keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639849/group-concept-mapping-for-health-professions-education-scholarship
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan C Mirabal, Darcy A Reed, Yvonne Steinert, Cynthia R Whitehead, Scott M Wright, Sean Tackett
While explicit conceptual models help to inform research, they are left out of much of the health professions education (HPE) literature. One reason may be the limited understanding about how to develop conceptual models with intention and rigor. Group concept mapping (GCM) is a mixed methods conceptualization approach that has been used to develop frameworks for planning and evaluation, but GCM has not been common in HPE. The purpose of this article is to describe GCM in order to make it more accessible for HPE scholars...
April 19, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38638521/advancing-equity-in-cross-cultural-psychology-embracing-diverse-epistemologies-and-fostering-collaborative-practices
#42
REVIEW
Gulnaz Anjum, Mudassar Aziz
Psychology, and cross-cultural psychology (CCP) in particular, plays a pivotal role in understanding the intricate relationship between culture and human behavior. This paper sheds light on the challenges of inequity and marginalization, especially concerning scholarship from the Global South, which have roots in historical colonial practices. It highlights how intellectual extractivism and the predominance of Western research methodologies often overlook the contributions of Global South scholars and indigenous ways of knowing...
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632918/examining-the-mental-health-impacts-of-climate-change-on-young-people-in-canada-a-national-cross-sectional-survey
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Breanne Aylward, Ashlee Cunsolo, Susan Clayton, Kelton Minor, Madison Cooper, Susan Chatwood, Sherilee Harper
BACKGROUND: Climate change poses a substantial threat to the mental wellbeing of young people. Population-level research is urgently needed to help inform policies and interventions to ensure that young people are not burdened by long-term mental health impacts from climate change. We sought to identify the prevalence, distribution, and factors associated with climate change-related mental and emotional health outcomes among young people (aged 13-34 years) in Canada. METHODS: This study is part of a larger cross-sectional survey, which examined mental and emotional health responses to climate change among individuals aged 13 years or older from across Canada...
April 2024: Lancet. Planetary Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632915/coming-together-as-a-whole-lessons-from-connecting-across-sectors-cultures-and-contexts-to-elevate-efforts-for-planetary-health
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margot Parkes, Angel Kennedy, Tannis Reynolds, Jonathan Doyon, Diana Kutzner
BACKGROUND: Addressing complex and interconnected ecological, social, and health issues necessitates upstream, solutions-oriented, and whole-systems thinking. Specifically, exploring what it means to live in reciprocity with the planet and all living systems, now and for generations to come, can have a crucial role in advancing planetary health. METHODS: In this presentation, we show findings from four gatherings that we co-designed and co-hosted to connect communities, lands, waters, climate, and health...
April 2024: Lancet. Planetary Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632889/using-narratives-to-correct-politically-charged-health-misinformation-and-address-affective-belief-echoes
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Helen M Lillie, Chelsea L Ratcliff, Andy J King, Manusheela Pokharel, Jakob D Jensen
BACKGROUND: In May 2020, news outlets reported misinformation about the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) related to COVID-19. Correcting misinformation about outbreaks and politics is particularly challenging. Affective belief echoes continue to influence audiences even after successful correction. Narrative and emotional flow scholarship suggest that a narrative corrective with a positive ending could reduce belief echoes. Therefore, this study investigated the efficacy of a narrative corrective with a relief ending for correcting misinformation about the CDC...
April 18, 2024: Journal of Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38629804/judicial-actors-understanding-of-the-mental-health-impacts-of-intimate-partner-violence-a-scoping-review
#46
REVIEW
Susan Lynn Heward-Belle, Parveen Azam Ali, Julieta Marotta, Debbie Hager, Michaela Rogers, Lynette Stevenson
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a global public health issue that has grave physical and mental health consequences for millions of women. The judicial system plays a critical role in responding to IPV principally through the criminal justice system, family law, and/or child welfare jurisdictions. However, victims/survivors who interact with the legal system report negative experiences. An under-researched area of scholarship is the degree to which judicial actors understand the mental health impacts of IPV on victims/survivors and how they apply that knowledge in practice...
April 17, 2024: Trauma, Violence & Abuse
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38628815/exiting-after-brexit-public-perceptions-of%C3%A2-future-european-union-member-state-departures
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph Ganderson
Public opinion scholarship suggests that Europeans broadly interpret Brexit as a cautionary fable rather than an encouraging blueprint to follow. Yet, Brexit singularly demonstrates the possibility of European disintegration, and is but one of multiple recent crises that have brought the potential for member state departures into focus. Drawing on new survey data from 16 countries and using logistic regressions, this article charts Europeans' perceptions of the likelihood future EU exits over the next decade...
