Monday, 30 April 2018

Publication: The impact of clinical placement model on learning in nursing: a descriptive exploratory study



Birks, Melanie, Bagley, Tracy, Park, Tanya, Burkot, Camilla, and Mills, Jane (2017) The impact of clinical placement model on learning in nursing: a descriptive exploratory study. Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing, 34 (3). 16 -23.

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/53263/

#JCUNursingMidwifery

Survey: Caring in Nursing: A snapshot of Queensland undergraduate nursing students

Are you studying in Queensland to become a registered nurse?

We want to hear what you think by participating in this survey!

Why? The information you provide will contribute to a research project to learn more about how undergraduate nursing students in Queensland understand their own caring behaviours and attitudes.

Where? Online – follow this link to participate

When? In study period one, 2018

What? The information you provide will be completely anonymous and it will only take about 8 minutes to complete the survey.

Further information? If you would like to know more about this survey or the project, please contact Elspeth Wood. Email: elspeth.wood@my.jcu.edu.au Contact Principal Investigator (Elspeth Wood) on 07 4726 5342


Tuesday, 24 April 2018

Publication: Uncovering degrees of workplace bullying: a comparison of baccalaureate nursing students’ experiences during clinical placement in Australia and the UK



Birks, Melanie, Cant, Robyn P., Budden, Lea M., Russell-Westhead, Michele, Sinem Üzar Ozçetin, Yeter, and Tee, Stephen (2017) Uncovering degrees of workplace bullying: a comparison of baccalaureate nursing students’ experiences during clinical placement in Australia and the UK. Nurse Education in Practice, 25. pp. 14-21.

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/53260/

#JCUNursingMidwifery

Saturday, 21 April 2018

Wednesday, 18 April 2018

Mount Isa is the land of opportunity for young grads

Verona Thomsen, Barbara Parker and Tamara Stacey say career opportunities are abundant in the north west.
Like many regional towns, Mount Isa has its fair share of problems.

But when it comes to economic prosperity – Mount Isa is the land of opportunity.

Isa’s relaxed outback lifestyle, abundance of outdoor activities and community spirit, makes it an enticing place to live.

It is really the career opportunities that are drawing in crowds of young professionals from big cities like Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne.

Verona Thomsen moved to Mount Isa from Brisbane and is studying nursing through James Cook University at the Centre for Rural and Remote Health.

“It is so much better here, it is smaller so you get more one on one time,” she said.

Tamara Stacey is also a JCU student and said nursing here had a distinct rural and regional focus that you do not find in the city.

Some of the students studying nursing through James Cook University at the Centre for Rural and Remote Health in Mount Isa
“I have just started a job as an assistant in nursing at the hospital. It is certainly easier to get that experience here than in a big city,” Ms Stacey said.

JCU nursing student Barbara Parker said you would have to “jump though ten hoops of fire to get that job in Brisbane”.

“It is easier to get a job out here. I made the choice to go to uni late in life but out here it is achievable. There are so many opportunities,” Ms Parker said.

Mount Isa is a regional base for health, education and a loads of other government ­services. Hoards of young professionals flock to town each year to launch their careers.

Many see short stints in the north west as a way to fast-track their ambitions – a stepping stone to new career heights.

Government services as well as the steady mining industry are the driving force behind the local economy, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics data.

Seventy per cent of the town has full time employment.

A pretty impressive statistic when compared to the national average of 57 per cent.

More people have full time jobs in Mount Isa and they are earning more than $300 extra per week compared with the average Australian.

The average Australian takes home $662 per week.

The average Mount Isa resident pockets $997 each week.

Cheaper rent is another incentive that is luring workers to the north west.

The average rent in Mount Isa is $260.

Almost $100 less than the Queensland average of $330 and national average of $335.

Reproduced from https://www.northweststar.com.au/story/5334633/isa-is-the-land-of-opportunity-for-young-grads/

#JCUNursing

Sunday, 15 April 2018

Publication: Engaging with pregnancy care providers: an interview study of teenage women


Frawley, N., Wong Shee, A., Robertson, C., MacKenzie, A., Lodge, J., Versace, V., Shotten, A., Sturmels, K., and Nagle, C. (2018) Engaging with pregnancy care providers: an interview study of teenage women. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, 54 (S1). p. 20.

