Thursday 13 May 2010
Concurrent session presentations (where agreed to publish)
5.1 Theme: Maternity / Caring for Children (Chair: David Foster)
5.1.1
Failing to care: Representations of perinatal loss in medical textbooks
Joan Cameron, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Dundee, UK. Co-authors: J Taylor; A Greene.
5.1.2
An examination of breastfeeding support for mothers in the community in Ireland
Patricia Leahy-Warren, Senior Lecturer, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University College Cork, Ireland.
5.1.3
Diversity, identity and pregnancy loss: Implications for policy and practice
Joan Cameron, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Dundee, UK. Co-authors: J Taylor; A Greene.
5.1.4
Caring dads: an evaluation
Toity Deave, Centre for Child and Adolescent Health, Health and Social Care, University of the West of England, UK. Co-authors:K McCracken; H Fergusson.
5.2 Theme: Methods / nursing roles / nursing practice (Chair: Leslie Gelling)
5.2.1
The experience of conducting interviews and observation in one setting in India: A step in the concept analysis of the cultural responsiveness of defined aims and definitions of rehabilitation
Sally Davis, Programme Lead, School of Health and Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, UK.
5.2.2
Using focus group research to inform the development of effective information strategies for critical care discharge: A discussion of its relative merits and challenges
Suzanne Bench, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery, King’s College London, UK.
5.2.3
Scoping the role of the breast care nurse (BCN): a national survey
Fiona Irvine, Health and Applied Social Science, Liverpool John Moores University, UK. Co-authors: J Brizell; Jan Hopkins.
5.2.4
Addressing dignity issues in diverse care settings in the UK: a qualitative study evaluation
Lesley Baillie, Reader in Healthcare, Research and Education, University of Bedfordshire, UK. Co-author: A Gallagher.
5.3 Theme: End of life (Chair: Carol Haigh)
5.3.1
Thinking about death and what it means: Conversations with people with intellectual disabilities
Sue Read, Reader in Learning Disability Nursing, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Keele University, UK.
5.3.2
‘Me, I feel proud in my uniform’: The impact of being a palliative care community volunteer in Uganda
Barbara Jack, Professor, Head of Research and Scholarship, Director EPRC, Faculty of Health, Edgehill University, UK. Co-author: A Merriman.
5.3.3
The impact of education on the practice of end-of-life care planning and delivery in care homes
Martin Johnson, Professor in Nursing, Nursing and Midwifery, University of Salford, UK. Co-authors: M Attree; I Jones.
5.3.4
Nursing and medical professionals’ perceptions of the palliative care needs of people with Parkinson’s Disease
George Kernohan, Professor of Nursing Research, Institute of Nursing Research, University of Ulster, UK. Co-authors: M Waldron; F Hasson; B Cochrane; H Chambers; Sue Foster.
5.4 Theme: Older people (Chair: Julienne Meyer)
5.4.1
DORIS - Database of research in stroke
Alex Pollock, Stroke Programme, Nursing Midwifery and Allied Health Professions (NMAHP) Research Unit, UK. Co-authors: M Brady; L Firkins; F Graham; M Halliday; P Langhorne; C Ritchie; P Sandercock; B Thomas.
5.4.2
What care regulators perceive having a choice means for people living in care homes
Katie Tucker, Methods Directorate, Care Quality Commission, UK.
5.4.3
The exploration of perceived health, life quality and coping strategies of the community-living elderly with cardiovascular diseases
Shu-Fen Su, Assistant Professor in Nursing, School of Nursing, Hung-Kuang University, Taiwan. Co-authors: P E Liu; Y W Lin; X Y Su.
5.4.4
Developing practice guidelines for bereavement care for older people
Audrey Stephen, Faculty of Health and Social Care, Robert Gordon University, UK.
5.5 Theme: Drug and alcohol related issues (Chair: Vita FitzSimons)
5.5.1
Privileging client experience within methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) in British Columbia, Canada: Lessons for heath care system change and research practice
Tessa Parkes, Senior Lecturer, Department of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Stirling, UK. Co-author: Bill Nelles.
5.5.2
Efficacy of brief interventions delivered by nurses for dependent drinkers: A prospective cohort study
Kathryn Rosemary Cobain, Research and Development/ Primary Care, Liverpool Primary Care Trust, UK. Co-authors: L Owens; R Fitzgerald; I T Gilmore; M Pirmohamed.
5.5.3
Can partnership working be seamless? An example of a nursing and voluntary agency partnership model for community alcohol services
Sarit Carlebach, Centre for Health and Social Evaluation (CHASE), Teesside University, UK. Co-authors: D Wake; S Hamilton.
5.5.4
Do psychosocial treatments decrease alcohol consumption for patients with alcohol dependence?
