Dr Jamie Ranse RN PhD
Research Fellow, Emergency Care
www.jamieranse.com
twitter.com/jamieranse
youtube.com/jamieranse
linkedin.com/in/jamieranse
Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of the out-of-hospital
environment following a disaster: Psychosocial aspects
overview
• Introduction
• Methodology
• Findings
• Discussion
ROLE IN A
DISASTER
Ranse J, Lenson S. (2012). Beyond a clinical role: Nurses were psychosocial supporters, coordinators and problem solvers in the Black Saturday and Victorian bushfires in
2009. Australasian Emergency Nursing Journal. 15(3):156-163.
methodology
• Phenomenology
• Individuals who have had
experience(s)
• Obtaining narrative
• From narrative to a lived-experience
description
• Epoche-reduction
Ranse J. (2017). Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of an out-of-hospital environment following a disaster. Doctorate of Philosophy, Flinders University, South
Australia.
Space
•Shrinking, then open wide
• Drawn-in and shrinking
• Drawn-in and looking out
• Wide-open and crowded
•Occupying, sharing and giving back
Relationships
•Being close
• Starting relationships
• Close, as work becomes home
• Relational widening
•With patients and their families
• Being an insider
•With self
• By (my)self
• Carrying an emotional burden
• Questioning the effort
Time
•Speeding up
•Slowing down
Body
•When nursing following a disaster
• Without technology
• Being autonomous
•For patients following a disaster
• Endless bodies
• Injured and ill
• Death
• Psychosocial well-being
• Returning to the hospital patient
findings
Space
•Shrinking, then open wide
• Drawn-in and shrinking
• Drawn-in and looking out
• Wide-open and crowded
•Occupying, sharing and giving back
Relationships
•Being close
• Starting relationships
• Close, as work becomes home
• Relational widening
•With patients and their families
• Being an insider
•With self
• By (my)self
• Carrying an emotional burden
• Questioning the effort
Time
•Speeding up
•Slowing down
Body
•When nursing following a disaster
• Without technology
• Being autonomous
•For patients following a disaster
• Endless bodies
• Injured and ill
• Death
• Psychosocial well-being
• Returning to the hospital patient
findings
Space
• Shrinking, then open wide
• Drawn-in and shrinking
• Drawn-in and looking out
• Wide-open and crowded
• Occupying, sharing and giving back
Relationships
• Being close
• Starting relationships
• Close, as work becomes home
• Relational widening
• With patients and their families
• Being an insider
• With self
• By (my)self
• Carrying an emotional burden
• Questioning the effort
Time
•Speeding up
•Slowing down
Body
•When nursing following a disaster
• Without technology
• Being autonomous
•For patients following a disaster
• Endless bodies
• Injured and ill
• Death
• Psychosocial well-being
• Returning to the hospital patient
findings
Space
•Shrinking, then open wide
• Drawn-in and shrinking
• Drawn-in and looking out
• Wide-open and crowded
•Occupying, sharing and giving back
Relationships
•Being close
• Starting relationships
• Close, as work becomes home
• Relational widening
•With patients and their families
• Being an insider
•With self
• By (my)self
• Carrying an emotional burden
• Questioning the effort
Time
•Speeding up
•Slowing down
Body
•When nursing following a disaster
• Without technology
• Being autonomous
•For patients following a disaster
• Endless bodies
• Injured and ill
• Death
• Psychosocial well-being
• Returning to the hospital patient
findings
discussion
• Psychosocial well-being of people affected by disaster
• Psychosocial well-being of self
Dr Jamie Ranse RN PhD
Research Fellow, Emergency Care
www.jamieranse.com
twitter.com/jamieranse
youtube.com/jamieranse
linkedin.com/in/jamieranse
Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of the out-of-hospital
environment following a disaster: Psychosocial aspects

Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of the out-of-hospital environment following a disaster: Psychosocial aspects

  • 1.
    Dr Jamie RanseRN PhD Research Fellow, Emergency Care www.jamieranse.com twitter.com/jamieranse youtube.com/jamieranse linkedin.com/in/jamieranse Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of the out-of-hospital environment following a disaster: Psychosocial aspects
  • 2.
  • 4.
  • 5.
    Ranse J, LensonS. (2012). Beyond a clinical role: Nurses were psychosocial supporters, coordinators and problem solvers in the Black Saturday and Victorian bushfires in 2009. Australasian Emergency Nursing Journal. 15(3):156-163.
  • 6.
    methodology • Phenomenology • Individualswho have had experience(s) • Obtaining narrative • From narrative to a lived-experience description • Epoche-reduction Ranse J. (2017). Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of an out-of-hospital environment following a disaster. Doctorate of Philosophy, Flinders University, South Australia.
  • 7.
    Space •Shrinking, then openwide • Drawn-in and shrinking • Drawn-in and looking out • Wide-open and crowded •Occupying, sharing and giving back Relationships •Being close • Starting relationships • Close, as work becomes home • Relational widening •With patients and their families • Being an insider •With self • By (my)self • Carrying an emotional burden • Questioning the effort Time •Speeding up •Slowing down Body •When nursing following a disaster • Without technology • Being autonomous •For patients following a disaster • Endless bodies • Injured and ill • Death • Psychosocial well-being • Returning to the hospital patient findings
  • 8.
    Space •Shrinking, then openwide • Drawn-in and shrinking • Drawn-in and looking out • Wide-open and crowded •Occupying, sharing and giving back Relationships •Being close • Starting relationships • Close, as work becomes home • Relational widening •With patients and their families • Being an insider •With self • By (my)self • Carrying an emotional burden • Questioning the effort Time •Speeding up •Slowing down Body •When nursing following a disaster • Without technology • Being autonomous •For patients following a disaster • Endless bodies • Injured and ill • Death • Psychosocial well-being • Returning to the hospital patient findings
  • 9.
    Space • Shrinking, thenopen wide • Drawn-in and shrinking • Drawn-in and looking out • Wide-open and crowded • Occupying, sharing and giving back Relationships • Being close • Starting relationships • Close, as work becomes home • Relational widening • With patients and their families • Being an insider • With self • By (my)self • Carrying an emotional burden • Questioning the effort Time •Speeding up •Slowing down Body •When nursing following a disaster • Without technology • Being autonomous •For patients following a disaster • Endless bodies • Injured and ill • Death • Psychosocial well-being • Returning to the hospital patient findings
  • 12.
    Space •Shrinking, then openwide • Drawn-in and shrinking • Drawn-in and looking out • Wide-open and crowded •Occupying, sharing and giving back Relationships •Being close • Starting relationships • Close, as work becomes home • Relational widening •With patients and their families • Being an insider •With self • By (my)self • Carrying an emotional burden • Questioning the effort Time •Speeding up •Slowing down Body •When nursing following a disaster • Without technology • Being autonomous •For patients following a disaster • Endless bodies • Injured and ill • Death • Psychosocial well-being • Returning to the hospital patient findings
  • 13.
    discussion • Psychosocial well-beingof people affected by disaster • Psychosocial well-being of self
  • 14.
    Dr Jamie RanseRN PhD Research Fellow, Emergency Care www.jamieranse.com twitter.com/jamieranse youtube.com/jamieranse linkedin.com/in/jamieranse Australian civilian hospital nurses’ lived experience of the out-of-hospital environment following a disaster: Psychosocial aspects