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Reema Safadi

Researcher at University of Jordan

Publications -  29
Citations -  529

Reema Safadi is an academic researcher from University of Jordan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 24 publications receiving 424 citations.

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An epidemiological overview of diabetes across the world.

TL;DR: For such a formula to be successful, it is important for nurses to be proactive in their political role in ensuring that people with diabetes become expert in their condition and healthcare systems and resources could be used more effectively to reduce real human and economic costs.
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Nursing students' perceptions of nursing: a descriptive study of four cohorts.

TL;DR: Student perceptions changed from lay altruistic beliefs of nursing to theoretical medical technological views of the profession denoting a theory-practice gap, delineating the importance of revising nursing schools' curricula and the universities' admission policies into the nursing profession.
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Competence assessment of nursing graduates of Jordanian universities

TL;DR: This cross-sectional survey assessed the level of competence of nursing graduates of Jordanian universities in relation to the type of university, sex, hospital type, and working area to recommend that nurse recruitment policies should consider individual competencies rather than innate characteristics in their selection of employees.
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‘Half a woman, half a man; that is how they make me feel’: a qualitative study of rural Jordanian women’s experience of infertility

TL;DR: Responses to infertility and its consequences in the Jordanian rural sociocultural context are explored, revealing women’s responses to infertility included: submission and docility, self-isolation, internalisation and persistence in getting pregnant by seeking modern and traditional methods of treatment.
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Evaluating the mental health of Jordanian women in relationships with intimate partner abuse.

TL;DR: Cognitive behavioral interventions are effective interventions when working with women experiencing intimate partner abuse (IPA) and resulted in decreased depression and decreased stress levels, although this finding did not reach significance.