The study purpose was to examine the reflections of the lived experiences of nurses in shelters or temporary community medical clinics responding for the first time to a civilian disaster. The disaster-nursing literature echoes the need for development of disaster content in the nursing curriculum. However, little thematic analysis-supporting curriculum from the lived experience of first-time responders exists in the literature. This study's purpose is to identify the essential thematic knowledge and skills necessary to provide care to disaster survivors in communities and for determining the themes necessary to formulate education in emergency preparedness curricula. A narrative inquiry, with a phenomenological analysis, to explore the lived experiences of nurses who responded once to a community disaster was the methodology used to identify themes. Thematic findings demonstrated a lack of prior knowledge about volunteering during a disaster response, that previous mass casualty exercises did not help with their actual responses, and that the participant RNs identified specific and assessment skills necessary for disasters.
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Details
Title
Qualitative Analysis of the Lived Experience of First-Time Nurse Responders in Disaster
Publication Details
The Journal of continuing education in nursing, Vol.47(2), pp.61-71
Resource Type
Journal article
Publisher
Slack Inc
Number of pages
11
Grant note
Sigma Theta Tau International Epsilon Omega Chapter Research Grant
Sigma Theta Tau Epsilon Omega Chapter Roberson Award
Copyright
Copyright 2016, SLACK Incorporated
Identifiers
WOS:000378233800006; 99380520297006600
Academic Unit
School of Nursing; Usha Kundu, MD College of Health