Medical Research News

Nursing

sponsor
Become a Member Today!
Register
Email:


Password:

Remember me
Forgot your Password?
Invite Code?
Article ID

Your Article Summary

(Click the title below to leave the MDLinx Network and go to the Journal's Website)

Johnson A et al. – The results show death and dying education has a minimal and inconsistent presence in Australian undergraduate nursing programmes. The main conclusions include: (i) little evidence exists of significant change to the provision of death and dying education in undergraduate nursing curricula since the 1960s; (ii) the conceptualization of death and dying education in Australian undergraduate nursing curricula is poorly designed and underdeveloped; (iii) what constitutes the 'best' death and dying education experiences remains unclear with little evidence to support decision–making; and (iv) reform of undergraduate nursing curricula is required to enhance graduate preparation to deliver contemporary practice especially in the area of caring for dying patients and their families.


Today in Education/Training...keeping you current

Management of self-harm in older people
Psychiatric Bulletin, 11/10/09

Training and transfer of colonoscopy skills: a multinational, randomized, blinded, controlled trial of simulator versus bedside training
Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, 11/05/09

Effectiveness of Asthma Education with and Without a Self-Management Plan in Hospitalized Children
Journal of Asthma, 11/10/09

Article Search

Keyword:

Search:

Published within

Sort By:
Date
Relevance


Sponsor

Send this Summary to a Colleague

Enter email address