Health Tech study

Please forward to all your networks! Thanks!

Are you able to help by passing this email on to any Registered Nurse you know who worked in any clinical setting in NZ during the COVID-19 pandemic?
Emma Collins (University of Otago) and Michelle Honey (University of Auckland) are managing the New Zealand part of an international study led by Prof Dawn Dowding from the UK, looking at the impact of adopting digital health technologies on nursing during the covid-19 pandemic. This is part of a larger international study – so nurses around the world are contributing to this.
If you, or if you know of any nurse who is currently working in any area of practice, please forward this email, the attached Participant Information Sheet and survey link to them. They can contact us if they have any questions.
If you have any questions please contact Emma Collins on emma.collins@otago.ac.nz

Thank you for considering passing this on to the nurses you know. This is called a snowball method of finding participants – so if you know any RNs who practiced during the pandemic, please pass this on and help get this snowball rolling. The survey is open now and closes Friday 23rd September.

Please follow this link to access the on-line survey.

This study has been approved by the University of Otago Human Ethics Committee. If you have any concerns about the ethical conduct of the research you may contact the Committee through the Human Ethics Committee Administrator (ph +643 479 8256 or email gary.witte@otago.ac.nz). Any issues you raise will be treated in confidence and investigated and you will be informed of the outcome. Ethics Reference: 22/070.

Hi everyone in @NMI
Please consider completing this survey and please share with your nursing networks

Thanks
Emma Collins and Michelle Honey

Hi @emma.collins and @m.honey . I cannot find the “Participant Information Sheet” referred too. Where is a copy?
Cheers Lucy

Its on the first page of the survey, but I have also attached it here. Thanks!
Information sheet FINAL.pdf (216.3 KB)