Aim: To review the current nursing and midwifery contribution to leading digital health (DH) policy and practice and what facilitates and/or challenges this.
Design: Integrative literature review.
Methods: Pre-defined inclusion criteria were used. Study selection and quality assessment using the appropriate critical appraisal tools were undertaken by two authors, followed by narrative synthesis.
Data Sources: Six databases and hand searching for papers published from 2012 to February 2024.
Findings: Four themes were identified from 24 included papers. These are discussed according to the World Health Organization's Global Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery and indicate nurses/midwives are leading DH policy and practice, but this is not widespread or systematically enabled.
Conclusion: Nurses and midwives are ideally placed to help improve health outcomes through digital healthcare transformation, but their policy leadership potential is underused.
Implications For The Profession And/or Patient Care: Nurses/midwives' DH leadership must be optimized to realize maximum benefit from digital transformation. A robust infrastructure enabling nursing/midwifery DH policy leadership is urgently needed.
Impact: This study addresses the lack of nursing/midwifery voice in international DH policy leadership. It offers nurses/midwives and health policymakers internationally opportunity to: drive better understanding of nursing/midwifery leadership in a DH policy context; enhance population outcomes by optimizing their contribution; Develop a robust infrastructure to enable this.
Reporting Method: Reporting adheres to the EQUATOR network, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines.
Patient Or Public Contribution: No patient or public contribution.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11638528 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jan.16265 | DOI Listing |
Nurse Educ
December 2024
Author Affiliations: Faculty of Health, School of Nursing and Midwifery & Centre for Quality and Patient Safety Research in the Institute for Health Transformation, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia (Drs Tomlinson, Schoch, and McDonall); Faculty of Health, Deakin Learning Futures, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia (Ms Macfarlane); and Faculty of Health, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia (Mss Aryal, Kumar, and Bunker).
Nurs Open
January 2025
Institute of Health and Wellbeing, Federation University Australia, Churchill, Victoria, Australia.
Aim: The overarching aim of this study was to explore patients' falls risk awareness in hospitals using section A of the validated Self Awareness of Falls Risk Measure (SAFRM).
Design: Descriptive cross-sectional study design.
Setting: Three rural/regional hospitals in the State of Victoria, Australia.
PLoS One
December 2024
Guangzhou Development Research Institute, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou, China.
The female advantage in life expectancy sits uneasily with female disadvantage in health and well-being in later life compared to their male counterparts. This health disparity has been suggested to rest on sex difference in allostatic load (AL). We aim to delineate the sex-specific age trajectories of AL among midlife and older adults in China and to interpret the contradiction between the female advantage in life expectancy and their disadvantage in health in later life from the perspective of physiological dysregulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Nurs
December 2024
Jhpiego, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Aims: With respect to midwives and nurse-midwife populations (1) measure and (2) explore professional identity and (3) explore how the midwifery profession may be best represented in the public realm.
Design: Convergent Parallel Mixed-Methods Design.
Methods: A web-based survey was used to collect data from 860 midwives and nurse-midwives from 102 countries between February and July 2022.
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