A systematic review Kathryn Rosemary Cobain, Research and Development/ Primary Care, Liverpool Primary Care Trust, UK. Co-authors: L Owens; R Dickson; M Pirmohamed.
5.6 Theme: Pain (Chair: Alison Twycross)
5.6.1
An ethnographic study of parental involvement in neonatal pain management
Caryl Skene, Neonatal Nurse Consultant, Neonatal Unit, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK.
Co-authors: Penny Curtis; Kate Gerrish.
5.6.2
Experiences of surgical patients: A second look at pain
Sheila Rodgers, University of Edinburgh, UK. Co-authors: J Tocher; M Coulter; D Watt; L Dickson; M McCreaddie.
5.6.3
The socialisation of registered nurses responses to post operative pain: a descriptive qualitative study
Carolyn Mackintosh, Department of Nursing, University of Bradford, UK.
5.6.4
Emergency department pain management: An Australian audit
Margaret Fry, Associate Professor of Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia.
5.7 Theme: Workforce (Chair: Leonie Walker)
5.7.1
Understanding advanced nursing practice: Perspectives from Jordan
Zainab Zahran, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Sheffield, UK.
5.7.2
Exploring nurse leadership in research development in clinical practice: An action research study
Loretta Bellman, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK. Co-authors: Amy Cole; Theresa Wiseman.
5.7.3
Succession planning of the education workforce: Commonalities, differences and challenges facing midwifery and diagnostic radiography
Elizabeth Anne Rosser, Associate Dean (Nursing), School of Health and Social Care, Bournemouth University, UK. Co-author: J W Albarran.
5.8 Theme: Education (Chair: Sue Jackson)
5.8.1
Applying Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics to interpret the mentor experience of failing preregistration nursing students in their final placement
Sharon Black, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, University of Bedfordshire, UK.
5.8.2
Using phenomenography to understand pre-registration nurse lecturers perception of the Observed Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE)
Laura Taylor, Faculty of Health, Edge Hill University, UK.
5.8.3
An investigation of race and the mentor-student relationship in nursing: the limitations of holistic approaches in tackling racism
Janet Scammell, School of Health and Social Care, Bournemouth University, UK.
6.1 Theme: Research methods (Chair: Alison Twycross)
6.1.1
Issues impacting on the perception and practice of advocacy by clinical research nurses
Polly Tarrant, Lead Research Nurse, Addenbrookes Clinical Research Centre, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK.
6.1.2
Multiple perspectives and methods: helping to understand the factors influencing quality of life
Wendy Moyle, Griffith Institute of Health and Medical Research, RCCCPI, Griffith University, Australia.
6.1.3
Colleague supervision of in-house master's level dissertations
Annette Jinks, EPRC, Faculty of Health, Edge Hill University, UK. Co-authors: J Kirton; K Straker; J rown; B Jack.
6.1.4
The impact of master's degree education in nursing: A case study within an inner city acute NHS trust
Ruth Harris, Reader, Faculty of Health and Social Care Sciences, Kingston University and St. George’s, University of London, UK. Co-authors: A McEwen; E Vangeli.
6.2 Theme: Chronic disease (CHair: Val Woodward)
6.2.1
The nursing contribution to chronic disease management (CDM): A case of public perception?
Patricia Wilson, Centre for Research in Primary and Community Care, University of Hertfordshire, UK. Co-authors: S Kendall; S Procter; F Brooks.
6.2.2
Living with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): The male carer’s story
Terry Robinson, Respiratory Nursing, Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust, UK. Co-author: G Fitch.
6.2.3
Evaluating the nursing contribution to chronic disease management (CDM): a comparison of four models
Sue Procter, Centre for Research in Primary and Community Care, University of Hertfordshire, UK. Co-authors: S Kendall; P Wilson; F Brooks.
6.2.4
Online forums as a tool for research in children's cancer care (ViPER)
Stephanie Kumpunen, Department of Children's Nursing, London South Bank University, UK. Co-authors: S Aldiss; L Forbat; N Goulden; G MacIntyre; N Ranasinghe; F Gibson.
6.3 Theme: Older people (Chair: Julienne Meyer)
6.3.1
We’re just not getting it right: How should we provide care to the older person with multimorbid chronic conditions?
Marina Lupari, Head of Nursing- Research and Development/ PhD Student, Northern Health and Social Care Trust, UK. Co-authors: Vivien Coates; Gary Adamson.
6.3.2
Nurse case management in England: A study of different models for community dwelling older people with long term conditions
Vari Drennan, Professor of Health Policy and Service Delivery, Faculty of Health and Social Care Sciences, Kingston University and St. George’s, University of London, UK. Co-author: C Goodman
6.3.3
In the shadow of ageing: The experiences of older women living with a longterm condition
Dianne Roy, Senior Lecturer, Department of Nursing, Unitec, New Zealand. Co-author: L S Giddings.
