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Featured researches published by Julie Postma.


AAOHN Journal | 2006

Environmental justice: implications for occupational health nurses.

Julie Postma

Through the use of innovative tools, such as clinical mnemonics, exercises in risk and asset mapping, and strategic program development, occupational health nurses can incorporate dimensions of environmental justice (EJ) into the workplace. Occupational health nurses who also take on educational roles can use case studies and network with labor and EJ groups to provide clinical experiences for occupational and environmental health nursing students, thereby integrating EJ into occupational and environmental health nursing practice. Occupational health nurses are well positioned to serve as technical experts within community-based participatory research projects. Occupational health nurses must share their knowledge and experience as members of coalitions that represent workers in their fight for worker health and safety.


Journal of Professional Nursing | 2014

Implementing AACN's recommendations for environmental sustainability in colleges of nursing: from concept to impact.

Patricia Butterfield; Elizabeth Schenk; Phyllis Eide; Laura Hahn; Julie Postma; Cynthia Fitzgerald; Gail Oneal

In 2011, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) released a guidance report titled Toward an Environmentally Sustainable Academic Enterprise: An AACN Guide for Nursing Education. The report was developed in response to a vivid slide presentation at an AACN meeting depicting the deleterious public and environmental health effects of global industrialization. Following the presentation, AACN members capitalized on the opportunity to provide national leadership to U.S. colleges of nursing in regard to environmental sustainability and stewardship. This article summarizes key features of the AACN plan and outlines one colleges multifaceted implementation plan. The goal of the implementation plan was to translate the AACN recommendations from concept into college-specific actions. Specific steps taken by the college included the following: (a) increasing student and faculty awareness, (b) greening business operations, (c) increased participation in media events, (d) leveraging the impact of national sustainability initiatives, and (e) enhancing curricula at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Through this work, the college achieved not only a higher standard of sustainability within its own walls but also a richer appreciation of the importance of educating nurses as future stewards in an environmentally sustainable health care system.


Journal of Asthma | 2015

Mexican-American caregivers’ perceptions about asthma management: a photovoice study

Julie Postma; Robin A. Evans-Agnew; Jared Capouya

Abstract Objective: The purpose of this study is to report how photovoice was used to (1) ascertain Mexican-American caregiver perspectives about asthma management, and (2) engage caregivers in dissemination. Methods: Eleven Mexican-American caregivers of children with asthma were recruited and given cameras to photograph what helped or hindered their ability to care for their child. Participants prioritized which images to share, discussed the images with the group, and wrote accompanying titles and captions in four photovoice sessions. Sessions were in Spanish and occurred in a community setting. Participants presented their work to peers and community members. Identified issues were subsequently categorized by investigators according to the four components of asthma care. Results: Participants prioritized 32 phototexts, the majority of which (n = 20, 63%) reflected activities associated with environmental control. Caregivers highlighted asthma triggers, and suggested ways to maintain indoor air quality (IAQ) through home cleaning. The need for policies that enforce smoking bans in shared housing and public places was identified as an important strategy to improve outdoor air quality. “Education for a Partnership in Asthma Care” was represented in six (19%) phototexts. Five phototexts (16%) represented “Assessment and Monitoring”. Only one phototext (3.13%) primarily represented “Medications”. Conclusions: Results support the need for active partnerships between caregivers and providers. Photographs can serve as the basis for reciprocal education between patient and provider, especially in the area of environmental triggers. Provider visits should include assessment, strategies and resources to maximize IAQ. Photovoice facilitates caregivers’ ability to advocate for improved asthma management and health equity.


Research in Nursing & Health | 2016

Retest of a Principal Components Analysis of Two Household Environmental Risk Instruments.

Gail Oneal; Julie Postma; Tamara Odom-Maryon; Patricia Butterfield

Household Risk Perception (HRP) and Self-Efficacy in Environmental Risk Reduction (SEERR) instruments were developed for a public health nurse-delivered intervention designed to reduce home-based, environmental health risks among rural, low-income families. The purpose of this study was to test both instruments in a second low-income population that differed geographically and economically from the original sample. Participants (N = 199) were recruited from the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program. Paper and pencil surveys were collected at WIC sites by research-trained student nurses. Exploratory principal components analysis (PCA) was conducted, and comparisons were made to the original PCA for the purpose of data reduction. Instruments showed satisfactory Cronbach alpha values for all components. HRP components were reduced from five to four, which explained 70% of variance. The components were labeled sensed risks, unseen risks, severity of risks, and knowledge. In contrast to the original testing, environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) items was not a separate component of the HRP. The SEERR analysis demonstrated four components explaining 71% of variance, with similar patterns of items as in the first study, including a component on ETS, but some differences in item location. Although low-income populations constituted both samples, differences in demographics and risk exposures may have played a role in component and item locations. Findings provided justification for changing or reducing items, and for tailoring the instruments to population-level risks and behaviors. Although analytic refinement will continue, both instruments advance the measurement of environmental health risk perception and self-efficacy.


