The SAGE Handbook of Mentoring

Author: Clutterbuck DA, Kochan F, Lunsford LG, Dominguez N and Haddock-Millar J
Pages: 688p.
Format: EPUB
Publisher: Sage, (23 Feb. 2017)
eISBN-13: 978-1412962537

The SAGE Handbook of Mentoring provides a scholarly, comprehensive and critical overview of mentoring theory, research and practice across the world. Internationally renowned authors map out the key historical and contemporary research, before considering modern case study examples and future directions for the field. The chapters are organised into four areas:

  • The Landscape of Mentoring
  • The Practice of Mentoring
  • The Context of Mentoring
  • Case Studies of Mentoring Around the Globe

This Handbook is a resource for mentoring academics, students and practitioners across a range of disciplines including business and management, education, health, psychology, counselling, and social work.

The Good Mentoring Toolkit for Healthcare

Author: Bayley H, Chambers R and Donovan C
Pages: 168p.
Format: EPUB
Publisher: CRC Press, (1 Sept. 2004)
eISBN-13: 978-1857756494

This toolkit can be used to help you establish good practice in mentoring, whether you are being mentored, an individual mentor, or responsible for setting up a mentoring scheme in your organisation – hospital or primary care trust, deanery, college, etc. It will guide you as to what to expect from mentoring and provide practical help in setting up the components of a mentoring scheme. Chapter 1 includes the many and varied definitions of mentoring. We employ general definitions of mentoring throughout this toolkit, rather than employing any terminology specific to one professional group. In brief, the benefits of mentoring for individuals are:

increases the confidence of the mentee by:

    • supporting them while they learn new skills, behaviours, etc.
      challenging assumptions
    • offering alternative perspectives
    • facilitating the mentee in finding solutions to their problems
  • encourages reflective practice by:
    • providing a sounding board
    • providing protected time and space to consider professional practice
    • increasing mentees’ understanding of their working environment
  • enhances self-development through:
    • action planning and learning
    • effective goal setting
    • increasing professional confidence and professional credibility.

The Nurse Mentor’s Handbook: Supporting Students in Clinical Practice

Author: Walsh D
Pages: 270p.
Format: Epub
Publisher: Open University Press, 26 Aug. 2020
eISBN-13: 978-0335248612

This popular book is an essential companion for supporting and supervising student nurses in clinical practice. The book examines the theory of supervision and the underlying principles of teaching and assessment in nurse education and includes case studies, tools and interventions that can be used in clinical practice.

Techniques for Coaching and Mentoring

Author: Natalie Lancer, David Clutterbuck And David Megginson. Pages: 341 Size: 1.24 MB Format: PDF Publisher: Routledge Ltd
Published: 15 July, 2016
eISBN-13: 9781315691251

This is a fully revised and updated second edition of the successful Techniques for Coaching and Mentoring, also incorporating the best bits of its sister text Further Techniques for Coaching and Mentoring. The book presents a comprehensive and critical overview of the wide range of tools and techniques available to coaches and mentors. With a strong academic underpinning, it explores a wide range of approaches, and provides techniques both for use with clients and to support professional development of the coach or mentor. Key features include:

  • Easy-to-use resources and techniques for one-to-one coaching;
  • Case studies throughout the text, helping to put theory into practice;
  • An overview of different theoretical approaches;
  • A dedicated section on ‘themes for the coach’ discussing coaching across cultures, evaluating your coaching and looking after yourself as a coach

Techniques for Coaching and Mentoring 2nd Edition is an invaluable resource for professional coaches and mentors looking to enhance their practice, and for students of coaching and mentoring.

Overcoming Secondary Stress in Medical and Nursing Practice

Author: Robert J. Wicks. Pages: 214 Size: 805 KB Format: PDF Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 25 August, 2005
eISBN-13: 978019803845

Physicians, nurses, and allied health professionals working in today’s health care settings must be prepared to offer support in dangerous times despite staffing shortages, financial pressures, and complex legal requirements. Overcoming Stress in Medical and Nursing Practice: A Guide to Professional Resilience and Personal Well-Being is a concise guide for all medical professionals who face these demands. This book:

  • Provides critical information about the dangers of compassion fatigue/burnout and vicarious post-traumatic stress disorder in health care settings
  • Introduces a newly-developed “Medical-Nursing Professional Secondary Stress Self-Awareness Questionnaire” that can be profitably self-administered at each phase of one’s career and reflected upon in private, with one’s mentor, or in a small group setting
  • Includes a unique section on strengthening one’s inner life through the use of three core spiritual wisdom approaches drawn from a world religion perspective
  • Provides a description of four types of “voices” one needs to have in one’s circle of friends to ensure that balance, perspective, growth, and challenge are fostered in one’s personal and professional life
  • Describes how physicians, nurses, and allied health professionals can formulate a personally-designed self-care protocol for themselves

Lastly, this book offers an extensive and up-to date bibliography of recent research, clinical papers, and books on medical-nursing practice and secondary stress. Overcoming Stress in Medical and Nursing Practice is an indispensable resource for medical and nursing professionals, students, and the counselors and therapists who work with them.

