
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Quality of work and work life: understanding the work ethic of medical professionals in selected hospitals in the Eastern Cape region of South AfricaKwizera, Alice Stella January 2012 (has links)
This thesis reports a study of work ethic values, beliefs and attitudes held by medical professionals in selected hospitals in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. The study was in response to the public outcry about the declining work ethic and poor service delivery in South Africa’s healthcare sector. Scholarly interest in the work ethic and its role in economic development dates back to Max Weber’s classical work, which was the starting point for my study. The German economic sociologist published his seminal essay on The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism in 1904/1905. Since that time, Weber’s ideas on the Protestant work ethic continue to inform and influence studies of the contemporary work ethic, which is thought to have become secularised. My study was informed by data collected in 2009 through a questionnaire survey and personal interviews. A total of 174 doctors and nurses, working in four urban, periurban and rural hospitals near East London, completed a self-administered questionnaire. The questionnaire replicated the Multi-Dimensional Work Ethic Profile (MWEP) developed by Miller, Woehr and Hudspeth in 2001/2002. The instrument examines seven critical dimensions of the work ethic, namely self-reliance, morality, (foregoing) leisure, hard work, centrality of work in life, not wasting time, and delay of gratification. In addition, I conducted personal interviews in the same four hospitals with 41 hospital managers, doctors, nurses, and patients to discuss their understanding of the work ethic and its practical application. The study found that both doctors’ and nurses’ overall work ethic scores on the MWEP scale were above average. Although there was no significant difference between the overall work ethic scores of the two professions, doctors scored significantly higher than nurses on the ‘hard work’ and ‘self reliance’ dimensions of the work ethic scale. In the qualitative study, the doctors’ work ethic was rated much more highly than the nurses’ by their superiors and patients; and the work ethic of nurses in the urban hospitals was rated much lower than that of their rural colleagues. In contradiction to the idea of the secularization of the contemporary work ethic, religiosity and religious beliefs were influential in the endorsement of work ethic principles. In line with the notion that ‘happy’ workers are more productive, job and life satisfaction were found to be strong correlates of the work ethic of medical professionals.
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