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Author Trout, F. openurl 
  Title Health needs assessment within the ecology of caring Type
  Year 1999 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords Community health nursing  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 1137 Serial 1122  
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Author Bramley, C.J. openurl 
  Title The nurse and the problem drinker: a study of helping behaviour Type
  Year 1981 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract The purpose of this study is to examine aspects of the behaviour of Nurses towards persons with alcohol related problems. Similarities and differences in helpful and unhelpful behaviour as perceived by providers and users of care are identified using the behaviour to alcoholism management ( B.R.A.M.) scale. The research covers two phases. In phase One 27 Registered Nurses and 12 members of Alcoholics Anonymous completed critical incident questionnaires which furnished a list of helpful behaviours and a list of unhelpful behaviours. These have been analysed and a set of descriptive statements prepared which constitutes the B.R. A.M. scale. In Phase Two this has been administered to 67 Registered Nurses and 46 members of Alcoholics Anonymous and the results assessed. The findings show that Nurses and Problem Drinkers view the same behaviour as helpful. There is however a significant difference between the two groups on the types of behaviour they consider to be unhelpful. This finding has consequences for those who provide care for problem Drinkers and for Teachers and students in education programs for Nurses  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 116 Serial 116  
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Author Nevatt, E.A. openurl 
  Title The place of the problem oriented record in nursing practice Type
  Year 1979 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 119 Serial 119  
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Author Rummel, L. openurl 
  Title The proving ground: a phenomenological study of pre-registration comprehensive nursing students in acute care settings Type
  Year 1993 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library, Carrington, Manukau & O  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract This research focuses upon the lived experience of Diploma of Comprehensive Nursing Students in their final clinical experience. It is generated from the narrative of the students, how they experience their practise, how they make clinical judgements and how they prepare themselves for their graduate practise. Twenty one participants were each interviewed three times throughout a 6-8 week clinical experience in an acute care setting  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 122 Serial 122  
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Author Clarke-Woolley, C. openurl 
  Title The relationship of an instrumental T-Group and personality changes in self concept and self actualisation Type
  Year 1976 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 123 Serial 123  
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Author Takarangi, J. openurl 
  Title The role-practice interface in community health nursing in New Zealand Type
  Year 1983 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract This field project undertaken in 1981 was designed to compare and contrast the role perspective with the practice perspective. Job descriptions were used as the role data and this role data was then considered in relation to information gained from field observations. The discussion looked at the findings in the current context of debate surrounding the future “roles” of nurses in the community  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 126 Serial 126  
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Author O'Sullivan, C. openurl 
  Title Cardiopulmonary resuscitation: Attitudes and knowledge of medical and nursing staff Type
  Year 2002 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords Attitude of health personnel; Emergency nursing  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 1262 Serial 1247  
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Author DeSouza, R. openurl 
  Title Walking upright here: Countering prevailing discourses through reflexivity and methodological pluralism Type
  Year 2002 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords Transcultural nursing; Childbirth  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 1269 Serial 1254  
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Author Idour, D.M.G. openurl 
  Title The social context and the relevance of nursing curricula Type
  Year 1981 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract The relevance of Nursing Curricula and the degree of effectiveness of their outcomes for the 'consumer' ( clients, students, a given society) are seen as commiserate to the degree that a curriculum is developed with due regard for the 'social realities' of a society. "Social realities' are defined as the actual conditions, pressures, disabilities and abilities, limitations and resources that exist in the lifespan of people and form the environment within which Nursing practices. A Curriculum relevancy process ( CRP) has been developed for use as the main analytical tool of the study. CRP has been designated as an information seeking, problem solving and evaluative process. It consists of three phases with a major emphasis on the first phase, information seeking. Information has been gathered about contemporary social realities ( the year of 1979) and related Socio- health disorders. Information has been gathered and analysed from official ad voluntary sources and the findings related to curricular choices for Nursing education  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 127 Serial 127  
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Author Stolz-Schwarz, P. openurl 
  Title Barriers to and facilitators of research use in clinical practice for a sample of New Zealand registered nurses Type
  Year 2001 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords Nursing; Evidence-based medicine  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 1271 Serial 1256  
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Author Rowe, W. openurl 
  Title An ethnography of the nursing handover Type
  Year 2001 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords Administration; Nursing; Organisational culture  
  Abstract  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 1272 Serial 1257  
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Author Perry, J.(see also C.) openurl 
  Title Theory and practice in the induction of five graduate nurses: a reflexive critique Type