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/53056/

#JCUNursingMidwifery

Thursday, 12 April 2018

Publication: Front loading the curriculum: early placement experiences enhance career awareness and motivation for students with diverse career options



de Hollander, Catherine, McGuckin, Teneale, Sinclair, Kelly, Barnett, Fiona, and Sealey, Rebecca (2018) Front loading the curriculum: early placement experiences enhance career awareness and motivation for students with diverse career options. Student Success, 9 (2). pp. 39-47.

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/53087/

#JCUSportExerciseScience

A JCU Psychology researcher has found that a person’s mental state affects how they look at art


JCU psychology lecturer Nicole Thomas said the same piece of artwork can attract admiration or rejection from different people.

“One intuitive explanation is that personality and the way in which we visually examine artwork contributes to our preferences for particular art,” she said.

The work was begun with Dr Thomas’ co-author Ali Simpson at Flinders University. Volunteers were psychologically assessed in relation to their personality and then shown abstract art pictures. They were asked to rate the pictures and say how much they would pay for them. The participants’ eye movements were tracked as they looked at the images.

Dr Thomas said the relationship between personality traits and artwork preferences was already well established. Scientists knew, for instance, that neurotic people found abstract and pop art more appealing.

She said as cognitive psychologists, the researchers were particularly interested in the mechanisms of attention and perception.

“We found that people who tended towards neuroticism paid more attention to the left side of a picture, and those with traits related to schizophrenia looked less often at the top of a picture,” said Dr Thomas.

She said this was significant becauseit fits well with known attentional differences in individuals with neuroticism.

“For example, we tend to look to the left side of images first and the fact that these individuals spent more time looking at the left overall suggests they find it harder to disengage their attention. In contrast, those participants with mild schizophrenic tendencies appear to have relied on an entirely different scanning strategy. The tendency to focus on the lower portion of an image has previously been linked with deficits in attentional focus and control.”


In contrast to people with these particular personality traits, she said, in general, participants’ eye movements were concentrated in the upper right quadrant of their visual field.

“The right hemisphere of the brain plays a significant role in emotional processing. Artwork is inherently emotional and the emotional reactions elicited by abstract artwork might lead people to focus their attention within the upper right quadrant to better engage that emotional processing.”

Dr Thomas said that activating the right hemisphere of the brain is also consistent with superior visuospatial processing, which would encourage more thorough exploration of abstract artwork.

Link to paper here.

Reproduced from https://www.jcu.edu.au/news/releases/2018/april/art-is-in-the-eye-of-the-beholder

#JCUPsychology

Monday, 9 April 2018

Publication: Implementing an intervention to promote normal labour and birth: a study of clinicians’ perceptions



Wong Shee, A., Robertson, C., McKenzie, A., Frawley, N., Lodge, J., Versace, V., Corboy, D., and Nagle, C. (2018) Implementing an intervention to promote normal labour and birth: a study of clinicians’ perceptions. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, 54 (S1). p. 126.


#JCUNursingMidwifery

JCU Speech Pathology students making models in anatomy labs



Speech Pathologists having fun making models of the muscles of facial expression. Good job!! ;) Remember they are innervated by cranial nerve facial (CNVII).



Reproduced from JCU Anatomy Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/jcuanatomy/posts/1781250168561889

#JCUSpeechPathology

Friday, 6 April 2018

Publication: Asylum seekers prejudice: tertiary education, the media, and the government


Hawkins, Russell, and McWaters, Samuel C. (2018) Asylum seekers prejudice: tertiary education, the media, and the government. International Journal of Innovation, Creativity and Change, 3 (4). pp. 13-29.

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/53051/

#JCUPsychology

JCU Physio in Cambodia 2018



Words simply cannot describe the experience our 1st JCU Physio Cambodia team has had here in Siem Reap! Most recently our 4th year students organised and ran their own physiotherapy service in the MHDC community, visiting over 100 homes, and providing daily education and exercise sessions to adults and school children!

During our time in Cambodia we've been privileged to have touched the lives of so many in such a positive way! And by doing so our lives (and the way we practice) has changed for the better! We've met some of the most incredible people whom we'll never forget, and experienced a health care system so different from our own!