Progress in Community Health Partnerships | 2018

Development and Pilot Testing of a Bilingual Environmental Health Assessment Tool to Promote Asthma-friendly Childcares

Robin A. Evans-Agnew; Julie Postma; Ariana Ochoa Camacho; Rachel M. Hershberg; Elsa Trujilio; Maria Tinajera

Abstract:Background: Childhood marks the highest risk for allergic sensitization to asthma triggers. Hispanic/Latino children are at higher risk for hospitalization for asthma than non-Hispanic White children. Childcare providers lack knowledge about reducing asthma triggers.Objectives: The purpose of this paper is to describe a community-based participatory research (CBPR) initiative aimed at developing and pilot testing a bilingual walk-through assessment tool for asthma-friendly childcare environments.Methods: Ten Latina mothers of children with asthma living in the Pacific Northwest collaborated with research partners to develop and pilot test a Childcare Environmental Health (CEH) assessment walk-through survey.Results and Lessons Learned: The women innovated the survey with photography and structural examinations of stress and provision of basic needs. The survey tool identified environmental threats to asthma in all three childcares surveyed.Conclusions: Parents are well-positioned to build trust with childcare providers, assess asthma triggers, and recommend practical mitigation strategies.


AAOHN Journal | 2017

Nursing Students’ Perceptions of the Transition to Shift Work: A Total Worker Health Perspective

Julie Postma; Erica Tuell; Lois James; Janessa M. Graves; Patricia Butterfield

Nursing students make an abrupt transition from traditional classes to clinical rotations and shift work. Little is known about students’ sleep, sleep disturbances, and safe practice behaviors during this critical phase of professional development. The purpose of this study was to identify nursing students’ perceptions of problems and potential solutions related to shift work and long work hours. This qualitative, descriptive study used two nursing student focus groups which engaged in a two-round participatory process aimed at framing future interventions. Participants identified problems and solutions related to personal and workplace well-being. Findings will inform undergraduate curricular revisions, and hospital hiring and managerial practices.


AAOHN Journal | 2015

Creating the Nurses' Environmental Awareness Tool (NEAT).

Elizabeth Schenk; Patricia Butterfield; Julie Postma; Celestina Barbosa-Leiker; Cynthia F. Corbett

Acute care delivery creates secondary health risks to patients, health care workers, and the environment through a complex waste stream, intensive energy use, and frequent use of harmful chemicals. Nurses are among the most affected by these risks and are also pivotal change agents in reducing the negative impacts of health care delivery. Assessing nurses’ understanding of health care–associated environmental health risks is essential if care is to be delivered in an environmentally safe and healthy manner, as indicated by published professional standards of nursing practice. However, psychometrically sound instruments that measure nurses’ awareness of the environmental impacts of nursing practice are not available. To address this gap, a prototype of the Nurse’s Environmental Awareness Tool (NEAT) was developed. Seven content experts in environmental health nursing and/or psychometrics were asked to review draft items. Comments were analyzed and applied to the scale items. Several revisions from the original item pool were made. The resulting draft NEAT includes six subscales, in three paired subsets. This article provides a summary of the process of item development and scale design. These findings, although preliminary, provide a foundation for subsequent psychometric testing. The result of this study is the creation of an instrument to measure nurses’ awareness of and behaviors associated with the environmental impact of their practices.


American Journal of Public Health | 2011

Effectiveness of a household environmental health intervention delivered by rural public health nurses.

Patricia Butterfield; Wade Hill; Julie Postma; Phillip Butterfield; Tamara Odom-Maryon


Journal of Asthma | 2011

The feasibility and acceptability of a home-visitation, asthma education program in a rural, Latino/a population.

Julie Postma; Katherine Smalley; Vickie Ybarra; Gail M. Kieckhefer


Journal of The American Academy of Nurse Practitioners | 2011

Rural children's exposure to well water contaminants: Implications in light of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ recent policy statement

Julie Postma; Philip W. Butterfield; Tamara Odom-Maryon; Wade Hill; Patricia Butterfield

Collaboration


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Patricia Butterfield

Washington State University Spokane

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Tamara Odom-Maryon

Washington State University

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Wade Hill

Montana State University

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Celestina Barbosa-Leiker

Washington State University Spokane

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Elizabeth Schenk

Washington State University

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Gail Oneal

Washington State University

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Cynthia F. Corbett

Washington State University

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Janessa M. Graves

Washington State University Spokane

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