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Featured researches published by Martha Dewey Bergren.


Journal of School Nursing | 2010

Frequent Visitors: Somatization in School-Age Children and Implications for School Nurses

Robin Adair Shannon; Martha Dewey Bergren; Alicia Matthews

There is a gap in the nursing literature regarding children who frequently visit school nurses’ offices with recurrent unexplained physical symptoms. A review of the scientific health literature was undertaken to examine the clinical presentation, associated variables, and implications for school nurses regarding children who are frequent school health office visitors with somatic symptoms. This subset of students with medically unexplained symptoms accounts for disproportionate use of primary care and school health resources. Common somatic complaints in school-age children, such as headache and stomachache, are associated with the psychosocial variables of anxiety and depression, childhood adversity, and school stress. Effective and practical treatment approaches to this complicated child health issue require accurate identification, appropriate referral, screening for associated conditions, and individualized treatment plans. Research to identify effective interventions for frequent health office visitors is needed.


Journal of School Nursing | 2007

Comparison of School Food Allergy Emergency Plans to the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network’s Standard Plan

Jill Powers; Martha Dewey Bergren; Lorna Finnegan

Eighty-four percent of children with food allergies have a reaction in school, and 25% of first food reactions occur in schools. An evaluation was conducted comparing food allergy emergency plans to the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network’s (FAAN) Food Allergy Action Plan. Of the 94 respondents, 60 provided food allergy emergency plans for comparison. Although two-thirds used food allergy plans, only 15% used the current FAAN plan. Plans were missing essential components, including emergency contact information, medication administration instructions, and health history information. School nurses must adhere to current clinical guidelines to provide an accurate resource for personnel in charge of a food allergy reaction in school. Professional associations and state school health agencies must create and market a resource that provides easy, one-stop access to current best-practice guidelines and tool kits.


Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing | 2008

Latino disparities in child mental health services.

Cyntia Lopez; Martha Dewey Bergren; Susan G. Painter

TOPIC Access and utilization of mental health services for Latino children. PURPOSE As Latino children may experience higher rates of unmet needs, this article examines the current literature for the reasons for the disparity and the barriers to the utilization of mental health services for Latino children. SOURCES An integrative literature review was undertaken from child psychiatry and nursing. CONCLUSIONS The literature confirmed a pattern of underutilization of mental health services by Latino children, but did not completely address the reasons for the disparity. Suggested barriers were language and cultural issues. Gaps in the literature include a lack of agreement for definition of a mental health problem and the tools to identify these, insufficient studies into the barriers for Latino children in the access and utilization of mental health services, and cultural and language issues related to Latino research.


Journal of School Nursing | 2003

Development of a Nursing Data Set for School Nursing

Martha Dewey Bergren; Mary Ann Fahrenkrug

School nurses need to clearly identify how they promote the health and educational achievement of children. School nurses contribute to student health by providing health assessment and nursing interventions, advocating for healthy living, and contributing to prevention of illness and disease management. A Nursing Data Set for School Nursing can identify those data elements that are needed to prove that school nurses have a positive effect on children, families, and the community. The purpose of this project was to develop a Nursing Data Set for School Nursing that would describe and validate school nursing practice. Building on the Nursing Minimum Data Set developed by Werley, Devine, and Zorn, a Nursing Data Set for School Nursing was developed with guidance from experts in the field of school nursing. A Nursing Data Set for School Nursing has the potential to assist school nurses in documentation and validation of their nursing practice. It can validate the complexity of the role of the school nurse, the resources needed, and the effect school nurses have on improving the health and educational outcomes of students.


NASN School Nurse | 2014

Standardized Data Set for School Health Services: Part 1—Getting to Big Data

Erin D. Maughan; Kathleen H. Johnson; Martha Dewey Bergren; Linda C. Wolfe; Marjorie Cole; Deborah J. Pontius; Linda L. Mendonca; Estelle Watts; Kathleen Patrick

School nurses collect voluminous amounts of data in a variety of ways and use the data to describe trends in students’ health and patterns of illness in the student population or to identify ways to improve care. NASN identified years ago that a national school nurse data set was needed to enable data-driven decision making for the millions of children who attend school each day across the United States. Informal work has been done in the past 5 years in preparation for the current joint NASN/National Association of State School Nurse Consultants workgroup. This article is the first of a two-part series related to the importance of data and national efforts to develop a uniform data set that all school nurses can collect. Collecting data, and collecting it in the same way as other providers, will demonstrate what school nurses do as well as provide the data necessary for robust research on the impact of school nurses on students’ health.


