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Citations for PPT Presentations. A few best practices. Why is it Important. It is always important to cite your sources! Otherwise it is considered Plagiarism! Options:
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Citations for PPT Presentations A few best practices
Why is it Important • It is always important to cite your sources! Otherwise it is considered Plagiarism! • Options: • If you only have one or two sources, place your citation in smaller font at the bottom of the slide, (author and date). • For multiple sources on many different slides, you can refer to superscript numbers for each reference. Then place full citations on a reference slide at the bottom of your presentation.
It is preferred that you do NOT include the source within the text of the slide (example below). It distracts and takes up real estate. • Need for Policy • Fiscal impacts of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) • The Medical Group of the West (MGW) staffing model is expensive • MGW management tasked with finding alternatives (C. Golden, personal communication, 2012)
This method is better Need For Policy • Practice issue holds consequences • Current organizational practice at CHCO • Risk management questioning • Physician reprimands • Just Culture Policy for Medication Error Events • Interdisciplinary event review process • Enable nurses’ reconciliation of feelings (Khatri et al., 2009; Schelbred & Nord, 2007; Smetzer, 2012; White et al., 2008)
For multiple references, this method is better. (use superscript and then include a source slide at the end.) Need For Policy • Practice issue holds consequences1 • Current organizational practice at CHCO2 • Risk management questioning • Physician reprimands • Just Culture Policy for Medication Error Events3 • Interdisciplinary event review process • Enable nurses’ reconciliation of feelings
Sources • Khatri, N., Brown, G.D., & Hicks, L.L. (2009). From a blame culture to a just culture in health care. Health Care Management Review, 34(4), 312-322. • Schelbred, A.-B., & Nord, R. (2008). Nurses’ experiences of drug administration errors. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 60(3), 317-324. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2007.04437.x • Smetzer, J. (2012). Don’t abandon the “second victims” of medical errors. Nursing, 42(2), 54-58. DOI: 10.1079/01.NURSE.0000410310.38734.e0. • White, A.A., Waterman, A.D., McCotter, P., Boyle, D.J., & Gallagher, T.H. (2008). Supporting health care workers after medical error: Considerations for health care leaders. Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management, 15(5), 240-247.