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Author Boddy, J.M. openurl 
  Title An ethnography of caring and control in an acute psychiatric unit Type
  Year 1992 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 231 Serial 231  
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Author Clare, D.J.(see also P.) openurl 
  Title Teaching and learning in nursing education: a critical approach Type
  Year 1991 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 232 Serial 232  
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Author Giddings, D.L.S. openurl 
  Title In/visibility in nursing: stories from the margins (United States, New Zealand, Diversity) Type
  Year 1997 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal University of Colorado University Library  
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  Abstract Using the life history approach this study investigates the consequences of difference within the context of nursing. Life story interviews were conducted with 26 women nurses of varying racial, cultural and sexual identity backgrounds in the USA and New Zealand.The questions framing the interviews focused on the women's experience of difference and fairness in their lives and specifically within nursing.The creation of life story 'snippets' in the first level of analysis reflected the unique aspects of each woman's story and became the first step in the process of creating a thematic analysis or meta-story. The meta-story that emerged from the juxtaposition of the women's stories was “not fitting in to nursing”.The findings of this study suggest that in spite of the change in location of nursing education and its recent attention to the implications of client diversity, the continued imposition of traditional definitions of 'the nurse' by nursing institutions, renders difference amongst nurses invisible. This limits the ability of nurses to be authentic in their practice and also limits the extent to which they can implement the new policies recognizing difference amongst their client populations  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 236 Serial 236  
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Author Adams, S. openurl 
  Title Nursing people with dual diagnosis in the community setting Type
  Year 1997 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 238 Serial 238  
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Author Boddy, J.M. openurl 
  Title Career development and job satisfaction of registered nurses practising in community settings Type
  Year 1976 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 242 Serial 242  
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Author Chick, D.N.P.; Pybus, M.W. openurl 
  Title Massey nursing studies' student follow-up survey Type
  Year 1982 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 244 Serial 244  
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Author Christensen, D.J.C. openurl 
  Title The nursed passage: a theoretical framework for the nurse-patient partnership Type
  Year 1988 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Abstract This study focussed on nursing practice in action. The research goal was to identify nursing-relevant dimensions within a person's experience of being a hospital patient undergoing elective surgery. In order to discover and conceptualize the underlying processes which are present as patients are nursed through this experience, an open question was posed – What is happening here? A qualitative research method ws the most appropriate means of discovering an answer to this question.The particular method chosen was the grounded theory approach developed by Glaser and Strauss. Data were collected in five surgical wards of a large city hospital over a period of five months. The research participants were twenty-one patients and the nurses involved in their care. Primary sources of data were interviews and the nursing records. These were augmented by field notes and accounts of observed incidents relating to the care of each patient.Using the inductive strategies of the grounded theory method, numerous descriptive concepts were generated during the data analysis. These were ordered within an integrating social process derived from anthropology. By this means a founded theory in the form of a theoretical framework – the Nursed Passage – was developed. Within this passage the patient is the passage and nursing is translated into action through the agency of the nurse.The Nursed Passage is a patterned partnership with three key elements. Firstly, the temporal element, characterised by ongoing movement and constant change, is conveyed in the sequence of phases or stages. Secondly the participative element is portrayed as a patterned relationship in which both nurses and patient are actively involved in progressing the patient through the passage. Finally, the contextual element recognises complex factors within the nursing environment which have an impact on the shape of the relationship between patient and nurse.This theoretical framework, generated from the reality of nursing as it occurs in one setting, assigns a specific shape to the encounter between nurses and patient. It identifies the contribution nursing alone can make to optimise each patient's hospital experience. In this way it both complements and facilitates the work of medical and other colleagues with whom nurses work. Thus it serves to revalue nursing in terms that can maximally utilise the registered nurse's knowledge and skill for the benefit of all concerned. Consequently, it has the potential value for nursing practice, education and research  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 245 Serial 245  
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Author Doole, P.L. openurl 
  Title Getting on with life: the lived experience of four adults with cystic fibrosis Type
  Year 1996 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 247 Serial 247  
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Author De Vore, C.A. openurl 
  Title Independent midwifery practice: a critical social approach Type
  Year 1995 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 250 Serial 250  
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Author Kinross, D.N.J.; Nevatt, E.A.; Boddy, J.M.; North, N. openurl 
  Title A nurse in an urban community: a process study Type
  Year 1987 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 251 Serial 251  
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Author Hedwig, J.A. openurl 
  Title Midwives: preparation and practice Type
  Year 1990 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 267 Serial 267  
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Author Kinross, D.N.J. openurl 
  Title A study of individual and organisational variables in relation to charge nurse behaviour Type
  Year 1981 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 272 Serial 272  
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Author Madjar, D.I. openurl 
  Title Pain as embodied experience: a phenomenological study of clinically inflicted pain in adult patients Type
