Thesis & Dissertations - ތީސީސް އަދި ޑެޒަޓޭޝަން
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ArticleItem Knowledge, attitude and practice wards management of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) among antenatal women visiting for antenatal care at reproductive health center, Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital(School of Nursing, 2022-12) Sheeza, AishathBACKGROUND: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a global health problem compromising maternal and fetal health. The aim of this study is to examine the level of knowledge, attitude and practice towards management of GDM among antenatal women. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional descriptive correlational study involving 197 antenatal women visiting for antenatal care at Reproductive Health Center (RHC) of Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital (IGMH). Participants were selected using random sampling in one-month period between August to September 2022. Pearson correlation was used to evaluate relationship between knowledge, attitude and practice towards management of GDM. RESULTS: Research findings indicate 68% respondents had low knowledge, 16.8% and only 15.2% had high knowledge of GDM. Majority of 80.2% had moderate attitude whereas 16.2% and 3.6% antenatal women were found to have high and low attitude towards GDM respectively. Practice level towards management of GDM were found to be poor in 59.9% participants and good in only 1% of participants. Pearson product correlation indicated significant and moderately positive correlation (r = .404, p < .001) between knowledge and attitude, statistically significant and weakly positive correlation (r = .284, p < .001) between attitude and practice. No correlation was found between knowledge and practice towards management of GDM. CONCLUSION: The results of this study can aid healthcare professionals in developing effective strategies to raise awareness of GDM prevention in the Maldives and in carrying out health promotion activities related to GDM successfully ArticleItem Knowledge, attitude, and perceived barriers to medication administration error reporting among registered nurses in a private hospital(School of Nursing, 2023-05) Azeemath, MariyamTopic: knowledge, attitude, and perceived barriers to medication administration error reporting (MAER) among registered nurses in a private hospital in the Maldives. Background: The failure to report medication administration errors (MAE) is a worldwide problem associated with patient safety. The first step towards increasing the reporting rate is recognizing nurses' attitudes toward errors and perceived barriers to reporting. Hence, this study explores the knowledge, attitude, and perceived barriers to medication administration error reporting from the nurses’ perspective. Methods: In this descriptive, correlational study, a structured, self-administered questionnaire was distributed to a sample of 172 randomly selected nurses at ADK hospital, Maldives. IBM® SPSS Statistics (Version 26) was used to analyze the data and level of knowledge and attitude were categorized using Bloom’s cut-off point. Results: Total of 164 nurses participated in this study, with a response rate of 95.93%. 87.8% (n=144) of the participants had a good to excellent level of knowledge. There was a positive attitude towards reporting medication administration errors among 54.9% (n=90) of the participants. A 50.5% (n=83) of the participants agreed or highly agreed that "Nurses could be blamed if something happens to the patient because of the medication error" as a barrier to medication error reporting. The results showed a statistically significant strong negative relationship between MAER attitude and perceived barriers to MAER, r (163) = -.818, p = <. 01. While there was a statistically significant weak negative relationship between MAER attitude and perceived barriers to MAER, r (163) = -.187, p = < .05. Conclusions: The findings revealed that most of the participants possessed good to excellent levels of knowledge in MAE and had a positive attitude toward medication administration error reporting. Blame due to adverse events to patients were considered the top-ranked barrier to MAER among nurses in the study. Thus, efforts to enhance MAER by creating a safe organizational culture and developing a confidential, anonymous, fast, and simple-to-use reporting system is crucial to eliminating these barriers.