Well done JCU Physio Cambodia! You met (and exceeded) all expectations! I can't wait to do this all over again in 2019!


Home visits were a highlight at MHDC! The kindness and generosity of the people we saw was so heart warming (we're also setting a physiotherapy service record for the most mangos ever received).


Teaching CPR and basic first aid at the local high school!


Daily exercise sessions at MHDC!


Starting traditions! Australia vs. Cambodia footy match! 



A very memorable farewell from MHDC! 

Reproduced from JCU Physiotherapy Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=360010681161525&id=100014577884193

#JCUPhysiotherapy

Thursday, 5 April 2018

Publication: Peri-operative chest physiotherapy for paediatric cardiac patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis


Beningfield, A., and Jones, A. (2018) Peri-operative chest physiotherapy for paediatric cardiac patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Physiotherapy. (In Press)

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52971/

#JCUPhysiotherapy

Tuesday, 3 April 2018

Workers motivated to take a stand

JCU SES researchers have been putting theory into practice with the successful trial of a method that reduces sedentary behaviour at work.

PhD candidate Teneale McGuckin is a lecturer in Sport and Exercise Science at JCU. She said the group wanted to test the effectiveness of a theory focused on using personalised interventions to reduce the sedentary behaviour of office workers.

“We found we could produce significant change, even without providing physical structures like a standing desk,” she said.

Ms McGuckin said it was well-established that sitting for long periods of time can have negative health outcomes.

“Increased sitting time has been associated with an elevated risk of cardiovascular disease and reduced life expectancy.  Links to weight gain, some cancers, type 2 diabetes, and breathing difficulties have also been identified,” she said.

The team found that with one-on-one consultations that included goal-setting they could make positive changes in behaviour.

“Goal setting was a large focus of the intervention. The majority of goals were prompt-based and supported purposeful standing or walking.

“Things such as going for a walk at morning tea, standing or walking when interacting with colleagues instead of sending an email, walking further to amenities or standing for the duration of a phone call.”

The volunteers filled in a journal and were fitted with movement monitors.

“We saw a reduction in sedentary behaviour, even without providing standing desks. 27 office-based workers reduced occupational sitting time by an average of 45 minutes per workday,” said Ms McGuckin.

She said individual workers responded differently to the set goals, and while some welcomed one-on-one contact with the researchers, others did not.

“That emphasised to us that if you want the best results in changing behaviour you have to have an approach tailored to the individual,” she said.

What can you do to stay active at work?

1. Go for a walk at morning tea time.
2. Stand and walk to talk to colleagues in person rather than sending an email.
3. Take the long way when you are walking somewhere.
4. Stand-up when you are on the phone.
5. Have standing lunch-breaks, instead of sitting down.

Link to video here

Link to paper here

Contacts
Ms Teneale McGuckin
P: (07) 4781 5295
E: teneale.mcguckin@jcu.edu.au

Reproduced from https://www.jcu.edu.au/news/releases/2018/march/workers-motivated-to-take-a-stand

#JCUSportExerciseScience

Sunday, 1 April 2018

New Health Science books added to JCU Library collection – March 2018


This is a list of new Health Science books which have recently been added to the JCU Library collection. Books may be borrowed from the displays in the Eddie Koiki Mabo Library and the Cairns Campus Library, unless they are in non-borrowable collections such as Reference. Click on the title links to see more details in Tropicat and to access eBooks online.

ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
158.1 SUL
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE
ONLINE

Dr Lynore Geia TEDx talk - Walking with community as they lead

JCU College of Healthcare Sciences Academic Lead, Indigenous Health, Dr Lynore Geia's TEDx Canberra talk - Walking with community as they lead.



Reproduced from TedX Canberra YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWoE5mEIVPs

#JCUCollegeHealthcareSciences

Publication: Effect of different evasion maneuvers on anticipation and visual behavior in elite rugby league players


Connor, Jonathan D., Crowther, Robert G., and Sinclair, Wade H. (2018) Effect of different evasion maneuvers on anticipation and visual behavior in elite rugby league players. Motor Control, 22 (1). pp. 18-27. (In Press)

https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52910/

#JCUSportExerciseScience