Discover how a team at Queen’s University Belfast have co-designed and evaluated digital resources including serious games and embedded them into undergraduate and postgraduate nurse education to promote improved care of older people. This process can be adapted to a range of chronic healthcare conditions. Current resources include dementia awareness, delirium, restrictive practice and brain health to reduce dementia risk factors.
Suitable for educators engaged in delivery of pre- and post-registration health care professions and students.
Presenter
Professor Christine Brown Wilson, Director Internationalisation, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Queen’s University, Belfast
Professor Christine Brown Wilson is a registered nurse with an international research profile in ageing and dementia focusing on service development and quality improvement in residential and community contexts. Christine is a Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and champions interprofessional projects engaging health professions students in the codesign and evaluation of learning resources. This has included projects across the island of Ireland, and she is currently supporting allied health professions students in codesigning a dementia awareness game with the Chinese community in Singapore.
Chair: Adjunct Associate Professor Sarah Jeong, Sydney Nursing School, University of Sydney
Recorded 1 October 2024