Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies

This is a descriptive study undertaken to identify competencies and supporting knowledge and skills in informatics perceived to be necessary by nurses for nurses engaged in clinical practice. This study applied a non-experimental, descriptive research design to a quantitative survey performed throug...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hobbs, Steven Douglas
Other Authors: Kooker, B.
Published: University of Hawaii at Manoa 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10125/22055
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spelling ndltd-UHAWAII-oai-scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu-10125-220552013-01-08T11:16:37ZClinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics CompetenciesHobbs, Steven DouglasHome nursing--Oceania--Case studies.This is a descriptive study undertaken to identify competencies and supporting knowledge and skills in informatics perceived to be necessary by nurses for nurses engaged in clinical practice. This study applied a non-experimental, descriptive research design to a quantitative survey performed through web-based technology. Based upon the foundational work of Staggers, Gassert, and Curran (2001, 2002), the goal was to substantiate with clinical nurses and their direct nurse supervisors the clinical competencies that Staggers' identified for Beginning and Experienced clinical nurses through a Delphi methodology of nursing experts. All study facility Registered Nurses received an e-mail inviting their participation. Respondents logged on to a website and completed sections applicable to their situation; that is Beginning Nurse, Experienced Nurse, or Nurse Supervisor. Reminder emails were sent at two and four weeks after the initial invitation. Respondents who accessed and completed the survey received a $5.00 food coupon redeemable at the hospital facilities. All of the knowledge, attitudes and skills identified were supported as valuable, that is, a mean score greater than neutral. Value ranged from just above neutral to strongly agree. Factor analysis generally supported categorization; however, many items did not load into the anticipated categories. Categorization is one area which deserves further study.University of Hawaii at ManoaKooker, B.2012-02-29T00:43:31Z2012-02-29T00:43:31Z20072007DissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10125/22055All UHM dissertations and theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission from the copyright owner.
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Home nursing--Oceania--Case studies.
spellingShingle Home nursing--Oceania--Case studies.
Hobbs, Steven Douglas
Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies
description This is a descriptive study undertaken to identify competencies and supporting knowledge and skills in informatics perceived to be necessary by nurses for nurses engaged in clinical practice. This study applied a non-experimental, descriptive research design to a quantitative survey performed through web-based technology. Based upon the foundational work of Staggers, Gassert, and Curran (2001, 2002), the goal was to substantiate with clinical nurses and their direct nurse supervisors the clinical competencies that Staggers' identified for Beginning and Experienced clinical nurses through a Delphi methodology of nursing experts. All study facility Registered Nurses received an e-mail inviting their participation. Respondents logged on to a website and completed sections applicable to their situation; that is Beginning Nurse, Experienced Nurse, or Nurse Supervisor. Reminder emails were sent at two and four weeks after the initial invitation. Respondents who accessed and completed the survey received a $5.00 food coupon redeemable at the hospital facilities. All of the knowledge, attitudes and skills identified were supported as valuable, that is, a mean score greater than neutral. Value ranged from just above neutral to strongly agree. Factor analysis generally supported categorization; however, many items did not load into the anticipated categories. Categorization is one area which deserves further study.
author2 Kooker, B.
author_facet Kooker, B.
Hobbs, Steven Douglas
author Hobbs, Steven Douglas
author_sort Hobbs, Steven Douglas
title Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies
title_short Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies
title_full Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies
title_fullStr Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Nurses' Perceptions of Nursing Informatics Competencies
title_sort clinical nurses' perceptions of nursing informatics competencies
publisher University of Hawaii at Manoa
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10125/22055
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