How nursing is critical to quality care in humanitarian settings
How nursing is critical to quality care in humanitarian settings
[version 1; not peer reviewed]No competing interests were disclosed
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With country/regional differences in mind, I think it's important that MSF adopt the universal WHO terminology of 'quality of health care' or just 'quality of care'. Otherwise, there is some ambiguity of the role of Nursing in 'Medical Care'. Although some may argue this is semantics, as a Nurse academic I think discourse is very important. With Nurse Advisors now appointed to all OCs, maybe they have an opinion on this. Inconsistent use of terminology creates confusion in MSF Medical Activities Reports aswell.
Thanks for the presentation. Glad to see Nursing getting acknowledged as a separate profession with a body of its own research in the Humanitarian sector.
With country/regional differences in mind, I think it's... READ MORE
With country/regional differences in mind, I think it's important that MSF adopt the universal WHO terminology of 'quality of health care' or just 'quality of care'. Otherwise, there is some ambiguity of the role of Nursing in 'Medical Care'. Although some may argue this is semantics, as a Nurse academic I think discourse is very important. With Nurse Advisors now appointed to all OCs, maybe they have an opinion on this. Inconsistent use of terminology creates confusion in MSF Medical Activities Reports aswell.
Thanks for the presentation. Glad to see Nursing getting acknowledged as a separate profession with a body of its own research in the Humanitarian sector. READ LESS
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