Family Nursing Externship, Switzerland: 23 participants from 3 countries
Dr. Lorraine Wright, Canada, and Dr. Janice M. Bell, Canada, offered an invited 4-day Family Nursing Externship workshop for advanced practice to 23 nurses from 3 countries (Switzerland, Austria, Italy) in June 2014. Sponsored by Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Institute of Nursing, the Family Nursing Externship offered ideas about advanced practice with families focused on the Illness Beliefs Model and the Trinity Model. A live family interview with a Swiss family experiencing illness was offered by Dr. Lorraine Wright and a reflecting team intervention was moderated by Dr. Janice Bell. Thanks to Barbara Preusse Bleuler for organizing and hosting this event which focused on increasing the competence and confidence of practicing nurses to offer family nursing interventions to families. For more information, contact IFNA members, Lorraine Wright: [email protected] or Janice M. Bell: [email protected]
Dr. Junko Honda Focuses on Family Research and Family Assessment in Child-Rearing Families
Dr. Junko Honda is currently an Associate Professor, Child Health Nursing, College of Nursing Art and Science, University of Hyogo, Japan. She teaches family nursing in an Advanced Nurse Practitioner program at the graduate level to students in pediatric nursing, home nursing, adult care/chronic illness, and mental health. Her research is focused on developing an e-learning tool for the education of generalist family nursing practice and she is also developing a scale to examine family nursing competency.
Dr. Megan Aston Focuses on Family Health Nursing with an Emphasis on Maternal, Infant and Child Health
Dr. Megan Aston is an Associate Professor at Dalhousie University School of Nursing in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada where she teaches Family and Community Health Nursing, and Qualitative Health Research. Her passion and expertise is in Family Health Nursing with a focus on maternal, infant and child health. She has conducted numerous research studies examining therapeutic relationships between nurses and families in the community as well as in the hospital. She worked as a public health nurse for many years and now studies postpartum early home visiting by public health nurses with new mothers. She has also focused on 1) queer women’s birthing experiences in rural Nova Scotia; 2) hospital experiences of children with intellectual disabilities, their parents and nurses who take care of them; 3) bereavement care by nurses with families whose child has died; and 4) bereavement care by Victorian Order of Nurses (VON) nurses in the community with families of all ages. She uses feminist poststructuralism to guide her research which includes personal, social, and institutional constructions of the practices of nurses and clients. Read more about her work and publications at http://www.dal.ca/faculty/healthprofessions/nursing/faculty-staff/halifax-faculty/megan-aston.html. For more information, contact IFNA member Megan Aston: [email protected]
Dr. Sue Kirk Studies the Effects of Disability and Chronic Illness on Families
Dr. Sue Kirk is a nurse researcher in the United Kingdom, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Manchester, who investigates the effects of disability and chronic illness on families and how support can be developed to meet their needs. Her primary research interests center on the experiences and support needs of disabled children and young people and those with long-term/life-limiting conditions and their families. Her research interests extend to adult chronic condition management and the role played by health technologies and social networks in self-care support. A detailed account of her program of research and publications can be accessed at: http://www.nursing.manchester.ac.uk/staff/SueKirk. Sue is a member of the IFNA UK/Ireland Chapter. For more information, contact IFNA member Sue Kirk: [email protected]