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Mary Wickman

Researcher at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Publications -  5
Citations -  75

Mary Wickman is an academic researcher from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Compassion fatigue & Burnout. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 5 publications receiving 54 citations.

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Hospital staff nurse perceptions of competency to care for patients with psychiatric or behavioral health concerns.

TL;DR: This study provides direction for further research and interventions in hospital settings with similar professional development needs that revealed a lack of nurse confidence to intervene in situations that require de-escalation techniques and crisis communication.
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Instrument validation: hospital nurse perceptions of their Behavioral Health Care Competency

TL;DR: The 23-item hospital nurse Behavioral Health Care Competency survey is an adequate and valid newly developed instrument and further testing with diverse samples is needed to strengthen generalizability and address unique and specialized nursing care needs.
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An effective in-hospital chaplaincy-led care program for nurses: Tea for the soul a qualitative investigation.

TL;DR: In a qualitative grounded theory study, hospital nurses who participated in TFS were interviewed and four core themes emerged: nurses' self-care, professional practice, community, and improved patient care outcomes as mentioned in this paper.
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Caritas Education: Theory to Practice

TL;DR: An educational seminar based on Jean Watson's Theory of Human Caring is delivered to newly graduated nurses to examine the impact on self-efficacy in caring behaviors to provide insights for the development of effective teaching strategies to facilitate translating nursing theory to practice.
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Direct-Acting Oral Anticoagulants and Warfarin-Associated Intracerebral Hemorrhage Protocol Reduces Timing of Door to Correction Interventions.

TL;DR: Study findings support the hypothesis that the new protocol was associated with lower door-to-treatment times for eligible patients, and support the idea that a rapid anticoagulant reversal protocol combined with warfarin and direct-acting oral anticoAGulant therapy helped reduce door to first intervention times.