Background: Supporting resilience for nursing student success is critical to future health care. This study explored the meaning and process of resilience among Generation Z traditional baccalaureate nursing students.
Method: Using a qualitative hermeneutical phenomenology approach, 13 Generation Z nursing students with the lived experience of resilience were surveyed and interviewed. Results were analyzed interpretively.
Results: Themes of resilience among Generation Z nursing students were identified relative to study questions. Identified themes included "Maneuvering the Murky Water" and "This Can Either Ruin Me or I Can Keep Moving With It," as well as a resilience process within the context of nursing education. Open-response data provided further reflective insights on resilience and recommendations for resilience in nursing education programs.
Conclusion: Supporting resilience begins with understanding students' individual and generational perspective. Future nursing education research should include innovative interventions wherein the perspectives of Generation Z students are central to design. .
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/01484834-20240505-02 | DOI Listing |
J Trauma Nurs
January 2025
Author Affiliations: School of Nursing and Health Management, Shanghai University of Medicine & Health Sciences, Shanghai (Mss Jiang and Ying and Drs Xu, Cao, and Zhou); and Shuguang Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, China (Ms Liu).
Background: The psychological resilience of patients with traumatic lower extremity fractures is relevant and has been studied in the postoperative rehabilitation phase; yet, few studies have focused on the early preoperative phase.
Objective: This study aims to explore preoperative psychological resilience in patients with traumatic lower extremity fractures.
Methods: This single-center cross-sectional survey design study was conducted over 5 months from December 2022 to April 2023 in a tertiary hospital in Shanghai, China.
One Health
June 2025
Department of Global Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States of America.
Notwithstanding the obvious interconnection between humans and the world that they share with non-human inhabitants, the impact of our changing climate on certain aspects of the public health ecosystem has been under-investigated. We briefly describe some of the possible climate-induced changes in the procurement, distribution, access and use of medications, including those for animals generally and livestock specifically. A fuller understanding of the effect of climate change on medicine supply, access, use and quality, including how these affect antimicrobial resistance, would contribute to the further development of the "One Health" and "One Health Systems" concepts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
January 2025
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA 01002, USA.
Every protein progresses through a natural lifecycle from birth to maturation to death; this process is coordinated by the protein homeostasis system. Environmental or physiological conditions trigger pathways that maintain the homeostasis of the proteome. An open question is how these pathways are modulated to respond to the many stresses that an organism encounters during its lifetime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan Med Educ J
December 2024
McGill Faculty of Medicine, Quebec, Canada.
Comput Struct Biotechnol J
December 2024
Systems Biology Center, Key Laboratory of Engineering Biology for Low-carbon Manufacturing, Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Tianjin, China.
DNA holds immense potential as an emerging data storage medium. However, the recovery of information in DNA storage systems faces challenges posed by various errors, including IDS errors, strand breaks, and rearrangements, inevitably introduced during synthesis, amplification, sequencing, and storage processes. Sequence reconstruction, crucial for decoding, involves inferring the DNA reference from a cluster of erroneous copies.
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