Article
Communication
Kevin B. Wright, Xiaomei Cai, Carla Fisher, Camella J. Rising, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Dasha Afanaseva
Summary: The study found that bloggers who shared personal breast cancer risk information were able to attract more reader comments, bloggers who cited breast cancer statistics were more likely to receive respect and emotional support from readers, and repeating information from blog interventions could generate different types of support messages.
HEALTH COMMUNICATION
(2021)
Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
Laura Struik, Youjin Yang
Summary: This study aims to understand how e-cigarette users are experiencing and approaching vaping cessation through the analysis of a quit vaping subreddit. Findings show that most users prefer gradual reduction of nicotine content to quit vaping, with reasons related to negative physical consequences and feeling stuck to the vape due to nicotine addiction. Top barriers include withdrawal symptoms and addiction intensity, while top facilitators include distraction techniques and positive mindset.
JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Social
Thomas Vaughan-Johnston, Devin Fowlie, Jill A. Jacobson
Summary: This article discusses the increasing concern among communication scholars about biases in people's interactions with science. It suggests that attitudes play a role in shaping people's facilitation of scientific discourse even between strangers. Through a field study using the lost e-mail technique, the researchers examine how people's beliefs are associated with their facilitation of scientific claims.
CYBERPSYCHOLOGY BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL NETWORKING
(2022)
Article
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Ting-Ting Wu, Yi-Chen Lu, Yueh-Min Huang
Summary: The integration of digital technology into healthcare is crucial for effective health communication and nursing information literacy. This study found that using multimedia e-books in different group sizes had no significant difference in effectiveness. However, nursing students' feedback on using e-books was consistently positive, indicating that multimedia e-books can effectively enhance health communication skills and nursing information literacy.
Article
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Anton Borg, Martin Boldt, Oliver Rosander, Jim Ahlstrand
Summary: Classifying emails into distinct labels using machine learning can improve customer support efficiency. This study concludes that long short-term memory networks outperform other models in predicting email labels and presents a Web-based interface for classifying emails into 33 different labels.
NEURAL COMPUTING & APPLICATIONS
(2021)
Article
Computer Science, Information Systems
Maryam Hina, Mohsin Ali, Abdul Rehman Javed, Fahd Gabban, Liaqat Ali Khan, Zunera Jalil
Summary: AIoT is an emerging trend in industrial applications that requires proactive data analysis to prevent cyber-attacks and crimes. SeFACED is an efficient method for multiclass email classification that overcomes limitations of traditional search techniques, achieving performance improvements on long dependency data.
Article
Nursing
Katherine A. Rafferty, Stephanie Nemmers-Bello, Sydney Tietz, Melissa Lipovac
Summary: The study found that children living with medical complexities are increasing in the U.S., with supportive pediatric health care team members playing a crucial role in helping mothers manage their child's condition. Mothers desired a collaborative partnership with the health care team, contingent upon effective use of informational, emotional, and network support by team members. Specific strategies were identified to improve communication skills in training and educational programs for health care professionals.
WESTERN JOURNAL OF NURSING RESEARCH
(2022)
Article
Nursing
Cheryl Zlotnick, Inbal Manor-Lavon, Patricia Leahy-Warren
Summary: This study aims to examine the relationship between social status and postpartum depression by migrant generation and determine whether social support can moderate this relationship. The results indicate that social support is negatively associated with postpartum depression for all mothers, but there is no association between migrant generation and postpartum depression, and no moderation effect was found.
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Aazam Hosseinnejad, Maryam Rassouli, Simin Jahani, Nasrin Elahi, Shahram Molavynejad
Summary: This study aims to explain the range of services that can be provided by community health nurses from the perspective of managers and nurses. The findings suggest that important services provided by community health nurses include health promotion, management of chronic patients and the elderly, follow-ups, and home visits.
