Asethetic Expression

2001 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 42-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon Eifried, ◽  
Oma Riley-Giomariso, ◽  
Gayle Voigt

Nursing students often reveal how helpless they feel in responding to the suffering of patients. During analysis of two interpretive phenomenological research studies, bearing witness to suffering emerged as a theme that captured the meaning of the experiences of students caring for patients in medical-surgical units and critical-care units. The discussion in this article centers on art as an expression of lived experience, being called by the face of the other, tears in the face of suffering, caring amid suffering, a circle of caring, and illuminating the spiritual in caring. The purpose of this paper is to describe the experiences of students caring for suffering patients and to explore how a pedagogy of suffering can change teaching, learning, and students’ future practices.

Author(s):  
Marla Morris

Curriculum means complex relations between teachers and students. Discourse on health and illness involves these relations. Health and illness are phenomenological states of being that can be fragile. Health might mean longevity, while illness could mean finality. It is not so clear, though, where health slips into illness. Illness can return in a circular fashion. So the line between health and illness is not entirely clear. When illness strikes, people’s narratives get interrupted; these narratives embody our identities. Narratives are stories that we tell ourselves. Narratives such as autobiography and biography have a long history in curriculum studies. In this field, autobiographies and biographies of teachers have historically been about happy occasions, occasions of triumph, and happy endings. Narratives of critical illness—which few curriculum scholars have dealt with—are without happy endings. Critical illness narratives concern grief, loss, and unhappy endings. Grief, bereavement, and melancholy have no timeline, no frame of reference, and sometimes no ending at all. Curriculum scholars have written about melancholy in mental illness but have not written much about it in the face of physical illness. During times of illness, some turn to the spiritual, some turn away. The spiritual can be put to use either to better understand endings or to avoid endings and deny what is happening. For some, avoidance helps the journey along. For others, facing head-on the catastrophe at hand becomes necessary. For those who slip from health into illness, radical Otherness is at hand. Being very sick isolates. Alterity, then, is key when thinking about such experiences. A phenomenology of alterity is key when thinking about health and illness. Chronic illness differs from a sudden onset of illness. People can be relatively healthy and yet suffer from chronic illness. People can be, on the other hand, very sick with chronic illness for many years. Some chronic illnesses are invisible. Grief over invisible illnesses tends not to be taken seriously by others because the illness is not visible. On the other hand, if there are physical symptoms that others can see, grief over that illness tends to be taken more seriously by others than illnesses which are invisible. Curriculum, or lived experience, is about health and illness because this is life’s trajectory. One cannot become educated in a disembodied way. Education happens in bodies that exist on a continuum between health and illness.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-44
Author(s):  
K Zehni ◽  
M Z Rokhzadi ◽  
sh Mahmoodi ◽  
M R Abdolmaleki ◽  
Gh Salehnezhad ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 130-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maureen Nokuthula Sibiya ◽  
Thembelihle Sylvia Patience Ngxongo ◽  
Somavathy Yvonne Beepat

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the influence of peer mentoring on critical care nursing students’ learning outcomes in critical care units. Design/methodology/approach A qualitative exploratory research design was used to conduct the study. Ten critical care nursing students were recruited from critical care units in the five private and two public hospitals. Descriptions of their experiences were gained through individual face-to-face interviews. Findings The study reinforces peer mentoring as a vital strategy in helping the critical care nursing students to attain their learning outcomes. However, peer mentoring was not consistent in all hospitals and there were no structured support systems to ensure that peer mentoring was formalized. Making peer mentoring a vital component in the registered nurses core competencies would enable efficiency and guarantee the viability of peer mentoring. Research limitations/implications Mentors for the critical care nursing students were not included in the study. Practical implications The study identified a need for incorporating a formalized mentorship programme into the core competencies of all qualified critical care nurses, the unit mentor to familiarise themselves with the prescribed learning objectives of the critical care nursing student and an allocation of supernumerary time for the critical care nursing student and mentors to allow for formal mentoring responsibilities to take place. Originality/value The study reinforces peer mentoring as a vital strategy in helping the critical care nursing students to attain their learning outcomes and conscietises registered nurses of their responsibility as mentors.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Christensen

