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Australian nurse educators identify gaps in expert practice

Authors :
Suzanne Mitten-Lewis
Sue Nagy
Christine Duffield
Dianne Pelletier
Jackie Crisp
Anne Adams
Source :
Journal of continuing education in nursing. 31(5)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

In Australia, nurses face a double-barreled challenge to their role. With the rapid adoption of new health care technologies coupled with increasing economic constraints, they find themselves "doing more with less." In this context of continuous change, it is useful to determine what expert nurse clinicians deem the most essential skills, attitudes and knowledge required for practice in complex technological environments. Separate panels of 28 educators and 43 cardiac nurse clinicians participated in a national Delphi study rating the importance to the nursing role of 107 items drawn from the international literature on expert practice and technology. Indicating the importance of each item in both the "real" and "ideal" worlds of practice, educators identified 58 items where they felt actual practice was substantially far from the ideal. For 16 of these items relating to empowerment of patients, nursing research, and technology policy, the educators rated clinical behavior below the median of the real world scale, indicating substandard performance of a role or inadequate assimilation of a concept. The implications for the definition of expert practice and for curricula development are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
00220124
Volume :
31
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of continuing education in nursing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b4a62f58035a2d0f69cbcf31291155f