Occupational health nurses’ roles, credentials, and continuing education in Ontario, Canada


Autoria(s): Alleyne, Jergen; Bonner, Ann
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

The role of the occupational health nurse is broad and includes health care provider, manager/coordinator, educator/advisor, and case manager and consultant, depending on the type of industry and the country in which the nurse practices. Regardless of the type of role, the occupational health nurse must participate in continuing nursing education (CNE) activities. This study describes the roles, credentials, and number of CNE activities undertaken by occupational health nurses working in Ontario, Canada. Using a non-experimental descriptive design, a questionnaire was mailed to all practicing occupational health nurses who are members (n = 900) of a local nursing association. Three hundred fifty-four questionnaires were returned. Nurses reported a variety of roles in the following categories: case management, health promotion, policy development, infection control/travel health, ergonomics, education, research, health and safety, direct care, consultation, disaster preparedness, and industrial hygiene. Sixty-five percent of nurses held an occupational health nurse credential, and 19% of nurses attended more than 100 hours of CNE annually. Occupational health nurses have multiple workplace roles. Many attend CNE activities and they often prepare for credentialing.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/43796/

Publicador

Slack, Inc.

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/43796/1/Occupational_Health_Nurses%E2%80%99_Roles%2C_Credentials%2C_and_Continuing_Education_in_Ontario%2C_Canada.pdf

DOI:10.3928/08910162-20090826-01

Alleyne, Jergen & Bonner, Ann (2009) Occupational health nurses’ roles, credentials, and continuing education in Ontario, Canada. American Association of Occupational Health Nurses Journal, 57(9), pp. 389-395.

Direitos

Copyright 2009 Slack, Inc.

SLACK Incorporated Public Access Policy. As of January 1, 2006, SLACK Incorporated journal copyright agreements enable NIH-funded authors to deposit their accepted manuscripts to PubMed Central for posting 12 months following publication by SLACK Incorporated. The agreements also allow posting of accepted manuscripts on authors’ institutional repositories, with a link to the journal’s web page, 12 months following publication by SLACK Incorporated.

Fonte

School of Nursing

Tipo

Journal Article