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Author Skinner, J. openurl 
  Title The jewel in the crown: a case study of the New Zealand College of Midwives Standards review process in Wellington Type
  Year (down) 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 369 Serial 369  
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Author Townley, C.J. openurl 
  Title Dynamics: a new approach to organisational forms Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 130 Serial 130  
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Author Booth, W. openurl 
  Title Towards partnerships in praxis Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library, Waiarik  
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  Abstract This action research project explored the factors that helped or hindered student nurse clinical learning from the perspective of nurse educators, practitioners and students. Participant analysis of their own discussions identified both common and disparate views regarding the student's learning experience. Researcher analysis identified five practical and three organizational issues that influenced the development of more effective partnerships between these three stakeholder groups that would facilitate student clinical learning. The practical issues were how to deal with the 'problem' people in the learning process, how to clarify and develop the various roles in the learning context, how to generate more effective communication, how to respond more effectively to the impact of the changing environment, and how to maximize 'moments of learning'. The organizational issues were identified as the schisms between the disparate personal and organizational cultures that direct the way educators, practitioners and students, perceive, think, feel and act  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 161  
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Author Stevenson, A.F. openurl 
  Title Realities and rhetoric: general hospital nursing in New Zealand 1945 to 1960 Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library, Welling  
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  Abstract Up until the 1980s most of the historical writing about nursing and nurses in this country has been told from the points of view of past nursing leaders. The realities of day-to-day nursing in New Zealand general hospitals were relatively unknown.This thesis examines the experience of general hospital nursing between 1945 and 1960. The recollections of thirty-four nurses who nursed during this period have provided the key sources from which the major themes of this study have emerged. These themes, of dirty work, authoritarian control and discipline, and learning nursing are discussed within the context of an expanding hospital system and a shortage of nurses.The study demonstrates the vast differences between the recollections of nurses of the experience of nursing and the rather high-flown rhetoric of the nursing leadership.Changes to the amount of cleaning, the ;level of discipline and control, and ways in which learning nursing was organised were small and gradual and occurred in the late 1950s.Overall, though, nursing in general hospitals by 1960 ws almost unchanged from the 1930s.An ethos of selfless service, opposition to unionism, and Christian altruism was till dominant amongst the nursing leadership. Nurses in training still worked a six day week, were expected to stay on duty until the work was done, and were supervised closely in, on and off duty time  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 162 Serial 162  
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Author Parmee, R.-A. openurl 
  Title Living and working with asthma: a dynamic interplay Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library, Otago P  
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  Abstract This action research study explores the experiences of 'patient education' from the perspective of a group comprising two nurses, two people with asthma, and the researcher who is a nurse who has asthma. The method used is emancipatory action research (Grundy, 1990) with critical social theory and feminism as theoretical underpinnings.The focus moves from patient education to a broader view of living and working with asthma. The story of the group is presented in the format of a play. A play within the play tells of living and working with asthma.An action research spiral is formed which reflects the way the group moves through the three modes of action research described by Grundy (1990). The acts of the play represent each of the stages of the action research process. The emphasis moves from power and control through to practice wisdom.The main issues explored are: the nature of patient education by nurses; the implications this has for relationships with patients and nursing education; power and control in the secondary setting; the lived experience of chronic illness and the practice wisdom of nurses and people with asthma. The work concludes with recommendations for change in each of these areas based on the work of the group  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 183 Serial 183  
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Author Fitzpatrick, A. openurl 
  Title Nurse meeting another: cultural safety in nursing practice Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library, Waiarik  
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  Abstract This research project, a descriptive study using narratives, explored the application of cultural safety theory and philosophy to clinical nursing practice. This application was illustrated through the stories of four experienced Pakeha,Tauiwi registered nurses in Aotearoa/New Zealand, who described their realities of applying cultural safety to daily clinical practice. The incentive for this study had been identified in light of the current political climate, pragmatic realities and in keeping with the current state of knowledge.Cultural safety was first identified by Maori nursing students and subsequently described and articulated by Maori nurses, as being a potential solution to improving Maori health statistics in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Many Maori and Pakeha/Tauiwi in this country accept that the Treaty of Waitangi, a covenant signed between Maori and the Crown in 1840, is the incentive for giving cultural safety status and credibility. While the Nursing Council of New Zealand has supported this concept and made it a requirement for all nursing education, there is little literature written concerning its application to practice from a Pakeha/Tauiwi perspective.The perceptions and insights of these nurses were heard when they were invited to describe how they saw cultural safety as part of their daily clinical practice and recount their struggles, realities, practice and experience. The literature review supported the use of narratives as an appropriate method for this study. The philosophy and assumptions of narrative appear to match the oral tradition of nursing and thus it was considered possible to contemplate the fit of narrative to nursing research.The stories of these nurses, gave examples of best nursing practice in which cultural safety was integral to practice, and provided exemplars of possible beginnings and possible endings. The depiction of cultural safety in practice surfaced as the weaving of four themes which were consistent in all the stories – themes of reflection, reverencing, the environment, and hidden blessings and healing. The research evidence