|   | 
Details
   web
Records
Author Lakeman, R.M.
Title Psychiatric – mental health nurses on the internet Type Journal Article
Year 1998 Publication Computers in Nursing Abbreviated Journal
Volume 16 Issue 2 Pages 87-89
Keywords
Abstract This research began in 1995 with an e-mail survey of psychiatric / mental health (PMH) nurses who belonged to an e-mail discussion group. The original aims were to describe how PMH used and learned to use the internet, the benefits to their work, and how they saw the internet affecting their work in future. Data were analysed using content analysis techniques and findings published in a number of forums. In 1999 another survey using the same e-mail list was undertaken to explore how things had changed in terms of internet use and peoples visions of how the internet is likely to impact on nursing in the future. These data are the subject of continuing analysis
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 191 Serial (down) 191
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author McRae, B.H.T.K.
Title Peer review: organisational learning for nurses Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 190 Serial (down) 190
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author Mote, J.A.
Title Quilting conversations: a reflective account of women growing up on the West Coast and going nursing in the 1930's and 1940's Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library, Grey Ba
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract This is an oral herstory of two West Coast Women in conversation with a contemporary, and all are nurses. The conversations are presented as whole patterns which are quilted together to form a story within a story. I have woven in my story, with the commonality of being a nurse and having lived on the West Coast for five years.Until the 1960s, women on the West Coast had had very little written about their lives and the nursing records on the Coast were very limited, even in the 1990s. The women in this study conveyed the childhood memories and the nursing days, as they reflected on a training that was strictly disciplined, hierarchical in a hospital based apprentice system.The opportunity to do this project has enabled me to explore some of the aspects of the lives of women on the West Coast, particularly through the eyes of two wonderful women. Their contribution has been particularly valuable, in that they were able to convey how it was for them as children, and also the experiences of their mother and other women. Both were nurses who trained at Grey River Hospital between 1933 and 1946, and they were able to recall their nursing days on the Coast and make a contribution to West Coast history.It has enabled me to rediscover my own nursing story and to gain insight into the conversations that will inspire my nursing, and enable me to hand on stories to other nurses. This thesis will also be of interest to nurses of the future, reflecting on the past and experiencing how it was then
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 172 Serial (down) 172
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author Watson, P.B.
Title An understanding of family in the context of families facing the diagnosis of childhood cancer Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library, Manawatu Polytechnic Li
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract The diagnosis of childhood cancer has a profound impact on the family. How nurses understand family affects their practice with families facing the diagnosis of childhood cancerShaped by Heideggerian phenomenology, van Manens methodology for hermeneutic phenomenology was used to construct an understanding of family from the experiences of family members facing the diagnosis of childhood cancer. Seven family members from two families, one mother, two fathers, two siblings, and two grandparents were interviewed about their experience of facing the diagnosis of childhood cancer.From the participants experience the meaning of family was interpreted as being-with-others, for-the-sake-of-others, who one might not distinguish from oneself. This understanding of family is recognisable, yet different from traditional definitions of family and may help nurses and family members to act more thoughtfully and tactfully with each other
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 153 Serial (down) 153
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author Williams, H.; Cuthbertson, S.; Newby, L.; Streat, S.J.
Title A follow-up service improves bereavement care in an intensive care unit Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Auckland Hospital Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 149 Serial (down) 149
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author French, P.
Title A study of the regulation of nursing in New Zealand 1901 – 1997 Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 63 Serial (down) 63
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author McKillop, A.M.
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
Keywords
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 NRSNZNO @ research @ 14 Serial (down) 14
Permanent link to this record
 

 
Author Wells, C.C.
Title Our dreams Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract There has been a great deal written about the efforts of the nursing profession to achieve full professional status but little about individual nurses' aspirations in seeking this goal. A group of 6 co-researchers, myself included, looked at this perceived gap in nurses' dreams for the profession.The philosophical underpinnings of the research were feminist and reflected postmodern feminist and some radical feminist concepts. This philosophical positions guided our research to uncover the knowledge of how we actively construct ourselves into dominant social values. This means we were searching for how our dreams were constructed and how we reflected the values of society in the way we produced our dreams. Peace and Power (Chinn & Wheeler, 1989) was used to guide the group interaction and Memory-Work (Hague, 1987) for data collecting and analysis. The co-researchers wrote individual stories about their dreams for the nursing profession. Collective analysis of the stories occurred in order to uncover the was in which the dreams were constructed. From this collective analysis the individual co-researchers redrafted their stories. Each redraft contained new insights, motives and actions of ourselves and others, forgotten experiences and inconsistencies, as a means of identifying and questioning dominant ideologies. The aim was to move towards empowerment through making the unconscious conscious.Four common dreams emerged from analysis of the stories: the first was that individual nurses want full professional status and autonomy; the second asked the nurses to care and support each other; a high standard of patient and nursing-focussed care was the third dream; and the fourth was for continuing education and knowledge to be shared between nurses. Although the dreams were common across the group it was found that the dreams varied in their construction. The dreams for each group member reflected multiple realities that emerged from different contexts, influenced by historical and socially dominant cultural values.Through studying and theorising our dreams for the nursing profession, we increased our understanding of how they were shaped so that we were able to initiate change and make our dreams become a reality. This has implications for the nursing profession. We live our lives collectively, as nurses and women, as others influence our being and reality. Although others influence us, it is each individual nurse who contributes to actively construct her/himself in to the dominant cultural values held by society and therefore up to each individual to initiate change. If nurses are able to make dreams a reality then positive changes will occur within the profession; I.e. decreased staff turnover, increased morale and increased quality in patient care
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 2 Serial (down) 2
Permanent link to this record