Author:
Osakwe Zainab Toteh,Horton Jay R.,Ottah Jane,Eisner Jill,Atairu Minne,Stefancic Ana
Abstract
With the current shortage of hospice/palliative care (HPC) workforce, there is an urgent need to train a generation of nurses with clinical competency in HPC to ensure equitable access and optimal care for patients living with serious illness or at the end of life. The recent demand for HPC teaching in nursing education calls for innovation in establishing clinical placements. Palliative care nursing experts in New York State were surveyed between June and August 2022 about facilitators of academic–clinical partnerships between nursing schools and clinical settings. Inductive content analysis of open-ended responses revealed six major interconnected themes: (a)
Increase Awareness of HPC in the Nursing Program
, (b)
Build a Relationship With Administrators
, (c)
Look Beyond Acute Care Partnerships
, (d)
Offer Incentives
, (e)
Develop Direct Care Experiential Opportunities
, and (f)
Develop Non-Direct Care Experiential Opportunities
. Findings provide rich insights into key considerations for successful collaboration between nursing schools and clinical sites. [
Journal of Gerontological Nursing, 49
(6), 13–18.]
Subject
Gerontology,General Nursing
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3 articles.
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