Debra Jackson AO RN PhD FCNA FRCN

675 posts

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Debra Jackson AO RN PhD FCNA FRCN

Debra Jackson AO RN PhD FCNA FRCN

@debraejackson

Professor of Nursing @syd_health @Sydney_Uni #SydneyNursingSchool Editor in Chief @jadvnursing

เข้าร่วม Nisan 2009
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Debra Jackson AO RN PhD FCNA FRCN
Debra Jackson AO RN PhD FCNA FRCN@debraejackson·
Can generative AI make clinical decisions like nurses do? If you’re interested in AI in healthcare, clinical decision-making, or the future of nursing practice and education, this paper compares how a generative AI model reasons through clinical scenarios alongside expert nurses and nursing students. The findings highlight where AI appears confident and efficient, and where human clinical judgement, context, and restraint still really do matter. doi.org/10.1111/jan.16…
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Debra Jackson AO RN PhD FCNA FRCN รีทวีตแล้ว
Nicholas Fabiano, MD
Nicholas Fabiano, MD@NTFabiano·
In 1992 Peter Ratcliffe received this rejection letter from Nature. His findings were not "a sufficient advance in our understanding". 27 years later he won the Nobel Prize for the same discovery. Don't lose faith in the things you believe in.
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Prof Jane Ball (FRCN)💙
Prof Jane Ball (FRCN)💙@JaneEBall·
I am so looking forward to this new role ⁦@theRCN⁩ It’s an honour to have the opportunity to serve the profession I love, the best way I know how: harnessing evidence and critical thinking to inform practice & policy. rcn.org.uk/news-and-event…
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Prof Mark Radford CBE PhD RN
Prof Mark Radford CBE PhD RN@MRadford_HEECN·
She said yes! 💍 an amazing night that I couldn’t have done without help from @weheartldnblog and many others! Thank you so much!
Prof Mark Radford CBE PhD RN tweet mediaProf Mark Radford CBE PhD RN tweet mediaProf Mark Radford CBE PhD RN tweet media
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Dr Tracy Westerman AM
Dr Tracy Westerman AM@TracyWesterman·
Just hit SEND on the FINAL chapter of my memoir edits. It has been an enormous job and is now going to endorsements before typesetting; sales & marketing etc etc I’m so happy with it. ❤️💛🖤 Here is the publishers outline: …. Title: Jilya: How one Indigenous woman from the remote Pilbara transformed psychology is an account of how Dr Tracy Westerman AM became the first Aboriginal person in Australia to complete a PhD in clinical psychology and why that matters. It is also an examination of her ground-breaking work in Indigenous-specific psychological services. Tracy’s journey with psychology began in the remote Pilbara town of Tom Price when she picked up a book that described the profession and decided it would be her life’s calling, despite never having met a psychologist before. She had to get into university through distance education and, with no-one on either side of her family having seen the inside of a university, it’s fair to say the odds were firmly stacked against her. This book reflects on how the psychology profession fails Aboriginal people and the damage that is done when you operate with a one-size-fits-all, monocultural approach. Westerman argues that the psychology profession needs to own the fact that its entire evidence base is predicated on a foundation of cultural exclusion. As she says: ‘There is a fundamental truth that was drilled into me during my training as a psychologist: If you get assessment wrong, you get treatment wrong and you make things worse. As Aboriginal people, we suffer from what I refer to as “the big three” when it comes to mental health assessment: Misdiagnosis, overdiagnosis and underdiagnosis.’ In this rich and ground-breaking book, Westerman presents various case studies from her years of clinical practice, provides fascinating evidence and seminal research into traumatic grief, suicide prevention, racial trauma, black identity formation and culture-bound syndromes, all presented with compassion and insight. It also a journey of hope and optimism; a testament to always believing that change is possible; and a demonstration of how, despite it all, so many of her clients have managed to achieve those ultimate goals for themselves. The book also details how Westerman established her own business, Indigenous Psychological Services, and rose to become one of Australia’s leading psychologists through self-funding numerous Australian first assessments and intervention programs. Later, frustrated at the lack of government response to the unacceptable rates of Indigenous child suicide in our remote communities, she personally funded the Dr Tracy Westerman Indigenous Psychology Scholarship Program in 2019 to train up the next generation of Indigenous psychologists. In 2020 she launched the Westerman Jilya Institute for Indigenous Mental Health. To date, Jilya has funded fifty-five future Indigenous psychologists from across Australia in our highest-risk communities, without federal government support. With just 218 Indigenous psychologists in Australia, that contribution is significant and permanent, because locals never leave. In a very short time, Westerman’s intent to #BuildAnArmy of Indigenous psychologists has captured many hearts and minds. The book concludes with a dissection of how we are failing to close the gap across suicides, incarcerations, child removals and mental ill-health. It is a story of what is possible with drive and determination, and of how hope can make the differences this country so badly needs – especially when many more share it with you. Ultimately, though, this book is a story of Westerman’s love for her people. And why she is building an army of psychologists for them all.
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Gearóid Brennan PhD RN
Gearóid Brennan PhD RN@gearoidbrennan·
Who do you complain to when you are in a dispute with an energy provider (@ScottishPower ) when they aren't actually your provider but they are insisting that they are despite hard evidence from your current provider (@OVOEnergy) that they are actually your provider? @ofgem
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Brett Mitchell
Brett Mitchell@1healthau·
Many thanks Phil and to many others for their kind comments. Great to see nursing and infection prevention being recognised.
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Julie Leask AO
Julie Leask AO@JulieLeask·
Want to use my Order of Australia honour today to highlight the achievements of so many in immunisation who don’t usually get such public accolades: nurses, Aboriginal health workers, community health workers, immunisation coordinators and more. 🙏 sabii.sydney.edu.au/news/
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Nicki Credland 💙
Nicki Credland 💙@credland_nicki·
Finished a little embroidery project for a friend’s birthday who loves flowers. Chuffed!!
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