Results 281 to 290 of about 431,118 (343)
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Continuing Education in Nursing

JAMA, 1964
PROGRAMS in continuing nursing education, relatively new in evolvement, are usually carried on in a university setting but may be sponsored by nursing organizations in cooperation with health-oriented groups. The programs, individually varying in scope and focus, nevertheless have a foundation in common nursing principles and practices. Planned to meet
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Continuing education for district nurses

Nurse Education Today, 1989
This paper describes a co-operative venture between Essex Institute of Higher Education and Southend Health Authority designed to meet the continuing education needs of district nurses by allowing them to analyse and develop their role in relation to the realism of service goals and resources.
A, Mackenzie, R, Sims
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Continuing Education Needs of Nurses in a Voluntary Continuing Nursing Education State

The Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, 2010
Background: Understanding the personal and professional motivations that shape learning needs is fundamental to high-quality continuing nursing education (CNE). This statewide survey assessed nurses’ CNE needs, learning priorities, perceived benefits and barriers, and motivation for voluntary CNE participation.
Maureen A, Nalle   +2 more
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Continuing Education in Gerontological Nursing

Journal of Gerontological Nursing, 1990
Programs are needed to evaluate staff because more elderly with multiple health-care problems are being hospitalized. Current formal training programs do not always have gerontology content based on up-to-date standards. Stimulation exercises give healthy young and middle-aged health-care workers an idea of challenges confronting the elderly with loss ...
R S, Crenshaw, P A, McLin, D J, Lewis
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Continuing Nursing Education: A Perspective

The Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, 1990
ABSTRACT This article takes a renewed look at continuing education (CE) within the discipline of nursing. Increasing complexity in the personal, professional, and social environments in which nursing is practiced, as well as changes in the present educational foundation of nurses all signal a need for a broader, more comprehensive concept of ...
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Continuing nursing education: some issues

Journal of Advanced Nursing, 1991
In nursing, a commitment to continuing education appears to be a relatively new concept There have always been nurses who are continuing learners throughout their professional lives Too often, this is incidental, rather than planned There appears to be a need to re‐examine current approach in continuing nursing ...
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Continuing Education in Neuroscience Nursing

Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 1988
Since its inception in 1968 the American Association of Neuroscience Nurses (AANN) has devoted the majority of its energy and resources to establishing and maintaining excellence in continuing education (CE). Building and sustaining a program for CE is both challenging and rewarding.
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CONTINUING NURSING EDUCATION

Nursing Management (Springhouse), 1973
Edith V. Olson   +2 more
  +4 more sources

Nurse educators’ perceived challenges in mandatory continuing nursing education

International Nursing Review, 2006
Aim:  This paper reports a study that leads to understanding challenges facing nurse educators implementing mandatory continuing nursing education in The People’s Republic of China.Background:  Mandatory continuing nursing education was instituted to maintain and develop registered nurses’ competence in the context of healthcare reform in China in 1996.
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