  Year 1985 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract This study investigates the induction of comprehensive Nurses into a professional culture during their polytechnic education and the first year of Hospital practise. A critical theory framework combined with case study method is used to demonstrate the ways in which social forces constrain individual and professional action. It is argued that a more socially critical approach to the design of Nursing curricula might begin to transform some of the social structures which presently inhibit and constrain the professional choices and actions of student and graduate Nurse  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 134 Serial 134  
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Author McKillop, A.M. openurl 
  Title Native health nursing in New Zealand 1911-1930: A new work and a new profession for women Type
  Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library, Northland Polytechnic L  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract The focus of this thesis is the practice of the nurses employed in the Native Health Nursing Scheme in New Zealand from 1911 to 1930. These nurses were a vanguard movement for change in community nursing services as they established a new role and developed innovative ways of practicing nursing while claiming greater autonomy and accountability for nurses who worked in community settings. Consequently they contributed to an increase in status for nurses in New Zealand.The Native Health Nursing Scheme was established by the Health Department to replace the Maori Health Nursing Scheme, an initiative by Maori leaders for Maori nurses to provide nursing care for their own people. The original scheme had foundered amid under-resourcing, a lack of support from hospital boards and administrative chaos. Government policy for Maori health was openly assimilationist and the mainly non-Maori Native Health nurses carried out this policy, yet paradoxically adapting their practice in order to be culturally acceptable to Maori.Their work with the Maori people placed the Native Health nurses in a unique position to claim professional territory in a new area of practice. As they took up the opportunities for an expanded nursing role, they practiced in a manner which would develop the scope and status of nursing. The geographical isolation of their practice setting provided the nurses with the challenge of practicing in an environment of minimal administrative and professional support, while also offering them the opportunity for independence and relative autonomy. Obedience, duty and virtue, qualities highly valued in women of the day, were expected especially in nurses. These expectations were in direct contrast to the qualities necessary to perform the duties of the Native Health nurse. The conditions under which these nurses worked and lived, the decisions they were required to make, and the partnerships they needed to establish to be effective in the communities in which they worked, required courage, strength, organizational ability and commitment  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 14 Serial 14  
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Author Fleming, V.E.M. openurl 
  Title Towards nursing advocacy: a socio-political process Type
  Year 1991 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library, Palmerston North  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract This thesis provides a reflexive critique of the power structures which constrain nursing actions in the practice setting, an abortion clinic, of the registered nurses who participated in this study. The development of abortion services, like other health services for women, has been based on a medical ideology of health which has created many ethical dilemmas for nurses. One of the most complex of these is the extent to which nurses should fulfil the role of client advocate. While the literature on nursing advocacy has been prolific, published research in this area is scant.The theoretical assumptions of critical social science, provide the basis for the methodological approach of action research adapted in this study. In depth, unstructured interviews involving exchange of dialogue amongst the participants with the researcher focused on the participants' experiences of their own nursing practice, with a view to uncoveing and removing restrasints, which had prevented them fulfililng an advocacy role. Diaries were also kept and used as supplementary research tools.The analysis of the data demonstrates the ways in which nurses interpret their own practice world as a system independent of their own actions. It shows how the shared understandings of the participants were 'ideologically frozen' and power relations inherent in the health care system are deep rooted and subtle, coming to be treated as natural by the nurses, and so denying them their own ability to make changes.It is suggested that opportunities for nurses coming together and engaging in such critically reflexive dialogue may provide a basis for future emancipation from traditional power structures. In this way effective and satisfying nursing practice dependent on emancipatory knowledge and a reinterpretation of power structures may result in an advocacy role for nurses  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 140 Serial 140  
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Author Wenmoth, J.D.A. openurl 
  Title A phenomenological study examining the experience of nausea, vomiting and retching associated with pregnancy Type
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract This paper outlines a phenomenological study carried out to explore the experience of nausea, vomiting and retching associated with pregnancy. These phenomena lack Nursing research and are debilitating symptoms which effect the quality of life for 50-75% of all pregnant women. Madjar ( 1991) indicates that the communication of such experiences can deepen our understanding of human life and coping. It is importance for Nurses to develop an understanding of lived experiences so that they can make more effective interventions. This study explores the essential humanness of life experiences as they are for those who live them. It involved collecting data from those experiencing the phenomena and analysing it. It focuses on the study of phenomena not as separate entities in themselves but as they are perceived as they are experienced. A 'purposeful sample' was required for this study. The aim was to include women who had direct knowledge of the phenomena of nausea, vomiting and retching associated with pregnancy. The study involved in depth interviewing of six women, the interviews were taped and independently transcribed, the transcripts were analysed to determine the meaning of the experience and to identify common themes. The experiences of the women are discussed in relation to what van Manen (1990) describes as four main life world existentials; the lived body, the lived other, lived space and lived time  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 15 Serial 15  
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