Liz McNeill
Flinders University
12 Papers
44 Citations
Liz McNeill is an academic researcher from Flinders University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Nursing care. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications.
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Papers
Sustaining a hemodialysis exercise program : a review
Paul Bennett,Leo Breugelmans,Robert Barnard,Megan Agius,Danwin Chan,Doug Fraser,Liz McNeill,Lauren Potter +7 more
TL;DR: Factors contributing to sustainable exercise programs included: dedicated exercise professionals; encouragement to exercise intradialytically; dialysis and medical staff commitment; adequate physical requirements of equipment and space; interesting and stimulating; cost implications need to be addressed; and there is no age barrier to exercise on hemodialysis.
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Review: nurses can improve patient nutrition in intensive care
TL;DR: This review supports the multi-disciplinary development and implementation of an evidence-based enteral feeding protocol in intensive care units as a strategy to improve adequacy of nutritional intake.
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•Journal Article
Do students want and need written feedback on summative assignments? Engaging students with the feedback process - a topic review activity
TL;DR: The authors found that if given the choice, a large percentage of students would take the opportunity to elect the specific amount and type of written feedback they want on their assignments, and more research is required to determine the reasons behind this choice and how the type/amount of feedback students chose affects the quality of student learning.
Nursing students' perceptions of a clinical learning assessment activity: 'Linking the puzzle pieces of theory to practice'.
Leeanne Pront,Liz McNeill +1 more
TL;DR: A simulated clinical educational intervention embedded into a second-year nursing student clinical topic offering experiential learning opportunities for a large cohort appears to support student's knowledge development for transference across situations and within large student cohorts.
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Comparing infection control and ward nurses' views of the omission of infection control activities using the Missed Nursing Care Infection Prevention and Control (MNCIPC) Survey.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the perceptions of nurses with infection control expertise and ward nurses as to what infection control activities are missed and the reasons why these activities are omitted and found significant differences were found on the mean scores between infection control and other nurses on ten items.
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