2024: West European Politics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627908/evaluation-of-nurse-reported-missed-care-in-a-post-anesthesia-care-unit-a-mixed-methods-study
#48
REVIEW
Laura Mun Tze Heng, Darshini Devi Rajasegeran, Siew Hoon Lim
BACKGROUND: Nurse-reported missed care (NRMC) is considered as any significant delay or omission in provision of nursing care. AIM: (i) Evaluate the frequency, types, and reasons for NRMC in the Post-anesthesia Care Unit (PACU). (ii) Evaluate associations between nurse demographic and workload factors with NRMC. (iii) Explore nurses' perception of NRMC in the PACU. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted in the PACU in a tertiary acute care hospital over 3 months...
April 16, 2024: Journal of Nursing Scholarship
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626144/the-mobilisation-of-professional-identity-a-scoping-and-lexical-review
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ann Dadich, Stephanie Best
Interprofessional care obliges different healthcare professions to share decision-making and sometimes, practices. Given established hierarchies, it can be difficult to promote interprofessional care, partly because of the need to reshape professional identities. Despite interest in effective interprofessional care, there is limited research on how professional identity can be mobilised to promote it. A scoping review as well as lexical review of academic publications was conducted to address this void. After searching seven academic databases and screening the identified publications, 22 publications met the inclusion criteria...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626011/reproductive-coercion-and-abuse-in-intimate-relationships-women-s-perceptions-of-perpetrator-motivations
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura Tarzia, Mandy McKenzie
Reproductive coercion and abuse is a hidden and poorly recognised form of violence against women. It refers broadly to behaviours that interfere with or undermine a person's reproductive autonomy, specifically to promote or prevent pregnancy. Reproductive coercion and abuse can involve physical, sexual, financial or psychological abuse in order to achieve these aims, and is overwhelmingly perpetrated by men against women. As an emerging field of scholarship, conceptual understanding of reproductive coercion and abuse is still in its infancy; however, it is often described as being linked to coercive control...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625709/how-nurse-faculty-in-saudi-arabia-view-their-competencies-in-all-aspects-of-the-faculty-role-a-descriptive-study
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fadiyah Jadid Alanazi, Rose A Rossi
This study used a quantitative descriptive survey with a sample of 92 participants to assess perceived nurse faculty competency in their role at Saudi Arabian universities. Participants' perceptions overall were highly positive in the areas of teaching, scholarship, and service competencies. Participants reported less competence in the areas of scholarship and service when they started in their role. Orientation and a mentor relationship with senior faculty were reported to aid in their transition to the faculty role...
April 17, 2024: Nursing Education Perspectives
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625248/upper-secondary-school-tracking-and-major-choices-in-higher-education-to-switch-or-not-to-switch
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sovansophal Kao, Phal Chea, Sopheak Song
This study aims to investigate the characteristics of students who switch versus those who do not switch when they transition from upper secondary to higher education. The data from 1338 students randomly selected from 21 HEIs in Cambodia in 2020 found that upper secondary school students are more likely than not to switch academic majors when they enter higher education. The tendency to switch is more common for female students in science-track, most of whom chose non-STEM majors such as business, management, accounting and finance...
June 12, 2023: Educ Res Policy Pract
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38620101/the-waves-conceptualizing-covid-19-as-an-event-through-one-particularly-contested-metaphor
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nick Rekenthaler
This paper bridges scholarship on events with that on metaphors, positing metaphors as a proxy for competing "forms of eventfulness." Focusing specifically on the "wave" metaphor, I draw from 471 Governor's Covid-19 Briefing transcripts across ten governors-five Democratic, five Republican-from the year 2020 to identify two competing forms of eventfulness with respect to the Covid-19 pandemic. As I show, using both discourse analytic techniques and simple text counts, Democratic governors take up the "wave" metaphor to present what I call "cascading" eventfulness, defined by multiple conditional moments of rupture, or "waves...
June 27, 2023: Poetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38619561/re-examining-geospatial-online-participatory-tools-for-environmental-planning
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie M Minde, Andrea K Gerlak, Tony Colella, Anna M Murveit
Geospatial online participatory tools, or geo-OPTs, are increasingly used worldwide for engaging the public in planning. Yet, despite growth in the adoption and use of geo-OPTs, and the growing scholarship to accompany it, our understanding of their ability to support public participation in environmental planning is still underdeveloped. In this paper, we investigate the application of a geo-OPT by the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), a leading water management agency in the United States, in three contextually and geographically diverse cases...
