69 research outputs found
Clinical simulation in Australia and New Zealand: Through the lens of an advisory group
Across Australia, innovations in simulation to enhance learning in nursing have been occurring for three decades and nursing is, and needs to be, a leading player in simulation knowledge diffusion. However, expertise is unevenly distributed across health services and education providers. Rather than build on the expertise and achievements of others, there is a tendency for resource duplication and for trial and error problem solving, in part related to a failure to communicate achievements for the benefits of the professional collective. For nursing to become a leader in the use of simulation and drive ongoing development, as well as conducting high quality research and evaluation, academics need to collaborate, aggregate best practice in simulation learning, and disseminate that knowledge to educators working in health services and higher education sectors across the whole of Australia and New Zealand. To achieve this strategic intent, capacity development principles and committed action are necessary. In mid 2010 the opportunity to bring together nurse educators with simulation learning expertise within Australia and New Zealand became a reality. The Council of Deans of Nursing and Midwifery (CDNM) Australia and New Zealand decided to establish an expert reference group to reflect on the state of Australian nursing simulation, to pool expertise and to plan ways to share best practice knowledge on simulation more widely. This paper reflects on the achievements of the first 18 months since the group's establishment and considers future directions for the enhancement of simulation learning practice, research and development in Australian nursing
The Liberal Playground: Susan Isaacs, Psychoanalysis and Progressive Education in the Interwar Era
The Cambridge Malting House, an experimental school, serves here as a case study for investigating the tensions within 1920s liberal elites between their desire to abandon some Victorian and Edwardian sets of values in favour of more democratic ones, and at the same time their insistence on preserving themselves as an integral part of the English upper class. Susan Isaacs, the manager of the Malting House, provided the parents â some of whom were the most famous scientists and intellectuals of their age â with an opportunity to fulfil their âfantasyâ of bringing up children in total freedom. In retrospect, however, she deeply criticized those from their milieu for not fully understanding the real socio-cultural implications of their ideological decision to make independence and freedom the core values in their childrenâs education. Thus, 1920s progressive education is a paradigmatic case study of the cultural and ideological inner contradictions within liberal thought in the interwar era. The article also shows how psychoanalysis â which attracted many progressive educators â played a crucial role in providing liberals of all sorts with a new language to articulate their political visions, but, at the same time, explored the limits of the liberal discourse as a whole
Snapshots of Simulation: Innovative Strategies Used by International Educators to Enhance Simulation Learning Experiences for Health Care Students
Innovations in simulation in nursing and health care continue to be developed as creative and
committed educators respond to challenges of providing pedagogically sound, engaging and
effective learning experiences for large student cohorts. Time-pressed educators may find it
difficult to network with others working in simulation-based learning, and thus, it is useful to
provide summaries or snapshots to provide a brief overview of activities in various countries
using simulation in a variety of ways.
The purpose of this paper is to profile a diverse range of innovative, cost-effective, and tested
simulation approaches that have been implemented in healthcare programs by nursing
educators from a range of countries to spark creativity. Each strategy was designed to address
contemporary and critical practice issues. They facilitate immersion in authentic clinical
scenarios, increase studentsâ awareness of cues in the environent that may compromise health
and safety, and prepare students for cultural or clinical realities that they may not routinely
encounter because of the inherent restrictions associated with clinical placements
It is time to talk about people: a human-centered healthcare system
Examining vulnerabilities within our current healthcare system we propose borrowing two tools from the fields of engineering and design: a) Reason's system approach [1] and b) User-centered design [2,3]. Both approaches are human-centered in that they consider common patterns of human behavior when analyzing systems to identify problems and generate solutions. This paper examines these two human-centered approaches in the context of healthcare. We argue that maintaining a human-centered orientation in clinical care, research, training, and governance is critical to the evolution of an effective and sustainable healthcare system
LeMone and Burke's medical-surgical nursing: Critical thinking for person-centred care
Dwyer, TA ORCiD: 0000-0001-8408-7956; Reid-Searl, KA ORCiD: 0000-0001-5808-9296This book has been designed to emphasise a person-centred philosophy to nursing, foster critical thinking and clinical reasoning, and recognise the nurse's role as an essential member of the interprofessional health care team
- âŚ