As editor of Evidence Based Nursing I, perhaps unsurprisingly, believe it is important that nurses use the best available evidence when making health care decisions. I also believe politicians should do the same when deciding on health care policy. When Jeremy Hunt took over from Andrew Lansley as the English Secretary for Health last September […]
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EBN Twitter Journal Club–Session 9
One often hears the anecdotes about abuse of nurses from patients, families, co-workers and employers. A recent study sought to determine the experience of nurses and midwives with aggressive behaviour and bullying. Of the 1495 returned questionnaires over half of the participants (52%) experienced some form of workplace aggression. Thirty-six percent experienced violence mostly from […]
Reflections: International Nurses Day
Each year, the International Council of Nurses celebrates International Nurses Day on May 12th, the birth date of Florence Nightingale. I read that there was a lobby to change the date since it was felt that Florence Nightingale no longer represented ‘modern’ nursing. Although she lived in an era that included very few rights for […]
Editors meeting update – changes to the EBN Twitter Journal Club.
A meeting of the Evidence Based Nursing (EBN) Editorial Board took place on the 26th April in London. The meeting was attended by Claire Weinberg, Catherine Lucas, Claire Bower and Allison Lang from BMJ and the Editorial team including myself, Alison Twycross and Joanna Smith from the UK, Roberta Heale and Dorothy Forbes from Canada […]
EBN Twitter Journal Club– Session 8
EBN Twitter Club #ebnjc – Session 8 The incidence of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), the sudden death of an infant that is not predicted by medical history and remains unexplained after autopsy, has reduced since the world wide ‘back to sleep’ initiative implemented during the early 1990’s. While it has been established that placing […]
Sciatica part 3.
In my last blog on the 19th February 13 I described how my diagnosed sciatica led to an MRI and consequently the identification of a substantial prolapsed disc at L5-S1.At the time I was awaiting a surgical appointment with a view to possible lumbar discectomy but I was aware of the controversy surrounding the efficacy […]
Sharing decisions with patients: Small things do matter
I am not a paediatric nurse but as a parent I sometimes have opportunities to admire the skill of paediatric nurses who make a difference in the lives of children and their families, by putting young patients at the centre of decisions about their healthcare. It was during a hospital visit with a family member […]
EBN Twitter Club #ebnjc – Session 7
The morbidity and mortality associated with cardiac surgery is commonly a consequence of pulmonary complications. Improving lung function may reduce postoperative pulmonary complications. While the benefit of postoperative physical therapy interventions is fairly well documented, there is a paucity of evidence in relation to the impact of preoperative physical therapy on postoperative pulmonary complications and […]
Context Matters: Factors that Promote Knowledge Exchange
For someone my age, learning to communicate via a blog or tweeting is a steep curve. My five-year old granddaughter is more adept at downloading apps and searching the internet than I. Besides age, I’m also discovering other important factors that influence knowledge exchange through my research in northern Canada. The context of a health […]
RCN 2013 International Nursing Research Conference Belfast
Some reflections from Suzanne Watts, this year’s Marjorie Simpson New Researcher Award winner I suspect that the 2013 RCN International Research Conference will be remembered by the delegates for two things. The first being the breadth and scope of the outstanding presentations and the second the weather. For some of the delegates the blizzard conditions […]