La bibliothèque de Louvain-la-Neuve sera fermée les samedis jusque septembre.
Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Carolynn Thomas Jones |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur



Research nurse manager perceptions about research activities performed by non-nurse clinical research coordinators / Carolynn Thomas Jones in Nursing Outlook, Vol. 63, n°4 (July/August 2015)
[article]
Titre : Research nurse manager perceptions about research activities performed by non-nurse clinical research coordinators Type de document : Article Auteurs : Carolynn Thomas Jones ; Clare Hastings ; Lynda Law Wilson Année de publication : 2015 Article en page(s) : p. 474-483 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Cadre de santé ; Groupe ; Management ; Personnel de santé ; Pratique professionnelle ; Recherche biomédicale ; RecommandationsRésumé : Objectives
There has been limited research to document differences in roles between nurses and non-nurses who assume clinical research coordination and management roles. Several authors have suggested that there is no acknowledged guidance for the licensure requirements for research study coordinators and that some non-nurse research coordinators may be assuming roles that are outside of their legal scopes of practice. There is a need for further research on issues related to the delegation of clinical research activities to non-nurses.
Methods
This study used nominal group process focus groups to identify perceptions of experienced research nurse managers at an academic health science center in the Southern United States about the clinical research activities that are being performed by non-nurse clinical research coordinators without supervision that they believed should only be performed by a nurse or under the supervision of a nurse.
Results
A total of 13 research nurse managers volunteered to be contacted about the study. Of those, 8 participated in two separate nominal group process focus group sessions. The group members initially identified 22 activities that they felt should only be performed by a nurse or under the direct supervision of a nurse.
Conclusions
After discussion and clarification of results, activities were combined into 12 categories of clinical research activities that participants believed should only be performed by a nurse or under the direct supervision of a nurse.Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=72944
in Nursing Outlook > Vol. 63, n°4 (July/August 2015) . - p. 474-483[article] Research nurse manager perceptions about research activities performed by non-nurse clinical research coordinators [Article] / Carolynn Thomas Jones ; Clare Hastings ; Lynda Law Wilson . - 2015 . - p. 474-483.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Nursing Outlook > Vol. 63, n°4 (July/August 2015) . - p. 474-483
Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Cadre de santé ; Groupe ; Management ; Personnel de santé ; Pratique professionnelle ; Recherche biomédicale ; RecommandationsRésumé : Objectives
There has been limited research to document differences in roles between nurses and non-nurses who assume clinical research coordination and management roles. Several authors have suggested that there is no acknowledged guidance for the licensure requirements for research study coordinators and that some non-nurse research coordinators may be assuming roles that are outside of their legal scopes of practice. There is a need for further research on issues related to the delegation of clinical research activities to non-nurses.
Methods
This study used nominal group process focus groups to identify perceptions of experienced research nurse managers at an academic health science center in the Southern United States about the clinical research activities that are being performed by non-nurse clinical research coordinators without supervision that they believed should only be performed by a nurse or under the supervision of a nurse.
Results
A total of 13 research nurse managers volunteered to be contacted about the study. Of those, 8 participated in two separate nominal group process focus group sessions. The group members initially identified 22 activities that they felt should only be performed by a nurse or under the direct supervision of a nurse.
Conclusions
After discussion and clarification of results, activities were combined into 12 categories of clinical research activities that participants believed should only be performed by a nurse or under the direct supervision of a nurse.Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=72944 Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité REV Périodique papier Woluwe (Promenade de l'Alma) périodiques Exclu du prêt