What does evidence tell us about the difference between quality of life (QoL) and health related quality of life (HRQoL) and is it easy to differentiate between these two concepts? This is a question I have been exploring recently as I prepare to carry out a research study which will investigate how quality of life […]
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Transition between child and adult services for people with a learning disability and life limiting condition – what does it mean?
Rebecca Haydock- RNLD, PhD student, School of Human and Health Sciences, University of Huddersfield. Contact e-mail u0954407@hud.ac.uk. Having recently commenced a PhD, which is focussing on the transition between child and adult services for people with a learning disability and life limiting condition, I have been deliberating the meaning of transition and exploring issues relating […]
Why not publish?
Most of the time I work as a professor in a nursing department at a university. There is a very high expectation to publish papers and present at conferences and such. The publishing aspect of my work led to editorial work with EBN. The articles and presentations that I put together are largely focused on […]
Evidence Based Nursing …….. not just for Christmas
Happy New year to Evidence Based Nursing readers. I don’t know about you, but in these times of austerity I felt the need to be more discerning than ever when purchasing Christmas gifts for my friends and family. I wanted to get the best I could for them with the resources I had set aside. […]
Festive blog and a time to reflect
The festive season is well underway and often a time to reflect on the year’s achievements and plan for the year ahead. From a personal perspective, I have had an exciting but challenging year. The year started with joining the editorial team at Evidence-Based Nursing and more recently taking up a new post as Senior […]
Cochrane in Nursing: 20 years and counting of evidence-based health care
In 1998, in the first published paper in the first published edition of Evidence-Based Nursing, Anne Mulhall began her article by asking the question ‘Why has research-based practice become so important and why is everyone talking about evidence based health care? But most importantly, how is nursing best placed to maximise the benefits which evidence-based […]
Nurses Against Nurses
I just finished reading and marking some papers from a nursing course. The assignment included interviewing an advanced practice nurse and discussing her scope of practice, workplace, collaborative network and any barriers to practice. It was an interesting assignment. However, one thing that struck me was the term horizontal violence. It is a term that […]
The Leap from Nurse to Nurse Researcher
My PhD research aimed to explore the palliative care provision experienced by patients with non-malignant respiratory disease and their caregivers throughout rural and urban areas in the North and South of Ireland. In order to achieve this I interviewed bereaved caregivers and conducted focus groups with healthcare professionals involved in the care of this client […]
A Call to Nursing Leadership and Service
Earlier this week I attended the 42nd Biennial Convention of Sigma Theta Tau International (STTI) in Indianapolis, USA. Once I had successfully dodged the tornadoes and arrived in Indiana, I settled down to absorb the positive energy that emanates from a large gathering of dedicated nurse leaders, keen to shape the future of nursing around the […]
Preparedness for Practice
I’m involved in a research project investigating newly graduated nurse practitioner’s perceptions of their preparedness to practice. Participants will be asked to give their thoughts about how well the education program prepared them to work as an NP. There have been many changes in NP legislation and to models of primary health care in our […]