Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dawn Doutrich is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dawn Doutrich.


International Journal of Nursing Education Scholarship | 2009

Relevant nursing leadership: an evidence-based programmatic response.

Linda L. Eddy; Dawn Doutrich; Zana Rae Higgs; Janet Spuck; Margie Olson; Stephen Weinberg

Community and student demand for relevant nursing leadership graduate programs provided the impetus for this study. The aims were to identify components of highly competent nursing leadership, and strategies to integrate those components into education and practice.Nursing leaders gathered in five focus groups. A semi-structured interview guide was used to elicit narratives about nursing leadership. Interpretive analysis proceeded from identification of themes to uncovering of paradigm cases. Essential nursing leadership competencies comprised communication skills such as listening, conflict resolution, the ability to communicate a vision, motivate, and inspire. Additionally, leaders needed technological adroitness, fiscal dexterity, and the courage to be proactive during rapid change. Implications included a revision in the leadership focus of the nursing masters program, and the necessity that nurse retention should be enhanced by better educated nurse leaders who are grounded in practice and ready to provide a vision for the future.


Nursing Ethics | 2001

Relief of Suffering and Regard for Personhood: nurses’ ethical concerns in Japan and the USA

Dawn Doutrich; Peggy Wros; Shigeko Izumi

The ethical concerns of Japanese nurses are compared with those of previously described nurses from the USA. Patient comfort was a primary concern of nurses from both countries. Participants described an ethical imperative to provide adequate pain medication for patients and prevent unnecessary and uncomfortable invasive tests and procedures, especially at the end of life as the focus changed from ‘cure’ to ‘care’. The notion of regard for personhood varied, based on the communication styles and definition of the self inherent in the different cultures of the nurses. A common meaning centred around knowing patients as persons, listening to their needs and preferences, supporting their everyday choices through advocacy, and maintaining their dignity. Despite background cultural differences, there are common ethical concerns between nurses in Japan and the USA. This article invites readers to reflect on everyday nursing practices that exemplify ethical expertise, and the significance of this expertise in uncovering and articulating nursing ethics across cultures.


Journal of Transcultural Nursing | 2012

Cultural Safety in New Zealand and the United States : Looking at a Way Forward Together

Dawn Doutrich; Kerri Arcus; Lida Dekker; Janet Spuck; Catherine Pollock-Robinson

Cultural safety emerged in Aotearoa, New Zealand as a nursing response to bicultural interactions between indigenous Maori and other New Zealanders. The purpose of this research is to describe the meaning and experience of cultural safety as depicted by nurses in New Zealand and to illustrate the potential for this to inform U.S. nursing education and practice. This interpretive hermeneutic study explored cultural safety as described by 12 experienced nurses who were selected through snowball and purposive sampling. Audiotaped interviews were conducted after ethics approval. Interpretive analysis uncovered five themes that are described with data and paradigm cases. Cultural safety considers the perspective of the patient as the norm in contrast to the culture of health care. Understanding historical power differences and personal biases can help challenge victim-blaming responses by health care providers. Incorporating these understandings into reflective practice enhances the possibility of culturally safe learning for students and culturally safe care for patients.


Nursing Clinics of North America | 2012

The future of the population-focused, public health clinical nurse specialist.

Dawn Doutrich; Jo Ann Walsh Dotson

This article addresses the need for continued certification of community and public health nurses at the advanced practice registered nurse level, and explores curricular avenues and policy recommendations with regard to certification and education of these nurses. The transformation of health care and burgeoning access to information has changed what the public expects and needs from health professionals. Nursing roles have expanded and transformed, in turn requiring that the education, licensure, certification, and accreditation of the professional likewise change.


Family & Community Health | 2004

Education and practice: dynamic partners for improving cultural competence in public health.

Dawn Doutrich; Marni Storey


Nursing & Health Sciences | 2004

Ethical concerns: Comparison of values from two cultures

Peggy Wros; Dawn Doutrich; Shigeko Izumi


Hispanic Healthcare International | 2005

Professional values of Hispanic nurses: The experience of nursing education

Dawn Doutrich; Peggy Wros; Maria Del Rosario Valdez; Maria Elena Ruiz


The Journal for Nurse Practitioners | 2012

Creating a Safe and Caring Health Care Context for Women Who Have Sex With Women

Nicole Flemmer; Dawn Doutrich; Lida Dekker; Dawn Rondeau


The Journal for Nurse Practitioners | 2014

Empathetic Partnership: An Interdisciplinary Framework for Primary Care Practice

Nicole Flemmer; Lida Dekker; Dawn Doutrich


Whitireia Nursing and Health Journal | 2014

Identity, ethics and cultural safety: Strategies for change

Dawn Doutrich; Lida Dekker; Janet Spuck; Renee Hoeksel

Collaboration


Dive into the Dawn Doutrich's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lida Dekker

Washington State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Janet Spuck

Washington State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Linda L. Eddy

Washington State University Vancouver

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicole Flemmer

Walla Walla General Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shigeko Izumi

Washington State University Spokane

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dawn Rondeau

Washington State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria Elena Ruiz

Washington State University Vancouver

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge