CQUniversity Australia
 

Engaging Indigenous people within Higher Ed

CQUniversity's Office of Indigenous Engagement recently hosted a visit from the Oodgeroo Unit of Queensland University of Technology (QUT), at Rockhampton Campus.

Professor Anita Lee Hong, Director of the Oodgeroo Unit, and Lone Pearce, Project Officer, met with Office of Indigenous Engagement staff to discuss employment issues and best practice models for engaging Indigenous people within the higher education sector, including governance matters.

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PhD 'child's play' for researcher graduating in Mackay 

Judi Parson's nursing perspective on the 'integration of procedural play for children undergoing cystic fibrosis treatment' has led her back to Mackay, where she was previously known as a nurse and nursing academic...

Now an established health researcher based in Tasmania, Judi will return to Mackay to accept her PhD award during CQUniversity's graduation ceremony at the local entertainment centre, from 5pm on Thursday April 23.

Judi says that children with cystic fibrosis must undergo long-term and invasive treatment regimes.

PhotoID:7010, Judi Parson
Judi Parson

"Research indicates that the emotional impact of invasive procedures associated with treatment are significantly stressful for the child-patient and his or her family," she says.

"It is also documented that procedural play can significantly reduce these stress levels.

"Nurses are one of the primary health care professionals responsible for dealing with hospitalised children with CF. It is important that they are aware of the significant therapeutic role of procedural play."

Judi says there is limited literature on nurses' understanding of procedural play in the acute paediatric environment.

"Thus, the purpose of my study is to describe factors, from a nursing perspective, that facilitate or inhibit the integration of play as a therapeutic tool for children undergoing invasive procedures for the treatment of CF in the context of an acute paediatric ward culture.

"Key findings showed that whilst nurses had an intuitive understanding of play they did not have a professional discourse of procedural play.

"The hospital system supports the prioritisation of clinical practice over the child's psychosocial needs during procedural interventions."

Judi says this research makes an original contribution to the knowledge base in the field of paediatrics by providing insights into an important and unexplored area.

The thesis details strong recommendations with regards to developing a supportive sub-culture of procedural play through educational strategies for the nursing profession.

Judi's latest research is profiled at: http://www.ipp-shr.cqu.edu.au/team/?s=11