Background: Qatar aspires to provide world-class healthcare comparable with Western countries. Compelling evidence demonstrating the positive effects of bachelor of nursing (BN) educated nurses on patient outcomes is creating a global demand for these graduates, particularly in contexts such as Qatar where historically RN-to-BN programs were unavailable.
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the return to education experiences of diploma educated registered nurses (RNs) undertaking a bachelor program.
Background: Qatar is one of the fastest growing countries in the Arabic region. Primary Health Care Corporation (PHCC) is the main provider of primary health services in Qatar and employs 1600 nurses. In 2014, PHCC started to migrate from paper to electronic documentation of patient records using a clinical information system (CIS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Physical inactivity is a leading global risk to health by contributing to obesity and other chronic diseases. Many chronic non-communicable diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), can be prevented and controlled by modifying lifestyle behaviors such as physical activity [PA]. However, prevalence of insufficient physical activity and obesity is high in the Middle East Region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorldwide, the literature reports that many residents in long-term care (LTC) homes are sedentary. In Canada, personal support workers (PSWs) provide most of the direct care in LTC homes and could play a key role in promoting activity for residents. The purpose of this institutional ethnographic study was to uncover the social organization of LTC work and to discover how this organization influenced the physical activity of residents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInstitutional ethnography (IE) was developed by Dorothy E. Smith, a Canadian sociologist, in the 1980s. This method of inquiry helps to uncover how the everyday experiences of people in local settings are organized by and linked to the work of others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite the benefits of physical activity, residents living in long-term care (LTC) are relatively sedentary. Designing successful physical activity and restorative care programs requires a good understanding of implementation barriers. A database search (2002-2013) yielded seven studies (nine articles) that met our inclusion criteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysical activity has been linked to positive health outcomes for frail seniors. However, our understanding of factors that influence the physical activity of residents in the long-term care (LTC) setting is limited. This article describes our work with focus groups, one component of a multi-component study that examined factors influencing the physical activity of LTC residents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 2006, the authors conducted a multisite qualitative study in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada to examine organizational and environmental factors that influence physical activity for long-term-care (LTC) residents. The article describes the results of interviews with 9 administrators from nonprofit and for-profit LTC facilities. A content analysis revealed that despite having positive views about the value of physical activity, the administrators encountered challenges related to funding, human resources, and the built (physical) environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCaring for an individual in the home is inherently complex. The physical environment, family dynamics and the cognitive abilities of the client and family members are only a few of the factors to be considered in delivering services. Although targeted initiatives have been established to reduce preventable injuries and deaths in the hospital sector, there has not been a corresponding level of research or patient safety initiatives in other healthcare delivery sectors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: This paper shows patients' enactment of choice in mixed methods, multidisciplinary study on the use of bedrails as restraints.
Approach: Under the pressure of the implementation of impending legislation, patients from a Canadian elderly care rehabilitation unit were recruited to be part of this study and assigned to either a study or control group. Study group patients were exposed to a new facility policy on restraints in which bedrails were not to be used on a patient's bed except under specified conditions.
Adv Neonatal Care
October 2005
Brachial plexus injuries (BPI) are usually readily apparent at or shortly after birth. Failure of caregivers to recognize and appropriately treat BPI may contribute to the risk of life-long neuromuscular dysfunction for the infant and represents a serious medical-legal liability for the delivery provider. This article is the second in a series on BPI and provides a standard classification and a systematic guide to physical examination of the infant with suspected BPI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor seniors, an inactive lifestyle can result in declines in mental and physical functioning, loss of independence, and poorer quality of life. This cross-sectional descriptive study examined theory-of-planned-behavior, health-status, and sociodemographic predictors on exercise intention and behavior among 109 older and physically frail adults. Significant predictors of being a high versus a low active were a strong intention to continue exercising, positive indirect attitudes about exercise, and having been advised by a doctor to exercise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Neonatal Care
August 2005
Upper-arm weakness (paresis) or paralysis indicates peripheral-nerve damage to the brachial plexus, a network of lower cervical and upper thoracic spinal nerves supplying the arm, forearm, and hand. Physical findings reflect muscle paralysis from spinal nerve roots. The mechanism of injury includes maternal, obstetric, and infant factors that apply traction on or compression to the anatomically vulnerable brachial plexus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScrotal or inguinal masses may represent inguinal hernias, hydroceles, or testicular torsion and are common findings in the newborn period. The clinician is challenged to differentiate between normal, abnormal, atypical, and pathologic findings and to seek urgent surgical consultation when compromised bowel, testis, or ovary is suspected. This issue of Focus on the Physical offers a review of the embryologic development of the processus vaginalis and testicular attachments to enhance the clinician's understanding of the development of these conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStool tests for occult blood or reducing substances were introduced in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) as potential aids in the early recognition of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in high-risk neonates, and have been recommended by some as routine nursing procedures. Neither the performance characteristics of these tests with respect to NEC, nor their indirect impact, were evaluated formally before widespread adoption into clinical care. The published evidence suggests that these tests are not useful as diagnostic or screening tools.
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