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Educating for health service reform: clinical learning, governance and capability – a case study protocol

Overview of attention for article published in BMC Nursing, May 2016
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Title
Educating for health service reform: clinical learning, governance and capability – a case study protocol
Published in
BMC Nursing, May 2016
DOI 10.1186/s12912-016-0152-8
Pubmed ID
Authors

Anne Gardner, Glenn Gardner, Fiona Coyer, Helen Gosby

Abstract

The nurse practitioner is a growing clinical role in Australia and internationally, with an expanded scope of practice including prescribing, referring and diagnosing. However, key gaps exist in nurse practitioner education regarding governance of specialty clinical learning and teaching. Specifically, there is no internationally accepted framework against which to measure the quality of clinical learning and teaching for advanced specialty practice. A case study design will be used to investigate educational governance and capability theory in nurse practitioner education. Nurse practitioner students, their clinical mentors and university academic staff, from an Australian university that offers an accredited nurse practitioner Master's degree, will be invited to participate in the study. Semi-structured interviews will be conducted with students and their respective clinical mentors and university academic staff to investigate learning objectives related to educational governance and attributes of capability learning. Limited demographic data on age, gender, specialty, education level and nature of the clinical healthcare learning site will also be collected. Episodes of nurse practitioner student specialty clinical learning will be observed and documentation from the students' healthcare learning sites will be collected. Descriptive statistics will be used to report age groups, areas of specialty and types of facilities where clinical learning and teaching is observed. Qualitative data from interviews, observations and student documents will be coded, aggregated and explored to inform a framework of educational governance, to confirm the existing capability framework and describe any additional characteristics of capability and capability learning. This research has widespread significance and will contribute to ongoing development of the Australian health workforce. Stakeholders from industry and academic bodies will be involved in shaping the framework that guides the quality and governance of clinical learning and teaching in specialty nurse practitioner practice. Through developing standards for advanced clinical learning and teaching, and furthering understanding of capability theory for advanced healthcare practitioners, this research will contribute to evidence-based models of advanced specialty postgraduate education.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 72 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Indonesia 1 1%
Unknown 71 99%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Master 16 22%
Student > Bachelor 8 11%
Other 4 6%
Professor 4 6%
Student > Postgraduate 4 6%
Other 15 21%
Unknown 21 29%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Nursing and Health Professions 27 38%
Medicine and Dentistry 7 10%
Computer Science 3 4%
Psychology 3 4%
Business, Management and Accounting 2 3%
Other 9 13%
Unknown 21 29%