Journal of School Nursing | 2012

The Promise of Standardized Data Collection School Health Variables Identified by States

Kathleen H. Johnson; Martha Dewey Bergren; Linda Oakes Westbrook

A gap in data prevents measurement of the needs of school-age children and the influence of school nursing interventions on student health and education outcomes. Its remedy is in the data collected in school health rooms. A national clinical database describing school health will allow education and health leaders to build evidence-based programs for children. Several states collect school health data describing student needs and school nursing practice. This study identified, collated, described, and evaluated the variables compiled from state school health reporting documents to identify commonalities and form the foundation of a standardized school health reporting system. A comprehensive content analysis of variables in the instruments yielded a framework within which school health data can be organized and described. It consists of five broad categories describing staffing; risk management; health promotion; episodic care; and care coordination. The result provides a nationally standardized coding set to describe school health.


Western Journal of Nursing Research | 2013

Ecological Influences of Early Childhood Obesity A Multilevel Analysis

Wannaporn Boonpleng; Chang Gi Park; Agatha M. Gallo; Colleen Corte; Linda L. McCreary; Martha Dewey Bergren

This study aims to determine the contributing factors for early childhood overweight/obesity within the contexts of the child’s home, school, and community, and to determine how much each of the ecological contexts contributes to childhood overweight/obesity. The framework was developed from Bronfenbrenner’s ecological systems theory. Data for 2,100 children from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort, were used in a series of multilevel modeling analyses. There was significant variation in childhood overweight/obesity by school and community. The majority of variation in childhood overweight/obesity was explained by the child and family factors in addition to school and community factors. Explained variance of childhood overweight/obesity at the school level was 27% and at the community level, 2%. The variance composition at children’s family level alone was 71%. Therefore, overweight/obesity prevention efforts should focus primarily on child, family, and school factors and then community factors, to be more effective.


Journal of School Nursing | 2011

Meaningful Use of School Health Data

Kathleen H. Johnson; Martha Dewey Bergren

Meaningful use (MU) of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) is an important development in the safety and security of health care delivery in the United States. Advancement in the use of EHRs occurred with the passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which provides incentives for providers to support adoption and use of EHRs. School nurses play an important role in alerting the public and key decision makers to the value of school health data to the MU of EHRs. The timeline for adopting MU of EHRs is short and school nurses must participate in the process to assure MU of school health data. This article describes MU and the importance of this federal action to school health.


Journal of School Nursing | 2010

School Nurses Save Lives Can We Provide the Data

Susan Kohl Malone; Martha Dewey Bergren

Vigilance has been central to nursing practice since Florence Nightingale. Often, the nurse’s work of surveillance goes unnoticed and the public never recognizes the value of the nurse’s work. The 1999 Institute of Medicine report on hospital deaths due to preventable errors has lifted the veil shrouding professional vigilance. But how to measure vigilance remained elusive, until the concept, failure to rescue (FTR), was proposed. FTR has taken a prominent role in health care since its adoption as a patient safety indicator by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and as a measure for nursing performance in acute care by the National Quality Forum (NQF). However, its applicability to school nursing has been unexplored. This article provides an initial review of the literature and an analysis of anecdotal stories and media accounts that illustrate professional vigilance in school nursing practice.


NASN School Nurse | 2012

The 2011 NASN Membership Survey Developing and Providing Leadership to Advance School Nursing Practice

Martha Dewey Bergren; Lina Monsalve

In 2011, NASN conducted a needs assessment to identify and analyze member demographic trends and identify priorities for current members. Ninety-five percent of survey respondents were currently registered nurses, 1% were licensed practical nurses, 3% were advance practice registered nurses, and 1% had other types of licensure. School nurses’ ages ranged between 21 and 66+ years of age with the highest concentration of school nurses (63%) older than 51 years of age. Thirty-one percent of respondents were nationally certified through the National Board for the Certification of School Nurses. Eighty-three percent had a bachelor’s degree or higher. Fifteen percent had a master’s in nursing, and another 15% held a master’s in another field. Nine percent of respondents had an associate’s degree in nursing and 4% had a registered nurse diploma as their highest level of education. The typical NASN member is a female, registered nurse with a bachelor’s degree who is over the age of 50.

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Erin D. Maughan

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

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Julia Muennich Cowell

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Saria Lofton

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Susan G. Painter

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Agatha M. Gallo

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Allison Bianchi

University of Illinois at Chicago

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