2002
DOI: 10.1053/jpnu.2002.32347
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Transition to community-based nursing curriculum: Processes and outcomes

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Cited by 16 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…These factors are well supported in the literature. The present environmental scan results corroborated the findings of Edwards and Alley (2002), who found resistance from faculty members regarding the balance of community-based versus acute care curriculum content. In the U.S., funding for illness prevention and health promotion activities was cut dramatically, and there have been serious shortages of public health nurses.…”
Section: Discussion and Recommendationssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…These factors are well supported in the literature. The present environmental scan results corroborated the findings of Edwards and Alley (2002), who found resistance from faculty members regarding the balance of community-based versus acute care curriculum content. In the U.S., funding for illness prevention and health promotion activities was cut dramatically, and there have been serious shortages of public health nurses.…”
Section: Discussion and Recommendationssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…What does exist suggests, first, that community health clinical education is oriented toward community health nursing care, which usually focuses on health promotion and injury/illness prevention activities and may involve population-level initiatives, rather than communitybased nursing, which may involve acute, rehabilitative, or palliative care in the community setting (Edwards & Alley, 2002;Zotti, Brown, & Stotts, 1996).…”
Section: What Do We Know About Community Health Clinical Education Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature consistently concludes that adequate preparation for the community role is essential (Besner, 2000; Bryans, 2000; Pearson & Care, 2002). Several studies report on the implementation and evaluation of transition courses and training intended to prepare acute care nurses for home health practice (Carter et al., 2005; Edwards & Alley, 2002; Kaiser et al, 2002), but research studies that investigate the actual competencies associated with the transition from acute care to community care settings are limited (Adams, 1998; Hartung, 2003; Pearson & Care). This lack of research into competencies has led to the development of continuing education programs with arbitrarily inserted additional content, based on personal anecdotal evidence and not evidence‐based research, which may not produce an effective or efficient outcome (Kaiser et al.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%