Literature DB >> 17689450

Designing and delivering clinical risk management education for graduate nurses: an Australian study.

Megan-Jane Johnstone1, Olga Kanitsaki, Tracey Currie, Enid Smith, Chris McGennisken.   

Abstract

In order to enhance their capabilities in clinical risk management (CRM) and to be integrated into safe and effective patient safety organisational processes and systems, neophyte graduate nurses need to be provided with pertinent information on CRM at the beginning of their employment. What and how such information should be given to new graduate nurses, however, remains open to question and curiously something that has not been the subject either of critique or systematic investigation in the nursing literature. This article reports the findings of the third and final cycle of a 12 month action research (AR) project that has sought to redress this oversight by developing, implementing and evaluating a CRM education program for neophyte graduate nurses. Conducted in the cultural context of regional Victoria, Australia, the design, implementation and evaluation of the package revealed that it was a useful resource, served the intended purpose of ensuring that neophyte graduate nurses were provided with pertinent information on CRM upon the commencement and during their graduate nurse year, and enabled graduate nurses to be facilitated to translate that information into their everyday practice.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17689450     DOI: 10.1016/j.nepr.2006.08.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurse Educ Pract        ISSN: 1471-5953            Impact factor:   2.281


  1 in total

1.  Rocky milieu: challenges of effective integration of clinical risk management into hospitals in Iran.

Authors:  Jamileh Farokhzadian; Nahid Dehghan Nayeri; Fariba Borhani
Journal:  Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being       Date:  2015-05-11
  1 in total

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