Programplaner og emneplaner - Student
SYKPPRA70I Prevention and Rehabilitation in Home-based Healthcare Service Course description
- Course name in Norwegian
- Hjemmebaserte tjenester, rehabilitering og forebygging
- Study programme
-
Bachelor's Programme in Nursing
- Weight
- 15.0 ECTS
- Year of study
- 2023/2024
- Programme description
- Course history
-
Introduction
In this course, the student will learn about nursing for patients with chronic diseases, loss of function after injury or disease, intellectual disabilities and other complex diseases. The students will encounter patients in their own homes or in residential care homes. They will gain experience of communicating and interacting with patients and next-of-kin. Challenges related to key patient phenomena, functional impairment, mastery, dignity and user participation will be central aspects of the course. Different perspectives on nursing in a care and rehabilitation context are analysed with the home as the arena, at the intersection between paternalism and autonomy, as well as different cultural values. Interprofessional and intersectoral cooperation and service development and innovation are also included in the course.
In addition, the students taking this course in the spring semester will participate in the interdisciplinary teaching activity INTER1300 ‘Interprofessional collaboration on and with children, young people and their families’, with a scope corresponding to 1.5 credits carried out in the beginning of January. The theme will be how different professions can cooperate on and with children and adolescents. This includes a theoretical understanding of and research-based knowledge about interprofessional cooperation about and with children, adolescents and their families. Examples of the students’ practical training periods in particular, and from interprofessional cooperation in different practical fields of practice in general, will be part of the work. The learning outcomes expected after completion of INTER1300 are marked with *. See INTERACT’s website for a more detailed description of the content of INTER1300
https://www.oslomet.no/forskning/forskningsprosjekter/interacthttps://uni.oslomet.no/interact/
Required preliminary courses
Passed course:
- SYKP/SYKP1000 Theoretical Foundations of Nursing/Fundamentals of Nursing 1, 13 credits
- SYKK/SYKP1100 Anatomy, Physiology and Biochemistry, 12 credits
- SYKK/SYKP1200 Microbiology and Infection Control, 5 credits
- SYKK/SYKP1300 Pharmacology and Drug Administration, 5 credits
- SYKK/SYKP1400 Diseases and Health Deficits, 10 credits
- SYKK/SYKPPRA10 The Fundamentals of Nursing/2, 15 credits
- SYKK/SYKPPRA20 Nursing Patients with Acute, Critical and Chronic Diseases, 20 credits
- SYKK/SYKPPRA30K Decision-making in Nursing and Patient Safety/Nursing Patients with Acute, Critical and Chronic Diseases 2, 10 credits
or equivalent.
Learning outcomes
After completing the course, the student is expected to have achieved the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and competence:
Knowledge
The student
- can discuss the nurse’s role in health promoting work and (re)habilitation enterprises for different age groups
- can explain the terms everyday rehabilitation and (re)habilitation at home
- can explain the nursing of children with lasting health challenges and their families
- can discuss health counselling at the individual, group, and social level
- can explain different interprofessional methods of collaboration in the field of practice*
- can explain the challenges and possibilities of interprofessional cooperation processes*
Skills
The student is capable of
- adapting and integrating theoretical and practical knowledge of the nurse's rehabilitating and health promoting function to promote the best possible functional level, well-being and quality of life for the individual, in cooperation with other health professions
- identifying persons with a high risk of functional impairment early enough to implement measures
- planning and carrying out nursing measures to ensure the safe transfer of patients between different units and levels of the municipal health service planning and carrying out nursing for patients in the last phase of life and following up next-of-kin and those left behind
- can based on examples from their own practical training, analyse and assess interprofessional cooperation processes on and with children and young people with challenges*
- can establish interprofessional cooperation about and with children, young people and their parents/guardians*
Competence
The student is capable of
- critically reflecting (professional, ethical, and legal) on how information, communication and welfare technology can strengthen the municipality’s services
- exploring what a lack of activity and unmet psychosocial needs can lead to over time, and discussing how new measures can strengthen the traditional services provided
- discussing his/her own professional role in an interprofessional context and initiating and contributing to interprofessional and intersectoral cooperation
- communicating and sharing experiences related to central subject matter such as theories, problems, and solutions, both in writing and orally
- reflecting on ethical perspectives when nursing is carried out in private homes
- engaging in new thinking and innovation processes through project work and taking the initiative to quality improvement and implementation of new work methods
- discussing cultural sensitivity and reflecting on the significance of cultural understanding in nursing practice, quality, and patient safety in the patients' homes
- using technology and digital solutions to support patients’ and next-of-kin's resources, mastering possibilities and participation
- understanding of the basis for and necessity of interprofessional cooperation about and with children, young people, and their parents/guardians, and of their own professional contribution to the cooperation*
Teaching and learning methods
Practical training: over eight weeks in the municipal health service, home-based services. Includes self-study, lectures, simulation, flipped classroom, digital learning resources and seminars.
