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Kerslake, M. T. (1994). The nurse practitioner in the South Pacific region: concerns about this innovation. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Kidd, J. D. (2008). Aroha mai: Nurses, nursing and mental illness. Ph.D. thesis, , .
Abstract: This research takes an autoethnographical approach to exploring the connections between being a nurse, doing nursing work, and experiencing a mental illness. Data is comprised of autoethnographical stories from 18 nurses. Drawing on Lyotard's (1988) postmodern philosophy of 'regimes of phrases' and 'genres of discourse,' the nurses' stories yielded three motifs: Nursing, Tangata Whaiora (people seeking wellness) and Bullying. Interpretation of the motifs was undertaken by identifying and exploring connected or dissenting aspects within and between the motifs.
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MacManus, M. (1994). Reflective practice: teaching the practice of nursing. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Maloney-Moni, J. (2004). Kia Mana: A synergy of wellbeing. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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McDonald, S. (2004). Registered nurses' perceptions of their role in acute inpatient care in New Zealand: A qualitative descriptive study. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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McKegg, A. H. (1991). Ministering angels: the government backblock nursing service and the Maori health nurses, 1909 -1939. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Messervy, L. (1993). The rise of the independent nurse practitioner: a comparative study of independent nurse practitioners and nurses in traditional work places. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Miller, N. R. (1978). The problems experienced by graduates of student based comprehensive nursing programs as they provide nursing care in general hospitals. Ph.D. thesis, , .
Abstract: When professionals are employed in bureaucratic organisations they can expect to experience incongruence between their professional role conception and the bureaucratic demands of the organisation which lead to their experiencing role deprivation. Students of comprehensive Nursing programs during their preparation are socialised into a role consistent with their professional group when employed in Hospitals, are subjected to its bureaucratic administrative structure This study examines problems experienced by graduates of these programs, the way they cope with these problems and the extent of their role deprivation, 6 months after commencing employment in General hospitals. The result obtained by questionnaire and interview indicate the main problems are related to the provision of nursing Care, the organisation of Hospital and Communication. These problems prevent graduates from functioning as professional Nurses. Almost half considered they have been successful in resolving them. All graduates experienced a considerable magnitude of role deprivation. there are implications both for agencies and for those preparing Comprehensive Nurses
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Morrison, M. (1994). Body-guarded: the social aesthetics of critical care. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Murray, D. J. (2004). The roles of nurses working with adolescents in Auckland secondary schools. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Neugebauer, A. F. (2004). The adult congenital heart disease service: An evidence-based development of a nurse specialist position. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Palmer, S. G. (1993). Positively positive: an experimental evaluation of the Wellness Programme, Burnett Centre. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Prebble, K. (2007). Ordinary men and uncommon women: A history of psychiatric nursing in New Zealand public mental hospitals, 1939-1972. Ph.D. thesis, , .
Abstract: This social-cultural history explores the changing context, culture, and identity of psychiatric nurses working in New Zealand public mental hospitals between 1939 and 1972. Primary documentary sources and oral history interviews provided the data for analysis. The thesis is divided into two periods: 1939 to 1959 when asylum-type conditions shaped the culture of the institutional workforce, and 1960 to 1972 when mental health reform and nursing professionalisation challenged the isolation and distinct identity of mental hospital nurses. Between 1939 and 1959 the introduction of somatic treatments did not substantially change nursing practice in mental hospitals. Overcrowding, understaffing and poor resources necessitated the continuance of custodial care. The asylum-type institutions were dependent on a male attendant workforce to ensure the safety of disturbed male patients, and the maintenance of hospital farms, gardens, and buildings. Although female nurses provided all the care and domestic work on the female side, the belief that psychiatric nursing was physically demanding, potentially dangerous, and morally questionable, characterised the work as generally unsuitable for women. Introduction of psychiatric nursing registration which was a move toward professionalisation did little to change the dominance of a male, working-class culture. From 1960 to 1972 psychiatric nurses' identity was contested. New therapeutic roles created the possibility of the nurses becoming health professionals. Their economic security and occupational power, however, was tied to an identity as unionised, male workers. As psychiatric nurses were drawn closer to the female-dominated nursing profession through health service changes and nursing education reform, both men and women acted to protect both their working conditions and their patients' welfare. To achieve these ends, they employed working-class means of industrial action. By accepting the notion that psychiatric nurses' identity was socially constructed, this thesis provides an interpretation that goes beyond the assumption that nursing is a woman's profession. Instead, it presents psychiatric nursing as a changing phenomenon shaped by contested discourses of gender, class and professionalisation. Nursing in public mental hospitals attracted ordinary men and uncommon women whose collective identity was forged from the experience of working in a stigmatised role.
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Ratnasabapathy, P. (2005). Silent suffering: The 'lived experience' of women who have experienced early pregnancy loss and used the health services for their care. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Robinson, T. (2005). Advancing nursing practice and deep vein thrombosis prevention. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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