Injury Center Second Term Seminar Series: Occupational Safety
Each academic term, the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy offers a graduate seminar course on various injury topics. Seminars are open to all. Students pursuing the Certificate in Injury and Violence Prevention are required to register for 305.861.71, Graduate Seminar in Injury Research and Policy, for all four terms (see Certificate for more details).
Each academic term, the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy offers a graduate seminar course on various injury topics. Seminars are open to all.
For more information, visit the event page:
https://qa.publichealth.jhu.edu/node/308696.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 2024-12-02 17:10 2024-12-02 18:20 UTC use-title Location Zoom
About the Event
Hosted by the Center for Injury Research and Policy, the seminar series is designed to advance your understanding of injury, violence, and resulting disability as public health problems. Each term the seminar has a unique focus, including for example, foundational issues, current research, methodological approaches, unmet needs and emerging topics, as well as the application of policy, law and practice for injury and violence prevention. Students hear from leading experts in the field and read literature provided to accompany each presentation. All seminars will be offered via Zoom; links will be provided at the beginning of each term.
This event is co-hosted by the Johns Hopkins Education and Research Center for Occupational Health and Safety.
December 2, 2024
Health and Safety Risk Exposure in Hospital Nursing
Paul E. Spector, PhD
Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Department of Psychology
University of South Florida
Nurses are exposed to all forms of physical and psychological health and safety risks, including biological hazards, chemical exposure, overuse injury, physical assault, psychosocial environment, and verbal mistreatment. I will cover the various forms of exposure, results of a long-term study of newly graduated nurses, and recent work from a study at Tampa General Hospital concerning the impact of unit understaffing.