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Archives of Nursing and Healthcare
ISSN: 2769-7835
Volume 3, Issue 1, p1-39
Articles published in this issue are Open Access and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY NC) where the readers can reuse, download, distribute the article in whole or part by mentioning proper credits to the authors.
Exploring undergraduate nursing students’ preferences in psychiatric nursing simulation modalities
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than one in five American adults live with a mental illness [1]. Due to the associated stigma and fear of discrimination, people who are impacted by mental health refuse to discuss or confront this disease. While mental health impacts all aspects of American lives, more funds, professional support, training and education are needed to tackle mental health challenges [2].
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p1-2 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3011
Commentary: Deconstructing the sexualization of menstruation—from societal myths to public health implications
Menstruation, an everyday organic process essential for duplication, has long been guide-friendly stigmas and impressions. The focus article, “The Sexualization of Menstruation: On Rape, Tampons, and ‘Prostitutes,’” exposes the disquieting socio-enlightening frameworks and fundamental issues that enhance the sexualization of period. This analysis further surveys the enlightening, intellectual, and community health dimensions of the issue while testing allure associations for feminist discourse and procedure.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p3-4 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.012
Enhancing nurses’ continuous professional development through ARCS-V (attention relevance, confidence, satisfaction, volition) motivational design: The path to success
Motivation plays a crucial role in the professional development of healthcare workers, particularly nurses, as it directly impacts learning engagement, clinical performance, and patient care quality. Given the high-stress environment in which nurses operate, training programs must incorporate motivational design strategies to sustain engagement and enhance learning outcomes.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p5-10 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.013
Bridging the gap: Transforming psychiatric nursing attitudes toward family involvement to improve inpatient and post-discharge outcomes
Despite global recognition of the benefits of family involvement in psychiatric care, the attitudes of mental health professionals—particularly nursing staff—remain ambivalent and inconsistent. This article analyzes current findings on nurses' attitudes toward family involvement and integrates international literature to propose strategies for reshaping these perceptions to optimize treatment outcomes during and after hospitalization.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p11-14 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.014
The perceived value of the nursing profession and its future direction
Registered nurses including advanced practice registered nurse practitioners (APRN) are the backbone of the healthcare system. Their responsibilities extend beyond basic patient care to include health promotion, disease prevention, management of acute and chronic illnesses and providing services in anesthesia care and obstetrics. Although nurses represent the largest segment of healthcare professionals and are widely recognized as indispensable collaborators with physicians, they paradoxically occupy undervalued position within the healthcare hierarchy.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p15-21 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.015
Hindering patient safety with vaccination fraud: A case study
Background: With recent changes influenced by the US Secretary of Health and Human Services, public confusion around vaccination requirements has become a significant issue. A lack of trust in health institutions creates an environment that vaccination fraud can capitalize on. This case study examines the impact of vaccination fraud on patient safety and professional integrity within nursing.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p22-26 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.016
Common practice gaps and influencing factors in enterovirus infection control among childcare personnel in Taiwan: A review
Background: Enterovirus infection poses a significant and recurrent public health challenge in Taiwanese preschool and childcare settings. While numerous studies address knowledge gaps, there is a lack of synthesized evidence identifying common practice errors and the multi-level factors influencing childcare personnel's infection control behaviors from a systemic perspective.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p27-33 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.017
Nursing care for patients with open thoracostomy: Case series report and proposal for standardized care protocol
Objective: To describe the clinical characteristics and nursing care of patients with prolonged open thoracostomy, and to evaluate the effectiveness of a short training program for nurses.
Arch Nurs Healthc, 2025, Volume 3, Issue 1, p34-39 | DOI: 10.46439/nursing.3.018
The effect of preoperative in-person education on the pain severity of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery
Pain is one of the most common symptoms experienced by patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Adequate pain management is critical to the well-being and overall recovery of these patients. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of preoperative in-person pain education on the pain severity experienced by patients undergoing CABG surgery in Rajaie Cardiovascular, Medical and Research Center in Tehran in 2022.
Understanding microbial influence on mental health
The past decade in science has seen an influx of new research articles showing the relationship between the human gut microbiome and its direct or indirect effect on the Central Nervous System (CNS). Much of the current research points to microbial therapy as a potential treatment option for many mental health disorders and conditions.
Suicide, opioids, chronic pain, and mental health disorders: a narrative
Suicide rates are on the rise in the United States as is mortality associated with opioid toxicity. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 7% of opioid overdose deaths are suicide, but this number may be under-reported. Many people who use opioids or have opioid use disorder, (OUD), may have “passive” intentions to commit suicide that are difficult to quantify.
Relevance of a simulation model to microvascular surgery for military surgical residents
Microsurgical training is an asset for deployed military orthopaedic surgeons who frequently treat hand or nerve injuries in the field.
Nurse educators should use pedagogies of kindness and hope to teach nursing students’ compassion
The study by Younas and Maddigan [1] Proposing a policy framework for nursing education for fostering compassion in nursing students: A critical review, focused on the cultivation of the quality of compassion in nursing students. While these authors conducted a credible literature review that led to a conclusion that nurse educators should use a range of approaches to teaching students’ compassion, they did not articulate what those approaches could be.
Healthcare professionals’ awareness and knowledge of COVID-19 and radiation safety
Background: lack of knowledge and awareness of COVID-19 and radiation safety among healthcare professionals will adversely affect their health and the patients’ safety due to unnecessary radiation exposure and rapid spread of COVID-19. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the knowledge and the awareness of both domains; COVID-19 and radiation awareness in one survey study.
