The 17th International Conference will be held in Perth Australia, June 17-25, 2025: https://conta.cc/3RwgFLp
More details to follow.
The 17th International Conference will be held in Perth Australia, June 17-25, 2025: https://conta.cc/3RwgFLp
More details to follow.
Greetings from the Family Measures Subcommittee of the IFNA Research Committee.
We are pleased to announce a new resource, the Family Measures Project, that we think many of you will find very helpful. The main goal of this project is to give IFNA members access to up-to-date information about select family measures.
To date, we have collected information on 14 family measures commonly used by IFNA members. While the amount of available information varies from one measure to the next, we have collected key information such as: 1)citation for the original article describing how the measure was developed and tested, 2) link to the website which shows how to obtain measure (if available), 3) purpose of the measure, 4) psychometrics, 5) scoring procedures, 6) norms/comparative data, 7) populations the measure has been used with, 8) languages the measure is available in, 9) strengths and limitations that have been identified for the measure, and 10) a reference list of studies in which the measure was used.
When you go to the link: IFNA 2023 Family Measures Project – International Family Nursing Association, you will find an overview of this project and a document for each of the 14 measures that includes the names of the IFNA members who collected the information. If you are interested in helping to collect information on other family measures for this project please contact Marcia Van Riper [email protected].
Dr. Rosemary Eustace is a Professor at Wright State University, USA. Her current research focuses on breast health awareness, education, and early detection. She works primarily with a population of rural women in midlife and their significant others in Tanzania, a low-income country in Sub-Saharan Africa. Her research also involves community health workers and primary care health care providers. Data is collected through an investigator-developed critical informant interview guide and a focus group discussion guide that explores the prospective feasibility and acceptability of a community health worker-led couple-based breast health awareness and early breast cancer detection program. Through this work, Dr. Eustace and her team seek to develop a multi-level breast health awareness and early detection program that will contribute towards Tanzania’s community health strategies for breast cancer prevention.
To achieve this important work, Dr. Eustace collaborates with Dr. Tumaini Nyamhanga from the School of Public Health at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) (https://muhas.ac.tz/). To support her ability to undertake this research, Dr. Eustace and Dr. Nyamhanga completed the competitive National Cancer Institute Multilevel Intervention Training Institute (https://healthcaredelivery.cancer.gov/mlti/) and the Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship Program (https://www.iie.org/programs/carnegie-african-diaspora-fellowship-program/).
As a nurse educator, Dr Eustace has been recognized for Innovation in Teaching Award for Family Science (https://cognella.com/blog/2019/11/21/three-instructors-honored-with-cognella-innovation-in-teaching-awards-for-family-science/). In addition, she is also part of a team of Wright State University nurse educators participating in the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) Pilot School initiative on Competency-Based Education for Practice-Ready Nurse Graduates (https://vocalvideo.com/v/aacn-essentials-anf-wright-state-university).
Dr. Eustace has also led Global Health Learning study abroad trips to Tanzania since 2012.
For further information, please contact Dr. Eustace: [email protected].
Dr. Barbara Giambra, PhD, APRN, CPNP-PC, is an Assistant Professor at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati (USA). Dr. Giambra studies the effects of communication between healthcare providers and the families of children with complex chronic conditions. Dr. Giambra seeks to understand the effects of caregiver-clinician communication on family management and child and family outcomes, and ways to modify communication behaviors to enhance outcomes. Through this work, Dr. Giambra has developed the Theory of Shared Communication and has utilized several instruments, including the Family Management Measure (FaMM), Parent Perception of Uncertainty Scale (PPUS), PedsQL, PROMIS 25, PROMIS Global Health and the Global Family Quality of Life Scale. Dr. Giambra was awarded a K23 grant from the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 2018.
For more information, contact IFNA member Barbara Giambra.
Twitter: @BKGiambra
Linked-In: Barbara Giambra