Fostering Resilience through Adverse Childhood Experiences and Self-care Tools
CE Information
2.0 CE creditsCompletion Time
1 hour, 40 minutesPosted By
Kentucky Nurses AssociationNavigate
Overview
This workshop will build a foundation for Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) knowledge and the effects of ACE on long-term health outcomes of adults. Participants will have the opportunity to self ACE score to understand the survey, reflect on potential triggers that may present in the workplace, and develop compassion for those experiencing high ACE scores. Building on the foundation of ACE knowledge, the workshop will examine the relationship between stress and resilience, introduce self-care tools to increase resilience, and tools to develop a personal resilience plan.
Made Possible by the Society of Pediatric Nurses 2019 Evidence-based Practice Grant University of Louisville IRB Number: 19.0804
Learning Objectives
At the conclusion on this course, the participant will be able to:
Program Objectives:
- Explain experiences classified as Adverse Childhood Experiences.
- Relate Adverse Childhood Experiences to long-term health outcomes of adults.
- Examine self-Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire score.
- Discuss the relationship of stress and resilience.
- Recall two positive effects of a Koru Mindfulness practice.
- Apply the principles of Koru Mindfulness to build personal resilience.
- Develop a personal resilience plan.
Speakers
Nursing Educator
Dr. Angela D. Mehringer is an Assistant Professor and Simulation Faculty at the University of Louisville School of Nursing and a graduate student at Northern Kentucky University. She is completed her DNP practicum hours jointly with the Green River District Health Department and the International Center of Kentucky, Owensboro, focusing on refugee health. Angela received her Master of Nursing in Nursing Education Degree from the University of Southern Indiana and has taught at the undergraduate level for 10 years. Her expertise is focused on Maternal Child Health, Community and Public Health, and Innovative teaching strategies, including Simulation. She recently presented “Incorporating Refugee Health Perspectives in Undergraduate Nursing Education” at the 2022 Transform AACN Conference. Angela and co-author are the recipients of the Society of Pediatric Nurses 2018 Evidence-Based Practice Grant Award for the EBP project “Fostering Resilience by Educating Undergraduate Nursing Students about Adverse Childhood Experiences.” In addition to teaching undergraduate community health and global health nursing, Angela is a Faith Community Nurse. Angela recently collaborated in the development of a fourth-semester culminating simulation that included cultural diversity, developed an annual faculty development titled “Our journey to being intentional with diversity, equity, and inclusion,” and collaborated to develop a faculty workshop “Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, & Cultural Humility in Simulation.”
Shirley B. Powers Endowed Chair in Nursing Research; Associate Professor; Director, CIEHS Community Engagement Core; Betty Irene Moore Nurse Faculty Fellow 2021-2024
Luz Huntington-Moskos, PhD, RN, CPN, FAAN is an Associate Professor and Director of the Community Engagement Core for the Center for Integrative Environmental Health Sciences at the University of Louisville. She is a Latina nurse scientist with Bolivian heritage. She received her Ph.D. in Nursing from The University of Alabama, Birmingham in 2013 and completed postdoctoral work at the University of Kentucky BREATHE program in 2014. Dr. Huntington-Moskos is a 2021-2024 Betty Irene Moore Fellow and her program of research is focused on the intersection between adolescent health, environmental health and health disparities. She is working to develop report-back strategies geared towards adolescents, with the goal of building environmental health literacy and promoting positive health behavior change. She has a long-standing interest in promoting adolescent health, which she first developed during her work as high school science teacher in the Peace Corps (Malawi 1994-1996). Her scholarly work has been published in peer-reviewed journals such as Preventing Chronic Disease, Journal of Adolescent Health and Public Health Nursing.
Assistant Professor at the University of Louisville
Following graduation from an accelerated BSN program, Paul Clark worked in the post-operative medical surgical and adult emergency department care settings. After completing graduate school, Clark joined the faculty at the University of Louisville School of Nursing where he teaches and is building a program of research. He participates in emergency nursing research as an advisory board member of the Emergency Nursing Research Advisory Council, the research arm of the ENA. As part of his full-time work with the UofL School of Nursing, Clark is a Nurse Scientist at Baptist Healthcare – Louisville, KY.
CE Information
This activity offers 2.0 CE credits to attendees.
Accredited by Kentucky Board of Nursing 1-0001-12-20-23.
KBN Approval. This offering for contact hours is provided by the Kentucky Nurses Association (KNA). Kentucky Nurses Association (KNA) is an approved provider of continuing nursing education by the Kentucky Board of Nursing (KBN). KBN Provider Number: 1-0001. KBN CE Providership Approval through December 31, 2025. KBN approval of an individual continuing nursing education provider does not constitute endorsement of program/offering content. 50 minutes = 1.0 KBN Contact Hour.
Disclosures
Originally offered October 22, 2020. Please be aware any interactive elements of the presentation were only applicable during the live viewing.
Activity Content
Registration to this activity includes access to the following supporting materials.
- PowerPoint (Size: 2.4 MB)
Duration: about 2 hours | Quality: HD
16 questions
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