6.3.4
Findings from a qualitative study of older people’s experiences of changed medication appearance
Tracey Williamson, Research Fellow, University of Salford, UK. Co-authors: M Howarth; L Greene; A Prashar.
6.4 Theme: Cancer (Chair: Kate Gerrish)
6.4.1
Developing a community based cancer survivorship coaching programme: Using mixed methodology to inform the development of a complex intervention
Karen Roberts, Queen Elizabeth Hospital NHS Trust, UK. Co-authors: S Rao; C Clarke; S Rushbrooke
6.4.2
Living beyond treatment for colorectal cancer
Susan Goodlad, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Health and Applied Social Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, UK. Co-authors: Fiona Irvine; Christine Wall; Helen Poole; Lynda Appleton.
6.4.3
Introducing volunteers into chemotherapy day units: A mixed method evaluation
Theresa Wiseman, Senior Lecturer/Nursing Research fellow, Specialist Care, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery, King’s College London, UK. Co-authors: D DeBerker; C Miller; M Griffin; A Richardson.
6.4.4
Thirty-day mortality in critical care outreach patients with cancer: An investigative study of predictive factors related to outreach referral episodes
Natalie Pattison, Clinical Nursing Research Fellow, Nursing, Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, UK. Co-authors: S Ashley; L Roskelly; G O’Gara.
6.5 Theme: Learning disability (Chair: Martyn Jones)
6.5.1
Developing a validated measure of peace of mind: A case study of carers of people with learning disabilities living in a residential facility
Marie Gressmann, School of Health and Social Care, Teesside University, UK.
6.5.2
A mixed methods research study of the impact and outcomes of four learning disability liaison nursing services across south east Scotland. Michael Brown, Nursing, Midwifery and Social Care, Edinburgh Napier University, UK.
6.5.3
‘You get people muddling along... often doing the wrong thing’: The role of the learning disability liaison nurse in supporting implementation of the Adults with Incapacity Act (Scotland) 2000
Juliet MacArthur, CPPD Department, NHS Lothian, UK. Co-author: M Brown.
6.5.4
Factors influencing the experiences of family carers who have a relative with a learning disability living in a residential facility
Marie Gressmann, School of Health and Social Care, Teesside University, UK.
6.6 Theme: Clinical practice (Chair: Carol Haigh)
6.6.1
Randomised controlled trials with complex interventions: Design issues
Vivien Coates, Prof Nursing Research, Nursing, University of Ulster, UK. Co-author: D Chaney.
6.6.2 Randomised control trial feasibility study on the use of medical grade honey to reduce the incidence of wound infection
Val Robson, CNS Leg Ulcer Care, Aintree University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK. Co-authors: Simon Rogers; Derek Lowe; Rachel Sen; Stephen Barrow.
6.6.3
Preoperative fasting for adults to prevent perioperative complications: An updated Cochrane review
Valerie Ness, School of Health, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK. Co-authors: M Brady; S Kinn; P Stuart.
6.7 Theme: Research methods (Chair: Kate Seers)
6.7.1
The synthesis of qualitative and quantitative research: Its role in producing an evidence base for practice
Kate Flemming, Department of Health Sciences, University of York, UK
6.7.2
A picture speaks a thousand words
Victoria Ridgway, University of Chester, UK.
6.7.3
The value of case study design for nursing research
Louise Shorney, Professional Development and Allied Health Care, University of Chester, UK.
6.7.4
Applying mixed methods in a single concurrent instrumental case study design (ViPER)
Lauretta Luck, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Western Sydney, Australia. Co-author: D Jackson.
6.8 Theme: Cardiac (Chair: Angela Grainger)
6.8.1
Patients’ and partners’ beliefs about treatment benefits and risks, before and four months after coronary artery bypass grafting surgery
Patricia Thomson, Lecturer, Nursing and Midwifery, University of Stirling, UK. Co-authors: C A Niven; D Peck.
6.8.2
Communication of individual cardiovascular risk: A practice nurse perspective
Sue Boase, Research Associate, General Practice and Primary Care Research Unit, University of Cambridge, UK. Co-author: S Sutton.
6.9 Theme: Tools development (Chair: Shron Hamilton)
6.9.1
Using card sort methodology in the development of a mobile phone based intervention to assess and alleviate symptoms in children receiving palliative care
Rachel Taylor, Department of Childrens Nursing, London South Bank University, UK. Co-authors: S Aldiss; M Comac; L Forbat; N Rowa-Dewar; D Murphy; F Gibson.
6.9.2
Renal treatment education: A patient needs assessment study
Kate McCarthy, Health Sciences Research Institute, University of Warwick, UK.
6.9.3
Q methodology and interview analysis: An innovative approach
Katie Gallagher, Tutor, Department of Midwifery and Child Health, Kings College London, UK. Co-authors: D Porock; A
Edgley; N Marlow.