Preventing Burnout: The key to staying healthy and engaged at work

Author: 50minutes.Com Pages: 0 Size: 1.37 MB Format: EPUB Publisher: 50 Minutes
Published: 10 April, 2017
eISBN-13: 9782806269782

Ready to take your career to the next level? Find out everything you need to know about preventing burnout with this practical guide.Many professionals in today’s business world find themselves working increasingly long hours and even taking work home with them as they try to manage their workloads and advance in their careers. However, this commitment to their jobs can lead to stress, fatigue and ultimately burnout, which has severe and long-lasting consequences. It is therefore imperative to take control of your work-life balance before reaching this stage.In 50 minutes you will be able to:

  • Identify the warning signs of burnout in yourself and others
  • Understand the personal, work-based and emotional risk factors for professional exhaustion
  • Take steps to prevent the development of burnout before it takes hold

Professional Burnout

Author: Edited By Wilmar B. Schaufeli, Christina Maslach, Tadeusz Marek. Pages: 313 Size: 309.33 MB Format: PDF Publisher: Routledge Ltd
Published: 26 June, 2017
eISBN-13: 9781315227979

A rapidly growing number of people experience psychological strain at their workplace. In almost all industrialized countries, absenteeism and turnover rates increase, and an increasing amount of workers receive disablement benefits because of psychological problems. This book, first published in 1993, concentrates on a specific kind of occupational stress: burnout, the depletion of energy resources as a result of continuous emotional demands of the job.

This volume presents theoretical perspectives that had been developed in the United States and Europe, discusses methodological issues, and examines organisational contexts. Written by an international group of leading scholars, this book will be of interest to students of both psychology and human resource management.

Compassion Fatigue and Burnout in Nursing

Author: Vidette Todaro-Franceschi. Pages: 255 Size: 1.83 MB Format: PDF Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
Published: 20 September, 2012
eISBN-13: 9780826109781

Compassion fatigue afflicts nurses working in all caring environments and has become a serious issue in health care institutions nationwide. This is the only book to specifically address this challenge and the related syndrome of burnout in nursing. It presents a unique healing model designed to identify, treat and, where possible, avert compassion fatigue with holistic strategies and action plans that help cultivate a healthier, more satisfying work environment.

The volume addresses risk factors for and manifestations of compassion fatigue, burnout, and other related experiences such as PTS, death overload, collective trauma, and moral distress, and presents strategies to mediate and resolve these issues. The author emphasizes ways in which dissatisfaction influences the quality of patient care and calls for nurses to reinvent their work environments to favor compassion contentment. Case vignettes and exercises will help readers identify and alter patterns of negativity to reaffirm purpose in their professional lives.

Key Features:

  • Describes the positive and negative contributors to professional quality of life
  • Explores the multifaceted nature of compassion fatigue and burnout, in nursing
  • Addresses the unique risk factors for nurses who work in critical care/ER, oncology, medical/surgical, and palliative care areas
  • Offers holistic self and group strategies and action plans to help leadership and staff nurses overcome compassion fatigue and promote work satisfaction
  • Addresses gaps in education which contribute to the development of compassion fatigue and burnout
  • Designed for nurses in stressful health care environments, and nurse educators and students

Enabling Learning in Nursing and Midwifery Practice

Author: Edited By Sue West, Tim Clark And Melanie Jasper.
Pages: 270 Size: 924 KB Format: PDF Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Published: 20 March, 2009
eISBN-13: 9780470697917

With current Government targets to increase health and social care practitioners, there is an increased need for informed mentors and preceptors to support the development of the students and new health professionals. Enabling learning in nursing and midwifery practice: A guide for mentors seeks to underpin recent mentoring initiatives, exploring the impact of mentoring, supervision and preceptorship on professional practice, covering principles that underpin effective learning and providing practical guidance on mentoring and assessment strategies within practice settings. Enabling learning in nursing and midwifery practice: A guide for mentors addresses the inter-professional and policy context for mentorship, examines the nature of effective learning environments and provides mentors with the necessary tools to assist students in their development within a practice setting. It explores the use of reflective practice, virtual learning and other core resources to enhance and support learning in practice and addresses assessing practice, making correct judgements about student competence and the development of competence in newly qualified practitioners. Enabling learning in nursing and midwifery practice: A guide for mentors is an important resource text for practitioners seeking to support learning in practice as well as experienced mentors and preceptors seeking to update their skills and understanding. Key features

  • Evidence-based, practical guide to effective mentoring and preceptorship.
  • Integrates theory and practice.
  • Addresses the context of learning in practice and the challenges of clinical supervision.
  • Promotes understanding of the importance of assessing practice and managing the mentoring process.
  • Equips mentors to enable students and newly qualified staff to gain confidence and expertise Includes activities, points for reflection and examples from practice