Article
Education, Scientific Disciplines
George Oliveira Silva, Amanda Karoliny Ferreira Games, Gabrielly Stefany Loiola Cabral, Karina Machado Siqueira, Natalia Del'Angelo Aredes, Helio Galdino Junior
Summary: This study explores the factors influencing the academic performance of undergraduate nursing students through interviews. The findings reveal two thematic categories: students' history and relationships, and academic experiences and their challenges. Students perceive socio-historical factors and relationships with peers and professors as direct influencers of their academic performance.
NURSE EDUCATION TODAY
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Patrick Stark, Gerry McKenna, Christine Brown Wilson, Georgios Tsakos, Paul Brocklehurst, Caroline Lappin, Barry Quinn, Nicola Holland, Gary Mitchell
Summary: This study aims to evaluate an educational e-resource co-designed by service users, carers, and clinicians to improve community nurses' capabilities in delivering oral health care to older people in their own homes. It will also explore the acceptability of the e-resource and examine the facilitators and barriers to providing this care for older people.
Article
Nursing
Julianna Timmerman, Verna Sitzer, Rhea Eusebio, Karen Reavis, Lynn Marder
Summary: The study revealed that nurses use handwritten notes for handover report, leading to personalized content and lack of consistency between shifts, with a scarcity of safety/risk-related information.
WESTERN JOURNAL OF NURSING RESEARCH
(2021)
Article
Linguistics
Pavla Chejnova
Summary: In e-mail communications between university students and their lecturer in the Czech Republic, students employ various politeness strategies in their apology emails, aiming to present themselves as committed and reliable students while also showing respect for the lecturer's opinions and willingness to follow their advice.
JOURNAL OF PRAGMATICS
(2021)
Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
Shimrit Keddem, Aneeza Agha, Sabrina Morawej, Amy Buck, Peter Cronholm, Sarita Sonalkar, Matthew Kearney
Summary: This study examined historical trends in Twitter hashtags related to women and HIV PrEP and explored the content shared through Twitter. The findings showed that most relevant tweets were posted by organizations, with individual users including activists and personal users. The tweets predominantly targeted people of color and the LGBTQ community, but lacked cues to action. Future tweets should incorporate more theoretical constructs and broaden their audience to achieve greater impact, while also drawing on strategies used by the LGBTQ community.
JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
(2023)
Review
Nursing
Suratsawadee Kruahong, Thitipong Tankumpuan, Kathleen Kelly, Patricia M. Davidson, Premgamon Kuntajak
Summary: This study analyzed the concept of community empowerment and highlighted its importance in health promotion. It found that community empowerment can help communities define priorities, make choices, develop strategies, and improve health while reducing health inequalities. Advanced practice nurses can effectively use community empowerment to address health disparities and promote community health.
JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Sylvia Hsi-Ching Chang, Wendy A. Hall, Suzanne Campbell, Lily Lee
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
(2018)
Review
Pediatrics
Wendy A. Hall, Elizabeth Nethery
PAEDIATRIC RESPIRATORY REVIEWS
(2019)
Article
Clinical Neurology
P. Corkum, S. Weiss, W. Hall, C. Brown, C. Chambers, E. Constantin, R. Godbout, A. Hanlon-Dearman, O. Ipsiroglu, G. J. Reid, S. Shea, I. M. Smith, R. Stremler, M. Witmans
Article
Nursing
Kathrin H. Stoll, Soo Downe, Joyce Edmonds, Mechthild M. Gross, Anne Malott, Judith McAra-Couper, Michelle Sadler, Gill Thomson, Yvonne Hauck, Joana Streffing, Emma Swift, Patricia McNiven, Deborah Payne, Wendy Hall
JOURNAL OF MIDWIFERY & WOMENS HEALTH
(2020)
Article
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Sarah Jane Liva, Wendy Anne Hall, John Oliffe
Summary: Women's postnatal physical activity decision-making processes are influenced by their relationships with physical activity, their perceived capacity, and the workability of their desires. Women may benefit from discussions about birth recovery and accessing community and peer resources to support safe physical activity post-birth.
BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Developmental
Nicole E. MacKenzie, Elizabeth Keys, Wendy A. Hall, Reut Gruber, Isabel M. Smith, Evelyn Constantin, Roger Godbout, Robyn Stremler, Graham J. Reid, Ana Hanlon-Dearman, Cary A. Brown, Sarah Shea, Shelly K. Weiss, Osman Ipsiroglu, Manisha Witmans, Christine T. Chambers, Pantelis Andreou, Esmot Begum, Penny Corkum
Summary: The study found that the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic had an impact on the sleep of many Canadian children, with parents generally perceiving a decline in their child's sleep quality during this period. Reasons for children's poor sleep included increased screen time, anxiety, and decreased exercise. Disrupted routines had negative effects on children's sleep and stress, highlighting the reciprocal influence of stress on children's and parents' sleep.
JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Christine H. K. Ou, Wendy A. Hall, Paddy Rodney, Robyn Stremler
Summary: This study found that mothers' sleep quality and anger about infant sleep are associated with their state anger. Clinicians can educate families about sleep pattern changes during the perinatal time frame and assess women's mood and perceptions of their and their infants' sleep quality in the first postpartum year. They can also offer evidence-based strategies for improving parent-infant sleep. Such health promotion initiatives could reduce mothers' anger and support healthy sleep.
BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH
(2022)
Article
Education & Educational Research
Wendy Hall, Sarah Liva
Summary: There is plenty of theoretical information available about how mentorship is supposed to work, its goals, and what makes it effective. However, there is a lack of empirical information about the processes and implications of mentoring when problems arise. Graduate students face significant challenges in areas such as psychology, physical well-being, finances, and relationships, and they expect mentorship to help alleviate these issues. Limited qualitative literature has described graduate students' perceptions and outcomes related to problems with mentorship.
CANADIAN JOURNAL FOR THE SCHOLARSHIP OF TEACHING AND LEARNING
(2022)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Christine H. K. Ou, Wendy A. Hall, Paddy Rodney, Robyn Stremler
Summary: Mothers experience intense anger after childbirth when they feel their expectations are violated, needs are compromised, and they feel on edge, particularly around infant sleep. They manage their anger by suppressing or expressing it, with support from partners, family, and others being key in helping them cope.
QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
(2022)
Article
Nursing
Esther Clark, Saraswathi Vedam, Alison Mclean, Kathrin Stoll, Winnie Lo, Wendy A. Hall
Summary: This study assessed indicators of respectful maternity care (RMC) through the Delphi method. The results provide a registry of indicators for use in perinatal care research.
JOURNAL OF NURSING MEASUREMENT
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Angelita Jose Henrique, Patricia Rodney, Wendy Hall, Sally Thorne, Soodabeh Joolaee
Summary: The study aimed to describe how women perceived relational autonomy for decision-making during childbirth pain and illuminated influencing factors. It found that circumstances during childbirth, such as women's expectations and relationships, influenced their efforts to engage in relational autonomy. Care providers' decision-making practices could disrupt women's expectations, undermine trust, demonstrate disrespect, and rely on inadequate communication. When care providers' perceptions about pain differed from women's reports, participants became distressed because their subjective pain experiences were not acknowledged.
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
(2023)
Editorial Material
Clinical Neurology
Wendy A. Hall, Elizabeth Keys, Christine Ou
Article
Education & Educational Research
Wendy A. Hall, Sarah Liva
Summary: Graduate student mentoring is crucial for successful university experiences, improving student retention, completion, and satisfaction. Students view mentoring as transformative, requiring them to advocate for themselves and utilize university structures for support. Systematic approaches are needed to strengthen institutional supervisory practices and support graduate student success.
MENTORING & TUTORING
(2021)
Meeting Abstract
Clinical Neurology
P. Corkum, C. Chambers, R. Godbout, R. Gruber, W. Hall, G. Reid, R. Stremler, S. Weiss, M. Witmans, G. Rigney, E. Begum, P. Andreou
Article
Education & Educational Research
Michael Paskevicius, Valerie Irvine
JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE MEDIA IN EDUCATION
(2019)