Creating Healthy Work Environments: Part One - Enhancing Clinical Professional Well-Being and Satisfaction - Online Course
This webinar is the first in the Creating Healthy Work Environments webinar series. Globally, it has been recognized that having a healthy work environment is essential for the nurses' performance, well-being, and to make positive impacts on patient outcomes. In this webinar, we will discuss hospital employee well-being and professional satisfaction along with ways to improve the current clinical environment for the profession.
Join us to learn more from the following presentations:
- Implementing a Zen Room to Influence Well-Being in Rural Hospital Employees: An EBP Project
- Unveiling the Components of Professional Satisfaction Among Novice Nurses: Practical Advices to Nurses' Managers
This course will retire after 2nd February 2027.
Learning Outcomes:
After participating in this course, learners will be able to:
- Upon completion of this webinar, participants will be able to recall the importance of well-being and professional satisfaction for the clinical environment.
Author Bios:
Regina Wilder Urban, PhD, RN, NPD-BC, CNE, MA-LPC Dr Regina Urban is a PRN Nurse Scientist with Texas Health Resources, a large not-for-profit healthcare system. She has been a nurse for 25 years with a clinical background in critical care and experience as an educator in hospital and academic settings. She has served as a PRN nurse scientist for Texas Health Resources for six years. Her research interests include well-being and resilience in nursing students, acute care nurses, and healthcare workers.
Bella Savitsky, PhD, MPH, RN Dr. Bella Savitsky is a nurse, epidemiologist, researcher, senior lecturer in the Ashkelon Academic College, Director of the Direct-Entry Nursing Program and Manager of the Research Seminar. She is a research fellow at the Gertner Institute for Epidemiology and Health Policy Research. Main fields of interest: socioeconomic disparities in health, the association between ethnicity and health.