Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10316317 | Nurse Education Today | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Adequate clinical exposure can be challenging as nurses are not routinely exposed to War Zone levels of trauma in the UK. Clinical placements need to be standardised and harmonised, and located in areas where nurses cared for patients with similar injury patterns to those witnessed on deployment. Current NHS Trust placements can reduce the opportunities for employment in suitable clinical environments and diminishing the openings for collective military training. Better use should be made of clinical rotation programmes, including high dependency units, elective surgery, medical assessment units, paediatrics, and outreach teams such as burns and plastic surgery and pain management. Practice Educators should be utilised to provide education, mentorship, supervision and continuing personal development in the operational arena. The paper considers post-Afghanistan future options.
Keywords
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Health Sciences
Nursing and Health Professions
Nursing
Authors
Alan Finnegan, Sara Finnegan, David Bates, Debra Ritsperis, Kath McCourt, Mike Thomas,