suggested that cultural safety was visible in practice in many diverse ways; it emphasised the complexity of the concept; accented its evolving status; and identified a relative consistency in defining cultural safety despite the varied contexts of practice.Although this study was limited by the small sample, the findings indicated that there were potential implications for nursing education, research, nurses and nursing practice as well as for other health care providers working in the current health care system. They suggested that actions from nurse educators, nurse managers, health care managers and clinical nurses themselves, would be needed to ensure that cultural safety continued to be part of nursing practice and contribute to the improvement of all health statistics in this country as well as to encourage an increased development in the focus on Maori health issues.Further nursing research suggested by the findings include studies to appraise cultural safety from a patient's perspective, and consideration given to the evaluation and assessment of nurses and their culturally safe practice. In addition, exploration and research could ascertain the benefits and rewards of culturally safe practice and identify ongoing educational needs as well as examining the views of other members of the multi-discipline team  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 204 Serial 204  
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Author McLauchlan, M.F. openurl 
  Title Women's place: an exploration of current discourses of childbirth Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 345 Serial 345  
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Author Fox, R.A. openurl 
  Title The antenatal education needs of Maori women in the Tainui region Type
  Year (down) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 347 Serial 347  
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Author Beale, T.M. openurl 
  Title Psychiatric nurses: the influence of their personal life experiences on therapeutic readiness Type
  Year (down) 1995 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Abstract This research investigates the impact of fifteen psychiatric nurses' personal experiences on their therapeutic relationships with clines. A hermeneutic phenomenological methodology informed by Heidegger is employed to gain an understanding of the human experience of these nurses in the context of the therapeutic relationship.The research illuminates the significant impact of these nurses' experiences on their relationships. Some experiences are found to enhance therapeutic readiness while the other personal experiences impede it, some impeding it to a degree that nurses are unable to work therapeutically with certain clients. The stories that describe the personal experiences that lead towards therapeutic readiness care special, as are the accounts of the professionalism and care that these nurses bring to their clients  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 256  
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Author Street, A.; Walsh, C. openurl 
  Title Not just a rubber stamp! mental health nurses as Duly Authorised Officers Type
  Year (down) 1995 Publication Nursing Praxis in New Zealand Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
  Volume 10 Issue 3 Pages 16-23  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 266 Serial 266  
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Author Blanchard, D.L. openurl 
  Title Nursing practice in the changing health care environment “just keep going until you see it right” Type
  Year (down) 1995 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 410 Serial 410  
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Author Walsh, C. openurl 
  Title Psychiatric nursing: a feminist perspective on nursing practice Type
  Year (down) 1995 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 411 Serial 411  
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Author Boyle, S.D. openurl 
  Title Nursing education in New Zealand: a case study of experiential learning Type
  Year (down) 1994 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library & Welli  
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  Abstract This thesis presents a study of a nursing 'practicum' from the perspectives of nursing students and staff 'buddies'. A grounded theory approach was used to interview six nursing students during their transition placement, the final practicum of their Diploma in Nursing programme. Five staff nurse buddies selected by the students were also interviewed. An informal, conversational interview was used and data was analysed from an experiential learning perspective.This study differs from others because it focuses on the clinical experience component of nursing education, 'practicum', and includess practitioners viewpoints. At present there is a re-evaluing of experience within nursing education with a new emphasis on practice-based learning. Experience-based learning is becoming increasingly acceptable within academia as a 'seamless' education system evolves.I identified three learning stages which students' experience during practicum – initiation, exploration and consolidation. The key stage for learning through experience was exploration. Learning during this stage was predominantly buddy-directed which contradicted the self-directed curriculum design. Students and staff nurses however agreed that communication between them during this stage enabled the development of 'competence'.The learning /teaching approach used by the students and staff nurses made it difficult for students to translate their 'all-round' competencies during practicum. It is argued that it is the useof such competencies during practicum which enable nursing students to become autonomous in the attitudinal and epistemological sense. The predominantly 'technical training' approach adopted was understood by students and staff nurses to be reinforced by 'silence' from tutors.Restructuring gives the opportunity for nursing to develop an ';investigative', enquiry-based approach in practice. There will increasingly be an emphasis on practice-based research as a result of the implementation of degree and post-graduate programmes in nursing. This study highlights some aspects of nursing education and it's relationship with practice which can assist the development of such an approach  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 339 Serial 339  
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Author Opie, A.; Allen, N.R.; Fulcher, L.; Hawke, G.R. openurl 
  Title There's nobody there: community care of confused older people Type
  Year (down) 1992 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Abstract There's Nobody There, is a qualitative study of the practise of caring for confused elderly people. It examines the implications of community care for social policy. It presents an account of the everyday lives of twenty eight family members who care for people with Alzheimer's disease or a related dementia. It shows that community care like other forms of care, carries a cost that the burden is largely borne by the carers themselves, rather than by the State  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 135 Serial 135  
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Author Alessi, L. openurl 
  Title The role of quality assurance strategies in the evaluation of New Zealand nursing services Type
  Year (down) 1990 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 221 Serial 221  
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