Digital learning resources are used for parts of INTER1300 ‘Interprofessional cooperation about and with children, adolescents and their families’, including digital resource lectures with lecturers from different study programmes, relevant cases and examples. 2 Days.
Course requirements
Practical training has requirements for attendance 90 %. The student fills in a self-presentation for the start of the practice and self-assessment for the mid- and final assessment. Other compulsory activities are:
- simulation palliation in home-based services - 2 days
- innovation and service development, participation in workshops related to innovation and innovation processes - 2 days
- group assignment (3-5 students) - based on learning outcomes in the course, the group formulates an issue related to nursing in private homes or in care homes. Creates a project description for the mid-term evaluation. Scope 1000 words (+/- 10 %). Based on the project description, the group creates a poster that is presented at a seminar before the final assessment.
The following must have been approved in order for the student to take the exam:
- INTER1300, Submitted individual log. Scope: 500 words (+/- 10%). In order to write the log, the student must first attend a seminar over two days.
Assessment
Coursework requirements from MALK 4000-401, 4000- 402, MALKA 211 and 212 or equivalent must be approved to participate and submit coursework requirements in MALKA220.
Permitted exam materials and equipment
On successful completion of the course, the student has the following learning outcomes classified as knowledge, skills and competence:
Knowledge
The student
- can describe and discuss the main distinctions between neoclassical economics, behavioral economics and behavior analysis
- can define behavioral economics and describe the origins
- can define the concepts of bounded and unbounded rationality
- can define the core concepts of discounting
- can define "beliefs, biases and heuristics" and describe typical heuristics
- can define core principles in game theory
- can describe and define the relations between nudging and prompting
Skills
The student
- can discuss the concept of rationality to the standard economic model and behavioral economics
- can discuss discounting in relation to the standard economic model and behavioral economics
- can discuss discounting in relation to behavior analysis
- can describe and discuss the concepts of rule-governed and contingency shaped behavior in the light of discounting.
- can discuss how "beliefs, biases and heuristics" affects choice behavior, and analyze these concepts in behavioral analytic terms
- can discuss game theory and how this affects choice behavior
- can discuss how nudging can affect choice behavior, and analyze nudging in behavioral analytic terms OK
- can discuss the concept of selection at the behavioral and cultural level in relation to micro- and macroeconomics
- can discuss the contribution of behavior analysis to behavioral economics
- can describe instances of cognitive biases and heuristics, and analyze them in behavioral terms
Competence
The student
- can present core principles of behavioral economics to others in a way that meets the requirements of professional scientific communication
- can present core principles of behavioral economics to the public
- can discuss how behavior analysis can contribute to the field of behavioral economics
- can present evidence based research from behavioral economics, and discuss different methods and applications
- can discuss how the field of behavioral economics can contribute to further understanding of choice behavior
Grading scale
The course will include lectures, student exercises, individual papers, discussions.
Examiners
Students submit 3 written assignments, each with maximum 5 pages including references, according to the deadlines in the course schedule.
Overlapping courses
Individual written examination with invigilation, 4 hours.
Exam questions are in English. Students may submit their exams in Norwegian, Swedish, Danish or English.