Nursing Research : Nursing
Interventions
Sylvie Cossette
, inf., Ph.D.
Nursing research focuses on the development and
evaluation of different modes of nursing interventions aiming to
improve the recovery of cardiac patients or at-risk
patients.
Two research axes are currently developed. The first
axis focuses on the detailed examination of of nursing
interventions and possible links between these particulars of
nursing and patients outcomes. Standard
and innovative technologies are used such as the numeric
recognition of audio-visual characteristics of patient-nurse
interactions. This axis is funded by the Canadian Foundation for
Innovation.
The second axis focuses on the development and the
evaluation of nursing interventions aiming to improve patients'
recovery. In collaboration with clinicians, we are identifying
nursing care problems that could be improved with nursing
research.
This axis is developed with the collaboration of the
direction of nursing, nurses, and other clinicians and
researchers at ICM. The nursing interventions theme is
also developed in line with priorities of the Groupe de recherche
en soins infirmiers de Montréal (GRISIM) based at the
Faculty of Nursing, UdeM and the School of Nursing, McGill
University.
Publications
Cossette S., Cara, C., Ricard, N.,
Pepin, J. (sous presse). Development and psychometric
evaluation of a scale to assess patient-nurse interactions with a
caring worldview. International Journal of Nursing
Studies.
Cossette S., Frasure-Smith, N.,
Lespérance, F. : Nursing approaches to reducing
psychological distress in men and women recovering from
myocardial infarction. International Journal of Nursing Studies
39 : 115-130, 2002.
Cossette S., Frasure-Smith, N.,
Lespérance, F. : Clinical implications of a reduction
in psychological distress on cardiac prognosis in patients
participating in a psychosocial intervention program
Psychosomatic Medicine 63 : 257-266, 2001.
Loiselle, C., &
Cossette S.: Cross-cultural validation of
alexithymia in the U.S. and Peru: Testing of the Toronto
Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) with constructs of patient
self-disclosure and private self-consciousness. Journal of
Transcultural Psychiatry 38 : 348-362, 2001. (
http://tps.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/38/3/348
)
Clarke S.P., &
Cossette S.: Secondary analysis:
Theoretical, methodological and practical considerations. The
Canadian Journal of Nursing Research, 32 : 109-129, 2000.