Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Holly Hagle is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Holly Hagle.


Substance Abuse | 2013

Effects of Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) Education and Training on Nursing Students’ Attitudes Toward Working With Patients Who Use Alcohol and Drugs

Kathryn R. Puskar; Heather J. Gotham; Lauren Terhorst; Holly Hagle; Ann M. Mitchell; Betty Braxter; Marie Fioravanti; Irene Kane; Kimberly Talcott; Gail R. Woomer; Helen K. Burns

ABSTRACT Background: Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) can reduce alcohol use and negative health outcomes in patients with risky substance use. However, negative attitudes that some health care professionals have toward patients who use substances are a barrier to implementing SBIRT. Methods: The University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing, in partnership with the Institute for Research, Education, and Training in Addictions (IRETA), developed a curriculum to train baccalaureate student nurses to deliver SBIRT. Results: Following SBIRT education and training, students’ perceived attitudes toward patients who use alcohol became more positive. Less robust changes were found for attitudes related to patients who use drugs. Conclusions: Nurses composing the largest group of healthcare workers are in key positions to screen, intervene, and provide education about substance use.


Nurse Educator | 2014

Identifying at risk individuals for drug and alcohol dependence: teaching the competency to students in classroom and clinical settings.

Irene Kane; Ann M. Mitchell; Kathryn R. Puskar; Holly Hagle; Kimberly Talcott; Marie Fioravanti; Mandy Droppa; Peter F. Luongo; Dawn Lindsay

Alcohol use and other drug use affect patient healthcare outcomes. This article describes a classroom-to-clinical approach teaching nursing students to utilize motivational interviewing techniques to support patient behavior change. Through the lens of a universal prevention method, nursing students learned about reward circuit activation leading to risky substance use and the difference between addiction and at-risk use. Specific assessment tools and motivational interviewing techniques were presented in the classroom. Students then applied their knowledge in simulation laboratories and clinical rotations.


Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing | 2014

Faculty Buy-In to Teach Alcohol and Drug Use Screening

Kathy Puskar; Ann M. Mitchell; Irene Kane; Holly Hagle; Kimberly Talcott

Educating nursing faculty about the use of an evidence-based practice to screen and intervene earlier along the continuum of alcohol and other drug use, misuse, and dependence is essential in todays health care arena. Misuse of alcohol and other drugs is a significant problem for both individual health and societal economic welfare. The purpose of this article is to describe nursing faculty buy-in for the implementation of an evidence-based addiction training program at a university-based school of nursing. Derived from an academic-community partnership, the training program results suggest implications for continuing education and curriculum innovation in schools of nursing and clinical practice. The training content presented can be used in continuing education for nursing faculty across all types of nursing school programs and professional nursing staff employed in multiple settings. The training program was funded by the Health Resources and Services Administration.


Journal of Addictions Nursing | 2014

Nursing students' experiences with screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment for substance use in the clinical/hospital setting.

Betty Braxter; Kathy Puskar; Ann M. Mitchell; Holly Hagle; Heather J. Gotham; Martha Ann Terry

AbstractAlthough Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) is an effective early intervention when used across healthcare settings, its implementation has been difficult, in part because of lack of training, healthcare providers’ feelings of low self-efficacy in performing SBIRT, and negative attitudes about people who use alcohol and drugs. This study used qualitative descriptive methods to examine baccalaureate nursing students’ experiences with practicing SBIRT in clinical rotations following in-depth classroom work and skill-based training. Fifty-five junior level nursing students participated in four focus groups. Three overarching themes describe students’ experiences with SBIRT. Students expressed a positive impact of the training on their attitudes and feelings of self-efficacy regarding the use of SBIRT, differences in opinions about whether SBIRT should be used universally with all patients or as a targeted intervention with only some patients, and that SBIRT is a nursing responsibility. These results suggest that education and training can affect attitudes and efficacy, but that attention needs to be paid to how SBIRT is implemented within different healthcare settings.


Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association | 2018

Changing BSN Students’ Stigma Toward Patients Who Use Alcohol and Opioids Through Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) Education and Training: A Pilot Study:

Khadejah F. Mahmoud; Dawn Lindsay; Britney B. Scolieri; Holly Hagle; Kathryn R. Puskar; Ann M. Mitchell

BACKGROUND: Stigma associated with substance use is considered a barrier to implementing Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) and assisting patients to receive appropriate treatment. OBJECTIVES: To test the efficacy of SBIRT education and training in changing undergraduate nursing students’ attitudes about working with patients who have problems with alcohol and opioid use. DESIGN: A sample of 49 undergraduate nursing students were surveyed, using five subscales, at three time points. RESULTS: After a 15-week semester that included (a) SBIRT education and (b) weekly clinical experiences with patients who had alcohol use problems the undergraduate nursing students’ stigma decreased as measured by three of the five subscales. The students’ attitudes toward working with patients who had opioid use problems exhibited favorable change as measured by four of the five subscales. CONCLUSION: SBIRT education and training for undergraduate nursing students might help mitigate some of their stigma toward working with patients who have mild to moderate alcohol and opioid use problems.


Journal of Transcultural Nursing | 2018

Creative Learning Through the Use of Simulation to Teach Nursing Students Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment for Alcohol and Other Drug Use in a Culturally Competent Manner:

Marie Fioravanti; Holly Hagle; Kathy Puskar; Emily Knapp; Irene Kane; Dawn Lindsay; Lauren Terhorst; Ann M. Mitchell

Introduction: Cultural competency is an integral component in undergraduate nursing education to provide patient-centered care and addressing patients’ cultural differences. Students need to consider the prevalence of alcohol and other drug use/misuse in patients from all cultures. This project combines cultural competency education, simulation, and educating students to use screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment for alcohol and other drug use. Method: Culturally diverse simulation scenarios were developed and used in the simulation lab with students to reduce stigma surrounding other cultures while learning an evidence-based practice to screen and intervene with patients who use/misuse substances. Results: Results show students value simulation and 91% of the students felt that they were able to apply culturally competent knowledge after the simulation experience. Discussion: Cultural competency principles can be embedded in teaching the broader evidence-based practice of screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment with undergraduate students. This is a replicable teaching methodology that could be adapted in other schools of nursing.


Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2016

Interprofessional collaborative practice incorporating training for alcohol and drug use screening for healthcare providers in rural areas

Kathy Puskar; Ann M. Mitchell; Susan A. Albrecht; Linda Rose Frank; Irene Kane; Holly Hagle; Dawn Lindsay; Heeyoung Lee; Marie Fioravanti; Kimberly Talcott

ABSTRACT Interprofessional collaborative practice expands resources in rural and underserved communities. This article explores the impact of an online education programme on the perceptions of healthcare providers about interprofessional care within alcohol and drug use screening for rural residents. Nurses, behavioural health counsellors, and public health professionals participated in an evidence-based practice (screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment—SBIRT) model that targets individuals who use alcohol and other drugs in a risky manner. SBIRT is recommended by the United States Preventive Services Task Force as a universal, evidence-based screening tool. Online modules, case simulation practice, and interprofessional dialogues are used to deliver practice-based learning experiences. A quasi-experimental method with pre-tests and post-tests was utilised. Results indicate increased perceptions of professional competence, need for cooperation, actual cooperation, and role values pre-to-post training. Implications suggest that online interprofessional education is useful but the added component of professional dialogues regarding patient cases offers promise in promoting collaborative practice.


Addiction Science & Clinical Practice | 2015

Discovering SBIRT implementation and training priorities: The National SBIRT ATTC Needs Assessment

Dawn Lindsay; Tracy McPherson; Piper Lincoln; Danielle Scott; Holly Hagle

Background In the summer of 2013, the National Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment Addiction Technology Transfer Center (National SBIRT ATTC) launched a national Needs Assessment focusing on the implementation of SBIRT services. The objectives are to the purpose of the Needs Assessment was to assess the current use of SBIRT in various settings, to examine SBIRT implementation models, and to determine training and technical assistance needs.


Journal of Nursing Education and Practice | 2012

Addiction training for undergraduate nurses using screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment

Helen K. Burns; Kathryn R. Puskar; Michael T. Flaherty; Ann M. Mitchell; Holly Hagle; Betty Braxter; Marie Fioravanti; Heather J. Gotham; Irene Kane; Kimberly Talcott; Lauren Terhorst; Gail R. Woomer


Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services | 2013

Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment: overview of and student satisfaction with an undergraduate addiction training program for nurses.

Ann M. Mitchell; Kathryn R. Puskar; Holly Hagle; Heather J. Gotham; Kimberly Talcott; Lauren Terhorst; Marie Fioravanti; Irene Kane; Eric Hulsey; Peter F. Luongo; Helen K. Burns

Collaboration


Dive into the Holly Hagle's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dawn Lindsay

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irene Kane

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kathy Puskar

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lynn Boucek

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Heather J. Gotham

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge