Journal Club Meeting with Laurie Gottlieb_McGill
Article:ÌýStrengths-Based Nursing: A Process for Implementing a Philosophy Into Practice ´¥ÌýJ Fam Nurs 2017; 23 (3): 319-340.
11:50²¹³¾â€“1:00±è³¾
Burnside Hall Room 107
REGISTRATION REQUIRED: RSVP by April 8 toÌýgilbert.primeau [at] mcgill.ca
*This event is approved for a maximum of 1.75 hours of accredited continuing nursing education by the Continuing Nursing Education (CNE) Office, Ingram School of Nursing, Ï㽶ÊÓƵ.
MUHC | Videoconference
12:00±è³¾â€“1:00±è³¾
MNH Site: Room 124
MGH Site: Room E19.102
Glen Site: Rooms C05.1172 & D03.5039
REGISTRATION REQUIRED:Ìýsonia.castiglione [at] muhc.mcgill.caÌý**Please Mention Your Site & OIIQ License No. **
JGH Site | Videoconference
12:00±è³¾â€“1:00±è³¾
JGH Site: K-6345
Richardson Site: J202
Catherine Booth Site: RDC Salle 6
Mount Sinai Site: C103
REGISTRATION REQUIRED:Ìýchantal.bastien.ccomtl [at] ssss.gouv.qc.ca
PRESENTER
Laurie Gottlieb,ÌýNurse, Ph.D., Professor, Ingram School of Nursing
Professor Laurie Gottlieb is a full professor at the Ingram School of Nursing, Ï㽶ÊÓƵ and holds the Flora Madeline Shaw Chair in Nursing. She is the Nurse-Scholar in Residence at the Jewish General Hospital. Professor Gottlieb earned a BN and MSc in Nursing and a PhD in develop-mental psychology from Ï㽶ÊÓƵ. A member of McGill faculty since 1974, she was the Director of the School of Nursing and Associate Dean of the Faculty of Medicine from 1995 to 2000. In 2014 she founded and is a co-director of the International Institute for Strengths-Based Nursing and Health Care. From 1992-2013 she was the editor-in-chief of the Canadian Journal of Nursing Research.
Her current work focuses on the development of Strengths-Based Nursing (SBN) as an approach to practice, leadership/management, and education. SBN is the result of an evolution of her thinking into what is nursing and how should nurses fulfill their social mandate of health and healing. SBN develops, extends, and re-conceptualizes elements of the McGill Model of Nursing resulting in a more integrated, in-depth philosophical vision and pragmatic approach to person and family nursing. Early in Professor Gottlieb’s career, she helped to develop and evaluate the core variables of Situation-Responsive Nursing that became the foundations of the McGill Model of Nursing. She later expounded on the developmental and biological principles that underlie nursing practice and brought these ideas together in the Developmental/Health Framework within the McGill Model of Nursing.