Open Access
Using ways of knowing in nursing to develop educational strategies that support knowledge mobilization
Author(s) -
Swift Amelia,
Twycross Alison
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
paediatric and neonatal pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2637-3807
DOI - 10.1002/pne2.12037
Subject(s) - health professionals , pain management , nursing , psychology , health care , empirical research , mobilization , medicine , medical education , political science , physical therapy , philosophy , epistemology , law
Abstract There are continued challenges in achieving effective pain management for children and young people (CYP). Research has found several barriers to effective CYP pain management, which include, but are not limited to, deficiencies in knowledge among nurses and other healthcare professionals. Calls for improvements in and an increase in pain education ensue, in the expectation that an increase in knowledge will lead to an improved pain care for patients. Educational initiatives, as reported in the literature, have tended to focus on increasing empirical knowledge which has not resulted in the anticipated improvements in practice. An exploration of Carper's and Chinn & Kramer's five ways of knowing helps demonstrate why an over‐reliance on empirics fails to equip nurses for the realities of clinical practice and does not facilitate knowledge mobilization or improvements in pain care for CYP. In this paper, we explore these ways of knowing to produce a model for knowledge mobilization in (pain) education. Our model puts forward a multifaceted approach to education using the active learning principles which supports and equip nurses to become effective pain practitioners.