Hypertension and comorbidities: A silent threat to global health
Worldwide, hypertension is a substantial cause of cardiovascular disease and premature death. In the past few decades, global mean blood pressure has been somewhat stable and decreased due to the advancement and utilization of antihypertensive medications [1]. According to the Sept. 2023 WHO report, Hypertension affects 1 in 3 adults worldwide, among which 4 out of every 5 people are not effectively treated.
Evidence-based nursing in bachelor assignments - A mini review
The mini-review is an update of the original article: Do bachelor assignments in Danish midwifery- and nursing educations reflect evidence-based practice? A document study [1]. We will summarize the findings from the original article, add an analysis of 140 recent bachelor assignments and present the result of a new search of literature to see recent developments in the field. Our aim is to see if the bachelor assignments present evidence-based nursing.
Physical Therapy in Mental Health?
At the beginning there was an international network of physical therapists working in the field of psychiatry and mental health with the origin at Leuven University (Belgium) from in 2006. The International Organization of Physical Therapy in Mental Health (IOPTMH) was accepted as a World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT) subgroup at the 17th General Meeting, in 2011 and reconfirmed in 2015 and 2019, including 21 member countries, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Colombia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Japan, Latvia, Mexico, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Spain, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, UK, but within IOPTMH, there is a network of individual physical therapists, representing 59 nations from 6 continents.
Physiotherapy in Mental Health Facing the Covid-19 Pandemic
According to the International Organization of Physical Therapy in Mental Health (IOPTMH), physiotherapy in mental health is a recognized specialty of physical therapy, with a subgroup representing physiotherapists from around the world before the World Confederation of Physical Therapy (WCPT). It is implemented in different settings, in health, psychiatry and psychosomatic medicine.
Partnering for success- A prototype for integrating evidence-based practices between referring professionals and mental health professionals
Children who experience abuse and neglect often have behavioral health sequalae which are poorly addressed because services are not evidence-based and partnerships with behavioral health providers lack precise coordination. Partnering for Success provides interprofessional training on EBPs, communication, and data sharing and has now been expanded to address the unique needs of children in treatment foster care.
Effect of educational level on Alzheimer's disease-related biomarkers: Commentary
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by cognitive impairments that might be accompanied by declines in activities of daily living, neuropsychiatric disorders and a loss of motor function [1,2]. At present, the prevalence of dementia of Alzheimer’s type (DAT) is approximately 4% among elderly people [3]. With the increase in the aging the population, the number of individuals with DAT is still increasing.
The potential of computational fluid dynamics simulations of airflow in the nasal cavity
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is a well-established and accepted tool for simulation and prediction of complex physical phenomena e.g., in combustion, aerodynamics or blood circulation. Recently CFD has entered the medical field due to the readily available high computational power of current graphics processing units, GPUs. Efficient numerical codes, commercial or open source, are available now.
Attitudes toward people with epilepsy in Libya: The conundrum continues
A close and contemplative look at the published neurology literature makes it clear to the reader that epilepsy research possesses more popularity and occupies a higher position in the plethora of scholarly medical writings. Perhaps the reason behind this is that epilepsy nowadays has become more than just transient seizures that are treated with drugs to put an end to seizure recurrence, but rather it is a disease that permeates all aspects of the patient’s life.
Compassion fatigue: The trojan horse in nursing
Nurses are leaving the profession at an alarming rate [1]. Like soldiers on the battlefield, many nurses post pandemic are left alive but injured, with a catalogue of emotional experiences to wrestle with. Using Stamm’s [2] breakdown, Compassion fatigue (CF) can be understood as the combination burnout and secondary trauma.
COVID 19 in Nursing homes
COVID-19 pandemic is a global threat that is having devastating consequences in congregate settings such as nursing homes and assisted facilities around the world. Several measures have been adapted by the nursing home through the guidance of CMS for protecting the most vulnerable population.
Can language use in social media help in the treatment of severe mental illness?
Nationally, patients experience multiple barriers to receiving mental health care. In many parts of the US, access to mental health providers is limited. For many patients, getting an appointment with a psychiatrist is difficult and often takes weeks. When patients are able to schedule appointments with a psychiatrist, the visits are usually short and aimed mostly at prescribing medications. For patients with serious conditions like schizophrenia or major depression, the consequences of unattended emergence or worsening of symptoms during those time intervals can be severe.
COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in nursing: Home staff and the need for ongoing education and vaccine access
Objective: To study vaccine hesitancy among health care workers who provide direct care in nursing homes and long-term care facilities which cater to the most vulnerable population of the community.
Attaining highest honors: A study proposal for the medical student’s honors bar expectancy and values changes within medical education
Expectancy-Value theory was originally proposed by John William Atkinson in the 1950s and 60s as an attempt to understand different behaviors of students including persistence, decision making when given multiple opportunities to choose from, and the effort of striving for success.
The tip of the iceberg: Commentary on mental illness and substance use as distal and proximal variables
Given the widespread taboo surrounding suicide, risk of suicide may become even more difficult to face for clinicians, when linked with substance use, another stigmatized behavior. In this commentary, we shall argue that even though suicides are to be taken seriously, we must also be aware of the rarity of completed suicide, and be careful not to exaggerate risks associated with substance use. The primary risk of suicide appears to occur when a range of distal and proximal factors converge.