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eaddg1

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  1. Something around the use of clinical reasoning, clinical judgement, and clinical decision-making in nursing. I think my question will be on the following: P = RNs E/ I = Medical/ Surgical Nursing (i.e. in a hospital) C = N/A (or, mainly, how nurses go about doing it and why (i.e. it's benefits and the process behind it) O = Ways in which nurses think and how this leads to clinical judgments and the process of making clinical decisions T = may not apply... N/A? Rolling with my original topic, while very interesting and applicable to me, was getting nowhere and I was getting flustered and unable to make sense of what I was doing. So a change in topic was needed, and I found a great article which has led me to this new focus. Plus the article explains nursing in a way that I completely agree with.
  2. Thank you so much for your help. Yes, I agree, too easy to get bogged down on the personal element and so be unable to write an objective research paper. I have now changed my focus, so not mental health related any more (due to an absence of literature and it being too personal).
  3. I fully acknowledge where you are coming from, and I do not expect to get all my information through passively chucking it out to an open forum. No, I am coming here mainly in the hope of finding out people's experiences, seeing if they align with my own so I can make recommendations that are not solely biased due to my own experience with an unwell parent, and so putting my feelers out re. others' knowledge of articles is only secondary. I do know how to conduct a lit. search and review, and I am fully aware of that being one of the components of this assignment, but the main focus is on using found literature to reinforce my argument, ergo by asking around, I was hoping I could be pointed in the right direction if I was to be going off in a tangent. Even one good article, I would imagine, would give me a place to go for further literature/ info. Yes, having this lived experience can indeed set you ahead of class mates when beginning, but I have found that my own has led me to dislike this field of nursing, where other's experience has been the driving force behind their journey into psychiatric nursing. It is an interesting one! Thanks for your help
  4. Hey folks, I'm a newbie on here, but I come with a very important question (or at least very important for me). For a Theory and Research paper I am currently studying towards, I am conducting a literature review and critical analysis of arguments - culminating in an essay and formulation of recommendations - into the experience had by student nurse of mental illness with a family member, and thus how they respond to mental health clinical placements. My formal question is as follows: "Is there a relationship between student nurses' lived experience of a family member with mental illness and the responses had on, or how they respond to, mental health clinical placements" I am a student nurse myself and am in this exact position, hence my drive to learn whether there are any trends related to this and what studies have been conducted. In addition, I would like to look into how this manifests itself on placement (i.e. becoming over-involved in patients' care, crying often/ getting easily flustered, etc); if there is a drive to get into mental health nursing as a profession in light of the lived experiences (or vice versa); and also whether this lived experience, placement experience, and consequential stress can lead to the development of mental illness in previously asymptomatic individuals. I am open to further suggestions of sub-topics. I guess why I am here is to, A) get some stories from students themselves who may be in a similar situation; and B) ask if anyone has any great articles (preferably within the last 10 years) or literature they know of that is on this or similar topics... I am a wee bit stuck for information at present. Much appreciated wonderful nursing people!! Kind regards
  5. Hey folks, I'm a newbie on here, but I come with a very important question (or at least very important for me). For a Theory and Research paper I am currently studying towards, I am conducting a literature review and critical analysis of arguments - culminating in an essay and formulation of recommendations - into the experience had by student nurse of mental illness with a family member, and thus how they respond to mental health clinical placements. My formal question is as follows: "Is there a relationship between student nurses' lived experience of a family member with mental illness and the responses had on, or how they respond to, mental health clinical placements" I am a student nurse myself and am in this exact position, hence my drive to learn whether there are any trends related to this and what studies have been conducted. In addition, I would like to look into how this manifests itself on placement (i.e. becoming over-involved in patients' care, crying often/ getting easily flustered, etc); if there is a drive to get into mental health nursing as a profession in light of the lived experiences (or vice versa); and also whether this lived experience, placement experience, and consequential stress can lead to the development of mental illness in previously asymptomatic individuals. I am open to further suggestions of sub-topics. I guess why I am here is to, A) get some stories from nurses themselves who may be in a similar situation; and B) ask if anyone has any great articles (preferably within the last 10 years) or literature they know of that is on this or similar topics... I am a wee bit stuck for information at present. Much appreciated wonderful nursing people!! Kind regards
  6. Hey folks, I'm a newbie on here, but I come with a very important question (or at least very important for me). For a Theory and Research paper I am currently studying towards, I am conducting a literature review and critical analysis of arguments - culminating in an essay and formulation of recommendations - into the experience had by student nurse of mental illness with a family member, and thus how they respond to mental health clinical placements. My formal question is as follows: "Is there a relationship between student nurses' lived experience of a family member with mental illness and the responses had on, or how they respond to, mental health clinical placements" I am a student nurse myself and am in this exact position, hence my drive to learn whether there are any trends related to this and what studies have been conducted. In addition, I would like to look into how this manifests itself on placement (i.e. becoming over-involved in patients' care, crying often/ getting easily flustered, etc); if there is a drive to get into mental health nursing as a profession in light of the lived experiences (or vice versa); and also whether this lived experience, placement experience, and consequential stress can lead to the development of mental illness in previously asymptomatic individuals. I am open to further suggestions of sub-topics. I guess why I am here is to, A) get some stories from nurses themselves who may be in a similar situation; and B) ask if anyone has any great articles (preferably within the last 10 years) or literature they know of that is on this or similar topics... I am a wee bit stuck for information at present. Much appreciated wonderful nursing people!! Kind regards

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