Background and objective: Descriptive phenomenology when used within the tradition of Husserl offers the qualitative researcher a unique perspective into the lived experience of the phenomena in question. Methods of data analysis are often seen as the theoretical framework for which these studies are then focused. However, what is not realised is that the data analysis tool is merely that a tool for which to delineate the individual narratives. What is often missing is a research framework for which to structure the actual study.  Therefore, the aim of this paper is to offer a reflective account of how the empirical-phenomenological framework shaped and informed a descriptive phenomenological study looking at the lived experience of male nursing students as they journey though the under-graduate nursing programme.Methods: A reflective narrative was used to examine and explore how the empirical-phenomenological framework can be used to support method construction within a descriptive phenomenological study.Results and conclusions: The empirical-phenomenological research framework aims to provide a practical method for understanding and valuing the range and depth of descriptive phenomenology, in particular the lived experience. Used in combination with specific phenomenological data analysis models the empirical-phenomenological framework is structured to support the qualitative research process.


2008 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark E. Rupp ◽  
Teresa Fitzgerald ◽  
Susan Puumala ◽  
James R. Anderson ◽  
Rita Craig ◽  
...  

Background.There are limited data from prospective studies to indicate whether improvement in hand hygiene associated with the use of alcohol-based hand hygiene products results in improved patient outcomes.Design.A 2-year, prospective, controlled, cross-over trial of alcohol-based hand gel.Setting.The study was conducted in 2 medical-surgical ICUs for adults, each with 12 beds, from August 2001 to September 2003 at a university-associated, tertiary care teaching hospital.Methods.An alcohol-based hand gel was provided in one critical care unit and not provided in the other. After 1 year, the assignment was reversed. The hand hygiene adherence rate and the incidence of nosocomial infection were monitored. Samples for culture were obtained from nurses' hands every 2 months.Results.During 17,994 minutes of observation, which included 3,678 opportunities for hand hygiene, adherence rates improved dramatically after the introduction of hand gel, increasing from 37% to 68% in one unit and from 38% to 69% in the other unit (P< .001). Improvement was observed among all groups of healthcare workers. Hand hygiene rates were better at higher workloads when hand gel was available in the unit (P= .02). No substantial change in the rates of device-associated infection, infection due to multidrug-resistant pathogens, or infection due toClostridium difficilewas observed. Culture of samples from the hands of nursing staff revealed that an increased number of microbes and an increased number of microbe species was associated with longer fingernails (ie, more than 2 mm long), the wearing of rings, and/or lack of access to hand gel.Conclusions.The introduction of alcohol-based gel resulted in a significant and sustained improvement in the rate of hand hygiene adherence. Fingernail length greater than 2 mm, wearing rings, and lack of access to hand gel were associated with increased microbial carriage on the hands. This improvement in the hand hygiene adherence rate was not associated with detectable changes in the incidence of healthcare-associated infection.


2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 8-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Ann Cordeau,

To effectively use clinical simulation for nursing education, the phenomenon must be understood from the perspective of the nursing student so learner centered teaching/learning strategies can be implemented to achieve desired outcomes. This study examined the lived experience of graded clinical simulation for novice nursing students. Using van Manen’s (1990) method for hermeneutic phenomenological investigation, the written descriptions of 19 novice nursing students were examined. Five thematic clusters; perceived anxiety, seeking and imagining, performing-in-the-moment, critiquing-the-performance, and preparing-for-nursing-practice emerged from the student descriptions of their lived experience of graded clinical simulation. Through understanding students’ perceptions and meanings of clinical simulation when designing, implementing, evaluating individual clinical simulations, this teaching/learning strategy will better meet student needs and learning outcomes.


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