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Ellen Rukholm

Researcher at Laurentian University

Publications -  43
Citations -  1246

Ellen Rukholm is an academic researcher from Laurentian University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Health care. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 43 publications receiving 1156 citations. Previous affiliations of Ellen Rukholm include Université de Sherbrooke & University of Western Ontario.

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The Quality of Life Profile--Adolescent Version: background, description, and initial validation.

TL;DR: With further validation, the QOLPAV could be used to assess current states of coping and functioning, identify adolescents' service needs, develop health enhancing environments, and assess the effects of illness and treatments.
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Cultural competence and cultural safety in Canadian schools of nursing: a mixed methods study.

TL;DR: Results suggest that several facilitating factors are present, such as leadership, partnerships and linkages, and educational supports for students, as well as the lack of policies to recruit and retain Aboriginal faculty, financial resources, and outcome evaluation indicators.
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Occupational Stress Management and Burnout Interventions in Nursing and Their Implications for Healthy Work Environments: A Literature Review

TL;DR: Recommendations are provided to improve nurses’ QWL in health care organizations through workplace health promotion programs so that nurses can be recruited and retained in rural and northern regions of Ontario.
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Nursing-sensitive outcomes data collection in acute care and long-term-care settings.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that nurses are able to collect data on nursing-sensitive patient outcomes in a reliable and valid way.
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Relationship between nursing interventions and outcome achievement in acute care settings

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that nurses can use MDS and TSCS data on patient outcomes to gain insight into the effectiveness of their interventions and indicated that nursing interventions aimed at exercise promotion, positioning, and self-care assistance predicted functional status outcome.