Background; Death Cafés are increasingly being held to facilitate discussions around death and dying and end-of-life issues with the public. They are thought to provide a safe, confidential and interactive space in which sensitive and supportive conversations about death and dying and end-of-life are shared. Aim; To explore nursing students’ experiences of participating in a modified death café and its impact on their learning about death and dying. Methodology; A qualitative interpretive approach was employed using face to face semi-structured interviews with a purposive sample of 3rd year student nurse volunteers. Thematic analysis was used to identify key themes. Findings; Students viewed the modified death cafés positively, reporti...
[[abstract]]Aims and objectives. The aim of this study was to elucidate the experiences of first en...
Nursing homes are often places where older persons amp;ldquo;come to die.amp;rdquo; Despite this, de...
Background: Many nursing students are not prepared to encounter death and care for patients who are ...
Aim: To describe first-year nursing student`s expereinces of witnessing death and providing end-of-l...
Student nurses are involved in caring for patients who are actively dying or who have been told they...
Background: Undergraduate nursing students spend a significant amount of time in clinical placements...
Nurse educators are responsible for accompanying students towards becoming capable, competent profes...
Problem. Nurses, members of a society which tends to avoid and deny death, grief, and loss, are freq...
Nurses encounter death more frequently than most other professionals and it has become more and more...
The purpose of this research was to determine the efficacy of a death education course on death anxi...
Student nurses will be exposed to dying patients from the very start of their education. The authors...
It is not uncommon for a nurse to be assigned to care for a patient who is dying. However, many coll...
Death is an inevitable experience for each individual. Although death is a natural human experience,...
Undergraduate nursing education inconsistently prepares students for their role in providing end-of-...
Undergraduate nursing education inconsistently prepares students for their role in providing end-of-...
[[abstract]]Aims and objectives. The aim of this study was to elucidate the experiences of first en...
Nursing homes are often places where older persons amp;ldquo;come to die.amp;rdquo; Despite this, de...
Background: Many nursing students are not prepared to encounter death and care for patients who are ...
Aim: To describe first-year nursing student`s expereinces of witnessing death and providing end-of-l...
Student nurses are involved in caring for patients who are actively dying or who have been told they...
Background: Undergraduate nursing students spend a significant amount of time in clinical placements...
Nurse educators are responsible for accompanying students towards becoming capable, competent profes...
Problem. Nurses, members of a society which tends to avoid and deny death, grief, and loss, are freq...
Nurses encounter death more frequently than most other professionals and it has become more and more...
The purpose of this research was to determine the efficacy of a death education course on death anxi...
Student nurses will be exposed to dying patients from the very start of their education. The authors...
It is not uncommon for a nurse to be assigned to care for a patient who is dying. However, many coll...
Death is an inevitable experience for each individual. Although death is a natural human experience,...
Undergraduate nursing education inconsistently prepares students for their role in providing end-of-...
Undergraduate nursing education inconsistently prepares students for their role in providing end-of-...
[[abstract]]Aims and objectives. The aim of this study was to elucidate the experiences of first en...
Nursing homes are often places where older persons amp;ldquo;come to die.amp;rdquo; Despite this, de...
Background: Many nursing students are not prepared to encounter death and care for patients who are ...