Charlene Ronquillo
University of British Columbia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Charlene Ronquillo.
Nursing Inquiry | 2011
Charlene Ronquillo; Geertje Boschma; Sabrina T. Wong; Linda Quiney
The history of immigrant Filipino nurses in Canada has received little attention, yet Canada is a major receiving country of a growing number of Filipino migrants and incorporates Filipino immigrant nurses into its healthcare workforce at a steady rate. This study aims to look beyond the traditional economic and policy analysis perspectives of global migration and beyond the push and pull factors commonly discussed in the migration literature. Through oral history, this study explores biographical histories of nine Filipino immigrant nurses currently working in British Columbia and Alberta, Canada. Narratives reveal the instrumental role of the deeply embedded culture of migration in the Philippines in influencing Filipino nurses to migrate. Additionally, the stories illustrate the weight of cultural pressures and societal constructs these nurses faced that first colored their decision to pursue a career in nursing and ultimately to pursue emigration. Oral history is a powerful tool for examining migration history and sheds light on nuances of experience that might otherwise be neglected. This study explores the complex connections between various factors motivating Filipino nurse migration, the decision-making process, and other pre-migration experiences.
Advances in Nursing Science | 2016
Charlene Ronquillo; Leanne M. Currie; Paddy Rodney
The data-information-knowledge-wisdom (DIKW) model has been widely adopted in nursing informatics. In this article, we examine the evolution of DIKW in nursing informatics while incorporating critiques from other disciplines. This includes examination of assumptions of linearity and hierarchy and an exploration of the implicit philosophical grounding of the model. Two guiding questions are considered: (1) Does DIKW serve clinical information systems, nurses, or both? and (2) What level of theory does DIKW occupy? The DIKW model has been valuable in advancing the independent field of nursing informatics. We offer that if the model is to continue to move forward, its role and functions must be explicitly addressed.
international conference on pervasive computing | 2017
Dawood Al-Masslawi; Lori Block; Charlene Ronquillo; Shannon Handfield; Sidney S. Fels; Rodger Lea; Leanne M. Currie
The increasing aging population needing homecare is leading to additional clinical work for homecare nurses. Wound care and documentation are substantial components of this work required to monitor patients and make appropriate clinical decisions. However, due to barriers in the systems that nurses are expected to use, and context of their activities, they create and use workarounds to get their job done. In this study, the most common themes of workarounds were identified and used to inform design iterations of a wound documentation application: SuperNurse. The exploratory and experimental design iterations involved homecare nurses, who expressed: curiosity, leading to further reflection; frustration, leading to identifying problems; and surprise, leading to identifying useful and easy to use designs. We found that nurse-centred design, informed by workarounds, led to using mobile, wearable, and speech recognition technology and improving ease of use and usefulness in SuperNurse.
Studies in health technology and informatics | 2016
Laura-Maria Peltonen; Maxim Topaz; Charlene Ronquillo; Lisiane Pruinelli; Raymond Francis Sarmiento; Martha K. Badger; Samira Ali; Adrienne Lewis; Mattias Georgsson; Eunjoo Jeon; Jude L. Tayaben; Chiu Hsiang Kuo; Tasneem Islam; Janine Sommer; Hyunggu Jung; Gabrielle Jacklin Eler; Dari Alhuwail
We present one part of the results of an international survey exploring current and future nursing informatics (NI) research trends. The study was conducted by the International Medical Informatics Association Nursing Informatics Special Interest Group (IMIA-NISIG) Student Working Group. Based on findings from this cross-sectional study, we identified future NI research priorities. We used snowball sampling technique to reach respondents from academia and practice. Data were collected between August and September 2015. Altogether, 373 responses from 44 countries were analyzed. The identified top ten NI trends were big data science, standardized terminologies (clinical evaluation/implementation), education and competencies, clinical decision support, mobile health, usability, patient safety, data exchange and interoperability, patient engagement, and clinical quality measures. Acknowledging these research priorities can enhance successful future development of NI to better support clinicians and promote health internationally.
Studies in health technology and informatics | 2016
Laura-Maria Peltonen; Dari Alhuwail; Samira Ali; Martha K. Badger; Gabrielle Jacklin Eler; Mattias Georgsson; Tasneem Islam; Eunjoo Jeon; Hyunggu Jung; Chiu Hsiang Kuo; Adrienne Lewis; Lisiane Pruinelli; Charlene Ronquillo; Raymond Francis Sarmiento; Janine Sommer; Jude L. Tayaben; Maxim Topaz
Nursing informatics (NI) can help provide effective and safe healthcare. This study aimed to describe current research trends in NI. In the summer 2015, the IMIA-NI Students Working Group created and distributed an online international survey of the current NI trends. A total of 402 responses were submitted from 44 countries. We identified a top five NI research areas: standardized terminologies, mobile health, clinical decision support, patient safety and big data research. NI research funding was considered to be difficult to acquire by the respondents. Overall, current NI research on education, clinical practice, administration and theory is still scarce, with theory being the least common. Further research is needed to explain the impact of these trends and the needs from clinical practice.
Cin-computers Informatics Nursing | 2015
Maxim Topaz; Charlene Ronquillo; Lisiane Pruinelli; Raquel Ramos; Laura-Maria Peltonen; Eriikka Siirala; Suleman Atique; Galen Hamann; Martha K. Badger
In July 2014, Taipei, Taiwan, hosted the biennial International Congress on Nursing Informatics (NI2014), titled East Meets West: eSMART+. This inaugural event for the Asia Pacific geographic region was organized by Taiwan’s Nursing Informatics Association and International Medical Informatics AssociationNursing Informatics Special Interest Group (IMIA-NISIG). The Congress attracted more than 500 participants from 28 countries, including about 80 students. There were more than 300 presentations, panel presentations, student papers, and poster sessions. At a specially organized student event, members of the Nursing Informatics Students’ Working Group had the opportunity tomeet and seek consensus about trends seen in the presentations. This meeting was followed by a collaborative writing effort, inspired by a similar publication by students in health geography.1Our goal in this article is to highlight the central themes presented at the Congress from the perspective of student participants and to provide a historical reference of the current topics, methodologies, and vision that inform and advance current nursing informatics research. We explore the five topics of interest that we found at NI2014: (1) standardized terminologies, (2) big data, (3) patient activation, (4) nursing informatics education and competencies, and (5) mobile health. To recognize some recent methodological trends in nursing informatics, we also present a methodological highlight regarding triangulation in health information technology.
Canadian Journal of Nursing Research Archive | 2012
Charlene Ronquillo
Studies in health technology and informatics | 2016
Maxim Topaz; Charlene Ronquillo; Laura-Maria Peltonen; Lisiane Pruinelli; Raymond Francis Sarmiento; Martha K. Badger; Samira Ali; Adrienne Lewis; Mattias Georgsson; Eunjoo Jeon; Jude L. Tayaben; Chiu Hsiang Kuo; Tasneem Islam; Janine Sommer; Hyunggu Jung; Gabrielle Jacklin Eler; Dari Alhuwail
Nursing leadership | 2013
Katrina Plamondon; Charlene Ronquillo; Linda Axen; Agnes T. Black; Lynn Cummings; Bubli Chakraborty
international congress on nursing informatics | 2012
Charlene Ronquillo; Leanne M. Currie