April 15, 2024: Environmental Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38619471/perceived-personal-and-contextual-impunity-conceptualization-antecedents-and-implications-for-workplace-misconduct
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Min Young Lee, Katie L Badura, Bradford Baker, Elad N Sherf
Scholarship on impunity has centered around quantifiable prosecutions related to criminal acts that often occur outside of the workplace. We offer insights into the psychological experience of impunity by shifting the focus to organizational settings and embedding impunity within discussions of workplace misconduct. We distinguish between (a) perceived personal impunity, which reflects employees' belief that they will not face punishment for their own misconduct; and (b) perceived contextual impunity, which reflects employees' belief that their organization will not punish employees for their misconduct...
April 15, 2024: Journal of Applied Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38618846/grappling-with-the-inclusion-of-patients-and-the-public-in-consensus-building-a-commentary-on-inclusion-safety-and-accessibility-comment-on-evaluating-public-participation-in-a-deliberative-dialogue-a-single-case-study
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Davina Banner, Katrina Plamondon, Nelly D Oelke
Deliberative dialogue (DD) may be relatively new in health research but has a rich history in fostering public engagement in political issues. Dialogic approaches are future-facing, comprising structured discussions and consensus building activities geared to the collective identification of actionable and contextualized solutions. Relying heavily on a need for coproduction and shared leadership, these approaches seek to garner meaningful collaborations between researchers and knowledge users, such as healthcare providers, decision-makers, patients, and the public...
March 13, 2024: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38617821/accidental-paradiplomats-the-curious-case-of-ontario-school-board-budgets-and-canadian-soft-power-projection
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael P A Murphy
From the earliest studies of soft power in International Relations, the importance of educational exchanges has been well-established. Studies of international education in the context of Canadian soft power often draw on cases from the higher education sector. This article argues that greater attention should be paid to the K-12 level, especially as budgetary pressures in Ontario's education system are leading school boards to rapidly expand their international student recruitment efforts. Although this is not an example of intentional soft power projection, it nevertheless represents an important reminder that subnational actors may accidentally become paradiplomats whose actions have consequences on the international level...
March 2024: International Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38615484/towards-a-social-harm-approach-in-drug-policy
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
George Christopher Dertadian, Rebecca Askew
In this paper, we explore how the social harm approach can be adapted within drug policy scholarship. Since the mid-2000s, a group of critical criminologists have moved beyond the concept of crime and criminology, towards the study of social harm. This turn proceeds decades of research that highlights the inequities within the criminal legal system, the formation of laws that protect the privileged and punish the disadvantaged, and the systemic challenge of the effectiveness of retribution and punishment at addressing harm in the community...
April 13, 2024: International Journal on Drug Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38615340/characterizing-nursing-time-with-patients-using-computer-vision
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carolyn Sun, Caroline Fu, Kenrick Cato
BACKGROUND: Compared to other providers, nurses spend more time with patients, but the exact quantity and nature of those interactions remain largely unknown. The purpose of this study was to characterize the interactions of nurses at the bedside using continuous surveillance over a year long period. METHODS: Nurses' time and activity at the bedside were characterized using a device that integrates the use of obfuscated computer vision in combination with a Bluetooth beacon on the nurses' identification badge to track nurses' activities at the bedside...
April 14, 2024: Journal of Nursing Scholarship
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38614675/consistent-scholarship-standards-among-dnp-prepared-faculty-needed-actionable-insights
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jayne Jennings Dunlap, Julee Waldrop, Rosalie Mainous, Cindy Zellefrow, Cindy Beckett, Bernadette Mezurek Melnyk
DNP-prepared faculty report challenges and barriers to achieving success in academic roles when criteria for promotion includes scholarship. The purpose of this evidence-based initiative was to explore thoughtful scholarship standards for DNP-prepared faculty which can be adapted and transferred across academic institutions with the goal of elevating faculty scholarship. Given a paucity of available research evidence, a review and synthesis of non-research evidence was conducted. DNP scholarship standards from high-ranking intuitions were critically appraised, and this evidence, along with the diverse and collective expertise of the authors, was translated into recommendations for an inclusive model of rigor for DNP-prepared faculty scholarship...
2024: Journal of Professional Nursing: Official Journal of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing
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