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Delwyn Nicholls BAAppSc BAppSC Grad Dip Med US Linda Sweet BNg MNgS PhD Grad Cert Ed Jon Hyett MBBS BSc MD 《Journal of ultrasound in medicine》2014,33(8):1349-1352
Sonographers use psychomotor skills to perform medical ultrasound examinations. Psychomotor skills describe voluntary movements of the limb, joints, and muscles in response to sensory stimuli and are regulated by the motor neural cortex in the brain. We define a psychomotor skill in relation to medical ultrasound imaging as “the unique mental and motor activities required to execute a manual task safely and efficiently for each clinical situation.” Skills in clinical ultrasound practice may be open or closed; most skills used in medical ultrasound imaging are open. Open skills are both complex and multidimensional. Visuomotor and visuospatial psychomotor skills are central components of medical ultrasound imaging. Both types of skills rely on learners having a visual exemplar or standard of performance with which to reference their skill performance and evaluate anatomic structures. These are imperative instructional design principles when teaching psychomotor skills. 相似文献
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Perspectives of rural health and human service practitioners following suicide prevention training programme in Australia: A thematic analysis 下载免费PDF全文
Martin Jones RN MSc PhD Monika Ferguson PhD Sandra Walsh BPsych BA GradCertEd GradCertCareerDevelopment Master Aboriginal Studies Lee Martinez RN BAppSC GradDipSocSc Michael Marsh Kathryn Cronin RN Nicolas Procter RN MBA PhD 《Health & social care in the community》2018,26(3):356-363
There are well‐established training programmes available to support health and human services professionals working with people vulnerable to suicide. However, little is known about involving people with lived experience in the delivery of suicide prevention training with communities with increased rates of suicide. The aim of this paper was to report on a formative dialogical evaluation that explored the views of health and human services workers with regard to a suicide prevention training programme in regional (including rural and remote areas) South Australia which included meaningful involvement of a person with lived experience in the development and delivery of the training. In 2015, eight suicide prevention training workshops were conducted with health and human services workers. All 248 participants lived and worked in South Australian regional communities. We interviewed a subsample of 24 participants across eight sites. A thematic analysis of the interviews identified five themes: Coproduction is key, It is okay to ask the question, Caring for my community, I can make a difference and Learning for future training. The overall meta‐theme was “Involvement of a person with lived experience in suicide prevention training supports regional communities to look out for people at risk of suicide.” This paper highlights the need for suicide prevention training and other workforce development programmes to include lived experience participation as a core component in development and delivery. 相似文献
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Clinical decision-making by midwives: managing case Complexity 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Jane Cioffi RN BAppSC GradDipEd MAppScPhD FRCNA Roslyn Markham MAPS MA PhD 《Journal of advanced nursing》1997,25(2):265-272
In making clinical judgements, it is argued that midwives use 'shortcuts' or heuristics based on estimated probabilities to simplify the decision-making task. Midwives ( n = 30) were given simulated patient assessment situations of high and low complexity and were given simulated patient assessment situations of high and low complexity and were required to think aloud. Analysis of verbal protocols showed that subjective probability judgements (heuristics) were used more frequently in the high than low complexity case and predominated in the last quarter of the assessment period for the high complexity case. 'Representativeness' was identified more frequently in the high then in the low case, but was the dominant heuristic in both. Reports completed after each simulation suggest that heuristics based on memory for particular conditions affect decisions. It is concluded that midwives use heuristics, derived mainly from their clinical experiences, in an attempt to save cognitive effort and to facilitate reasonably accurate decisions-making process. 相似文献
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