149 research outputs found

    Facilitation Plan

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    Group Norms

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    The Role of Patient Room-Type, Interruptions, and Intrapersonal Resources in Nurse Performance and Well-Being

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    Interruptions create a complex challenge in health care. Because some interruptions are necessary in health care, they cannot be completely eliminated. Thus, their effects must be appropriately mitigated. To better understand predictors and consequences of interruptions, as well as factors that may mitigate their negative effects, I employed Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) theory, supplemented by additional constructs from organizational behavior and psychology to develop a model of predictors and mitigators of interruptions. Twenty registered nurses providing care on a progressive acute care unit with single- and double-occupancy patient rooms volunteered to participate in this study. The study incorporated nurse-level questionnaires, event-level surveys, observation, and medical record review to test a mediated, moderation multi-level model. Double-occupancy rooms were a significant predictor of interruptions. Interruptions mediated the effect of room-type on perceived stress, but not on the other five dependent variables (task completion rate, medication administration errors, positive affect, and negative affect). While the full mediated, moderation models were not supported, the individual nurse characteristic of conscientiousness was found to have a significant moderating effect on the effect of room-type on perceived stress. Other nurse characteristics tested, but not found to have a significant effect, were stress mindset and psychological resilience. This study fills significant gaps in interruption research by using theory to develop a single conceptual model that identifies predictors of interruptions and nurse characteristics that may mitigate their effects. Future applications of this research should expand this approach to support nurse selection and training for working in interruptive patient care environment

    Inclusive Collaboration in Community-Academic Engagement

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    Taking into consideration historical context and how it has influenced relationships with community partners.The historical legacy of a geographic place can act as an invisible barrier to the establishment of mutually-beneficial university-community partnerships. There are methods to overcome these barriers

    Inclusive Collaboration - Group Norms

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    Initiating & Sustaining Partnerships

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    Ethics & Critical Reflection

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    Are Your Findings \u27Finding\u27 Their Way to the Community? A Faculty Learning Community Approach to Broad Dissemination

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    Presented at the International Association for Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement Conference on September 27, 2016 in New Orleans, Louisiana

    CUMU Annual Conference

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    The VCU Division of Community Engagement mobilizes university-community partnerships that generate innovative solutions to societal challenges and prepares the engaged citizens of tomorrow; they host the CUMU Conference (Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan Universities) annually. Students, faculty, and community partners collaborate to effect positive change in social, organizational, and economic impact. Value Propositions are created to clearly summarize the value that students add to an organization, and the relevance and distinction. This information is complied through assessment, development, and communication
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