Managing community and neighborhood partnerships in a community-based nursing curriculum.

J Prof Nurs

Nursing Department, Calvin College, 1743 Knollcrest Circle SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49546-4403, USA.

Published: October 2006

A community-based undergraduate nursing program in a liberal arts college sought to establish partnerships with area neighborhoods to enhance the educational process of the program and the health of the neighborhoods. With the full financial and emotional support of the college administration, two unique positions were developed within the nursing department: community partnership coordinator (CPC) and neighborhood coordinator. The CPC works at the greater community level with involvement in area-wide community health ventures to provide a liaison to the community for the nursing department. The CPC coordinates area-wide student experiences, provides oversight to the community-based participatory research process, and expands scholarly opportunities for students and faculty. In addition, a neighborhood coordinator for each of the three underserved, ethnically diverse partnering neighborhoods provides an ongoing presence in the neighborhood, coordinating and teaching students as they have practicum experiences within the neighborhood. The neighborhood coordinator is also intimately involved in the neighborhood, maintaining professional relationships with neighborhood residents, leaders, agency representatives, and health care professionals. Discussion of how challenges of the roles were managed is included.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.profnurs.2006.03.008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

neighborhood coordinator
12
neighborhood
8
nursing department
8
coordinator cpc
8
managing community
4
community neighborhood
4
neighborhood partnerships
4
partnerships community-based
4
nursing
4
community-based nursing
4

Similar Publications

Point cloud registration is pivotal across various applications, yet traditional methods rely on unordered point clouds, leading to significant challenges in terms of computational complexity and feature richness. These methods often use k-nearest neighbors (KNN) or neighborhood ball queries to access local neighborhood information, which is not only computationally intensive but also confines the analysis within the object's boundary, making it difficult to determine if points are precisely on the boundary using local features alone. This indicates a lack of sufficient local feature richness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of the present study is to identify obesogenic environment profiles to find the obesogenic environment pattern for Belo Horizonte City. The current research followed the ecological approach and was substantiated by data from food shops, public sports venues, crime rates (homicides and robberies) and the rate of accidents with pedestrians. Descriptive analyses and principal component analysis (PCA) were conducted in Stata software, version 14.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neonates with congenital heart disease (CHD) who undergo cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) are at high-risk for unfavorable neurodevelopmental (ND) outcomes and are recommended for ND evaluation (NDE); however, poor rates have been reported. We aimed to identify risk factors associated with lack of NDE. This single-center retrospective observational study included neonates < 30 days old who underwent CPB and survived to discharge between 2012 and 2018.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: With the rise in the older population, it has become important to understand the relationship between oral frailty and drug use to consider appropriate medical interventions and drug use for older persons.

Objective: To clarify the relationship among oral frailty, drug use, and other patient backgrounds and to identify relevant factors using information from patient questionnaires and pharmacy medication history records.

Methods: This cross-sectional study involved community-dwelling older adults.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Falls and fall-related injuries among older adults in Singapore are a serious health problem that require early intervention. In previous research, exercise interventions have been effective in improving functional outcomes and reducing falls for a broad group of older adults. However, results from multi-domain, multi-component falls prevention programs for high fall risk older adults in the community remain equivocal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!