  Year 1991 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Abstract This phenomenological study describes the lived experience of pain inflicted in the context of medically prescribed treatment, explores the meanings of such pain for patients who endured it and for nurses whose actions contributed to its generation, and presents a thematic description of the phenomenon of clinically inflicted pain. The study is informed by phenomenology, both in terms of its premises and orientation, and its research design and method.The participants in the study were 14 adult patients, admitted to hospital following burn injuries, or receiving intravenous chemotherapy upon diagnosis of cancer, and 20 nurses involved in their care. Data collection took place over a period of five months and included participant observation and compilation of field notes, and a total of 89 tape-recorded interviews (48 with patients and 41 with nurses). Through the process of hermeneutic interpretation a number of themes were identified and used to describe the phenomenon of clinically inflicted pain and the structure or the lived experience of the patients and the nurses concerned.The phenomenon of clinically inflicted pain is described in terms of four isolated themes: (1) the hurt and painfulness of inflicted pain; (2) handing one's body over to others; (3) the expectation and experience of being wounded, and (4) restraining the body and the voice. These themes point to the embodied nature of pain experience and the extent to which the person is involved not only in the enduring of pain but also in its generation. The broader lifeworld of clinically inflicted pain, often as punishment and almost always a something avoidable, and in turn being constituted by their experiences in terms of losing and seeking to regain a sense of embodied self and of personal situation, and by changed experiences of lived space and lived time.Nurses who themselves helped to generate pain, frequently overlooked the patient's lived experience and thus the essential nature of inflicted pain as painful, wounding, and demanding cooperation and composure from the patient. Instead, the pain frequently become invisible to nurses involved in its infliction, or when it could not be overlooked or ignored, it was perceived inevitable , non-harmful and even as beneficial to patients' recovery. The strategic responses that nurses adopted to pain infliction included detachment from the perceived impact and consequences of their own actions and objectification of the person in pain as a body-object on whom certain tasks had to be performed. An alternative to the strategy of detachment and objectification was involvement in a therapeutic partnership between the nurse and the patient, where shared control over pain infliction and relief helped to sustain trust in the relationship and preserve personal integrity of the patient and the nurse.The study points to dangers for both patients and nurses when clinically pain is ignored, overlooked or treated with detachment. It also points a way toward nursing practice, that is guided by thoughtfulness and sensitivity to patients' lived experience, and awareness of freedom and responsibility inherent in nursing actions, including those involved in inflicting and relieving pain. The study raises questions about nurses' knowledge, attitudes, and actions in relation to clinically inflicted pain, and highlights the need for nursing education and practice to consider the contribution of a phenomenological perspective to the understanding of human experience of pain, and the nursing role in its generation, prevention and relief  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 279 Serial 279  
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Author Douche, J.R. openurl 
  Title Urban women's choice of birthplace and locus of control Type
  Year 1997 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington  
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  Abstract Discourse about women assuming greater control over their childbirth experience has received much attention in contemporary childbirth and womens' studies publications. Research in the domain of childbirth has shown that a sense of control over one's birth experience is related to childbirth satisfaction. More specifically, studies have used Locus of Control measures and have found a significant relationship exists between expectations for control and choice of birth place. Choice of birth place features in some articles as a factor that determines the degree to which control can be exercised. Home, as a place of birth, is considered a setting in which a woman can have optimum control over her experience. Many women are discouraged from taking up this option, based on fears about safety. Reflection on why women continue to pursue a home birth against the wishes of their care giver rekindled and interest in Locus of Control. This study was undertaken to explore the relationship between urban women's choice of birth place setting and their scores on two different measures of Locus of Control (LOC). The aims of the study were: to test whether LOC scores predict choice of birth place for women who chose hospital, home or a birthing centre as their place of birth; to test which of the two LOC scales (Levenson's generalised measure or Wallston et al's more specific scale) is the most useful in predicting the influence of LOC and choice of birth place and to explore the relationship between choice of birth place LOC, demographic and contextual factors surrounding pregnancy. The method used in the study was a descriptive correlational design. One hundred and ninety four pregnant urban women who accessed a range of maternity care providers in the greater Auckland , Wellington , Christchurch and Dunedin cities responded to a “Birth Choice Survey” between April and June 1996. Tests of significance found significant differences for powerful others and chance Locus of Control among the three groups of women who chose hospital, home or a birthing center as a place of birth. Differences were significant at p = 0.05. No significant differences were ffound in the scores for internal Locus of Control for women in the three groups. Limitations in the sample sixe prevented linear discrimination being successful in predicting the influence and choice of LOC variables and choice of birth place for both scales. A classification tree was employed to identify key variables which might affect choice of birth place and indicated that women who were extremely happy with their birth place choice were more likely to be those who chose home birth. Locus of Control measures are interesting, and if used specifically, may be helpful in relation to understanding a women's choice of birth place. However general assessment of the contextual factors appears just as relevant. Implications of this study are the while women may differ in how they perceive their outcomes are determined, an overwhelming majority of women who participated in this study value their ability to make choices about their birth location. Identifying consumer perceptions about control and the contextual factors that influence women's choice of their birth place has the potential to clarify women's preferences for responsibility in their birth experience. Limitations of the study were addressed and included suggestions to improve response rates and thus generalizability of findings. Implications for further research were also considered  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 287 Serial 287  
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Author Whitehead, S. openurl 
  Title Nursing care for the elderly: a survey of training needs Type
  Year 1980 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal MacMillan Brown Library – University of Canterbury  
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  Abstract A report prepared in association with the Nursing Subcommittee of the North Canterbury Geriatrics Advisory Committee  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 290 Serial 290  
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