Articles Tagged With: Education
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HIV Prevention and Education Needed for Young, Female Populations in the U.S.
Human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) is no longer an epidemic in the United States, but some parts of the country and some populations still have high rates of the disease among young women.
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Ensuring Sexual Health Education Addresses Patient Needs
Clinicians can help make sure patients have the information they need about sexual health and contraception.
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Comprehensive Sexual Health Education Can Be Successfully Implemented with Rural Latino Youth
A reproductive health team at the University of California, San Francisco has been working for five years with community partners in rural, farming communities to provide sexual health and education to the young people living in agricultural communities. Their efforts resulted in successful implementation of comprehensive sexual health education among Latino youth.
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Ethics Committee Members Want More Ethics Education
Many ethics committee members want to increase their ethics expertise. However, tailoring work schedules around course demands is an obstacle for many. After practicing in clinical settings for years, some ethics committee members are somewhat intimidated at the prospect of reentering a classroom in a formal academic setting.
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Nursing-Focused Ethics Education Is in High Demand
Nurses spend more time with patients and families than other healthcare providers. “Yet, they do not always have the greatest authority and power. This means that they can experience ethical challenges and burdens in a different way to other healthcare professionals,” says Georgina Morley, PhD, MSc, RN, HEC-C, director of the Nursing Ethics Program at the Cleveland Clinic.
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Ethicists Are Addressing Ableism in Medical Education, Clinical Practice
There is increasing attention to the issue of ableism in healthcare. One concern is that medical education is not doing enough to include the perspectives of people with disabilities.
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Many Ethics Committees Lack Formal Process for Education, Orientation
One of the primary functions of an ethics committee is education — for members, for clinicians, and for patients and their family members. Yet most ethics committees have no formal orientation process, and many have no ongoing ethics education process, according to a recent survey of hospital leaders at AdventHealth.
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Effective Ethics Education in Nurse Residency Programs
While directing the nurse residency program at a large midwestern academic teaching hospital, Rebecca West, MSN, RN, NPD-BC, observed that many recent graduates were highly distressed over ethical issues. One new nurse was intensely uncomfortable with completing orders for aggressive treatment for a patient clearly in the process of dying. The nurse did not think to request an ethics consultation. West and colleagues authored a recent paper on the benefits of embedding ethics content in nurse residency programs.
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Take on CLABSI Infections with Individualized Education, Leadership Support
Central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) are a big problem for patients because they often lead to serious complications such as sepsis. Further, managing such cases can significantly run up the tab for hospitals.
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Care Coordination Screening Tool Helps Case Managers Spot Delirium
Case managers and other healthcare providers can improve overall patient care and outcomes using an assessment tool that identifies patients’ delirium and confusion. A health system found that a confusion assessment tool helped decrease hospital length of stay and reduced utilization.