20 February 2015

En route to London from Italy

BRITISH AIRWAYS FLIGHT 2869—I ran out of two things these past two weeks: energy and enthusiasm. As I write this, I am on the journey home from Genoa in northern Italy to London’s Gatwick Airport in the United Kingdom, having spent a week in Italy teaching and consulting with colleagues at the University of Genoa. After posting my previous blog entry about my time in Taiwan, I spent a week in Hong Kong, two nights at Heathrow Airport, and then this week in Genoa.

My energy has been at low ebb for most of this three-week journey. It took most of my two weeks in the Far East to overcome jet lag and then, after returning to Europe, I underwent another bout, from which I am only now recovering. I am not looking for sympathy—most of my international work is self-imposed—but I am a lot older now than when I started these years of intensive international work.

I completed the week in Hong Kong with colleague Mark Hayter, PhD, RN, FAAN, and, after fitting in a variety of dinners and breakfasts with old friends and colleagues, Mark and I flew home. Formal links with Hong Kong Polytechnic University are now concluded, but I return to Hong Kong in June to work with the University Grants Committee, and I will continue to advise the university’s Research Assessment Exercise.

Regaining inspiration
As usual, I ran the Corsa Italia several times in Genoa, mostly in darkness, as the days were quite short. The PhD students here are an inspiration to work with. For my past two visits, they have been working on a rapid review, applying the principles of rapid evidence assessment. They work as a group, with my support, and they are in the process of producing for publication a very good review on the influence of the clinical learning environment on nursing students’ competence with regard to patient safety.

Members of my PhD class at the University of Genoa
working hard on a rapid evidence assessment review.
Next week, the RN4CAST@IT will be launched at the University of Genoa, and Walter Sermeus, PhD, is coming from the University of Leuven in Belgium to help with the launch. RN4CAST, which was inspired by and involves the work of Linda Aiken, PhD, RN, FRCN, FAAN, has been very effective across Europe in providing evidence for the effectiveness of nursing care and the value of graduate nurses. I played a small part in the project by putting my Genovese colleagues in contact with Sermeus and Aiken.

Summing up, after 17 podcasts, 10 lectures, keynotes and plenaries, and a rejection of a major paper on the effect of sampling on Mokken scaling (to be continued), in addition to keeping up with all my work as acting associate dean for research at Hull, I am returning to my family with the prospect of five weeks at home, which will be a joy. My travel responsibilities during those weeks will be limited to obtaining visas for forthcoming visits to China and Saudi Arabia and preparing lectures for those visits. Life is busy and never dull.

For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International. Comments are moderated. Those that promote products or services will not be posted.

11 February 2015

A week in Taipei

Hong Kong SAR, China—How many keynoters with the surname Watson can you have at one international conference? Apparently, the answer is two. The 700 participants at the 18th East Asian Forum of Nursing Scholars (EAFONS) at National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei were greatly amused that both keynote speakers had the same surname.

I was sharing the platform with Jean Watson, PhD, RN, AHN-BC, FAAN, distinguished professor and dean emerita, University of Colorado Denver, College of Nursing; Living Legend, American Academy of Nursing (2013); and founder/director, Watson Caring Science Institute. More than 20 years had passed since I first met Watson, when she gave a lecture at the University of Edinburgh. Since then, our contact has been by correspondence. She was one of my reviewers during my time as editor-in-chief of Journal of Clinical Nursing, and she oversaw my contributions to both editions of her book Assessing and Measuring Caring in Nursing and Health Science. I neither pretend to understand nor agree with everything Watson says about nursing and caring, but she is a captivating public speaker and fantastic company.

She shared my consternation that we had to endure a three-hour gala conference dinner without a glass of wine, but we had an excellent dinner the next evening—with Taiwan beer—at the world-famous Ding Tai Fung restaurant, at the base of Taipei 101. This was my second Ding Tai Fung experience, as my PhD student Yeh Tzu-Pei and Ting-Ting, another PhD student from National Taipei University, took me to the original Ding Tai Fung restaurant upon my arrival in Taipei.

Overexposure
During my five days in Taiwan, I gave four presentations: a keynote and plenary at EAFONS, a lecture to research students at National Taiwan University Hospital, and a speech to the annual general meeting of STTI’s Lambda Beta Chapter-at-Large, at the invitation of Pei-Shan Tsai, PhD, professor and associate dean of Taipei Medical University College of Nursing. I attended EAFONS at the invitation of Lian Hua-Huang, PhD, professor and former dean of nursing at National Taiwan University, and she was a generous and attentive host.

Never give this man a microphone. Yours Truly at the
plenary session with Taiwanese colleagues.

 I must have had hundreds of photographs taken. This is the habit in the Far East and South East Asia, to get your picture taken with a “celebrity,” and, apparently, I’m a celebrity! I have picked up dozens more followers on my Facebook page, and the photographic evidence is there to see.

Running
Yours Truly surrounded by fans.
That's orange juice I'm drinking.
Apart from the rain, the weather in Taipei was perfect for running, and I managed a total of 12 miles round the campus of National Taiwan University, where I was staying for the week. On Sunday, after a morning visit to Holy Family Church and lunch at Cha for Tea, I went to the airport to meet two old friends from Hualien who work at the nursing college and university run by the Tzu-Chi Buddhist Foundation. Upon boarding the plane for Hong Kong, I reflected on the terrible air crash that had occurred in the city that week. Not every flight ends with an arrival at the destination.

Podcasting continues, and people seem to be listening to them. Mrs. Watson prefers the shorter ones, she tells me.

For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International. Comments are moderated. Those that promote products or services will not be posted.