
Sleep Across the Lifespan: Helping patients in their sleep journey
Learn techniques to guide your patients towards better sleep at the virtual workshop, “Sleep Across the Lifespan,” on January 27, 2024, from 9:00-11:00 a.m.
You’ll learn about the importance of sleep and how it relates to all chronic conditions (pain, discomfort, inflammation, fatigue, etc.) as well as insights into specific conditions. You’ll also hear real-life examples of how sleep intertwines with symptoms and impacts health and quality of life.
This Nurses Education Series event is free for WSNA members, $40 for nonmembers, and $20 for nursing students. Earn 2 ANCC contact hours (pending).
Registration hosted by Rainier Olympic Nurses Association.
We’ll dive into sleep research as it relates to acute and chronic conditions in pediatric, adult, and aging populations, including:
- Prevention of cognitive decline in older ICU survivors.
- Symptom management in stroke survivors.
- Digital self-management interventions for patients with gastrointestinal conditions.
- User-centered design approaches to improve sleep in pediatric patients.
Learn how to talk to your patients about sleep and set them up for success once they return home with practical tips and tools for themselves and their caregivers.
Don’t miss this chance to learn the latest research, protocols, and use of technology from experts in the field of sleep innovation.
Our panelists
We are proud to announce that all of our speakers are nurses!
Sleep Overview: Sleep across the lifespan, common sleep problems, and strategies to improve sleep in children, families, and caregivers.
Dr. Teresa Ward, PhD, RN, FAAN
Dr. Ward is a Professor in the Department of Pediatrics, UW School of Medicine and the Center for Child Health, Behavior, and Development at the Seattle Children’s Research Institute. Her areas of research include innovation interventions, symptom science, health equity and lifespan health. Dr. Ward conducts clinical trial studies that integrate behavior change and management strategies with technology for children and their caregivers with a focus on under-resourced populations. As a nurse scientist, Teresa’s research interests grew from her clinical practice as a nurse practitioner.
Sleep in Pediatric Patients: Sleep in children with chronic conditions and their family caregivers
Weichao Yuwen, PhD, RN
Dr. Yuwen is an Associate Professor in the School of Nursing & Healthcare Leadership, UW Tacoma. Her early work focused on descriptive research to examine sleep and other symptoms in children with chronic conditions and their families. Currently, her work focuses on user-centered design approaches to develop and test technology-enabled interventions to improve sleep and other symptoms for people with chronic conditions and their family caregivers.
Sleep in Adult Patients with Gastrointestinal Conditions: principles of sleep in patients with gastrointestinal conditions, with a consideration for emerging adults.
Dr. Kendra J. Kamp, PhD, RN
Dr. Kamp is an Assistant Professor at UW. She is also the Director of the UW Gastrointestinal Health and Wellness Lab (GI-Well) which promotes optimal gut health through a holistic approach to addressing individual, environmental, and societal factors. Her nursing research looks at adapting a comprehensive self-management intervention into a digital format, understanding patient symptom experiences through qualitative and quantitative methods, and incorporating biological markers (biomarkers) such as fecal calprotectin, gut microbiome, cytokines, and bile acids into nursing research.
Sleep Health for Older Adults: Promotion of sleep health for older adults throughout recovery from critical illness.
Dr. Maya Elias, PhD, MA, RN
Dr. Elias is an Assistant Professor of Nursing in the Dept. of Biobehavioral Nursing and Health Informatics at the UW. Her research focus is on older adults recovering from critical illness and the impact of sleep disturbances on cognitive function. Her research applies sleep and circadian science to cognitive interventions to prevent cognitive decline in older ICU survivors.
Management of Sleep Disturbances in Stroke Survivors: Sleep disturbance and daytime sleepiness and underlying mechanisms of these symptoms in subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) survivors during the first 6 months after SAH.
Dr. Eeeseung Byun, PhD, RN
Dr. Byun is an Associate Professor, Biobehavioral Nursing and Health Informatics at the UW School of Nursing and is an Endowed Professor in Critical Care at the Harborview Medical Center. Dr. Byun studies sleep disturbances and daytime sleepiness and underlying mechanisms of these symptoms in subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) survivors during the first 6 months after SAH. Her research focuses on symptom management (sleep disturbance, fatigue, depression, and impaired cognition) for stroke patients and their family caregivers.
Registration hosted by Rainier Olympic Nurses Association.
Workshop recording
A recording of the workshop will be available approximately three weeks after the event. All those who register will receive a link to the recording.
Continuing education
This activity has been submitted to Oregon Nurses Association for approval to award contact hours. Oregon Nurses Association is accredited as an approver of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation.
Upon approval, attendees may earn 2 contact hours. Participants must be present for all the educational activity to receive contact hours.
Event Sponsors
Inland Empire Nurses Association, King County Nurses Association, Northwest Region Nurses Association, Rainier Olympic Nurses Association, and Central Washington Region Nurses Association.