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Chick, D. N. P. (2003). Rural district nurses as rehabilitationists. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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O'Sullivan, C. (2002). Cardiopulmonary resuscitation: Attitudes and knowledge of medical and nursing staff. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Woodbridge, M. (2002). From child savers to child activists: A participatory action research project with community child health nurses. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Raynel, S. (2002). Nurse-led clinics on ophthalmic practice: A vision for the future. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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DeSouza, R. (2002). Walking upright here: Countering prevailing discourses through reflexivity and methodological pluralism. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Stolz-Schwarz, P. (2001). Barriers to and facilitators of research use in clinical practice for a sample of New Zealand registered nurses. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Rowe, W. (2001). An ethnography of the nursing handover. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Walsh, C., Boyd, L., Baker, P., Gavriel, A., McClusky, N., Puckey, T. C., et al. (2001). It was time for me to leave: A participatory action research study into discharge planning from an acute mental health setting. Wellington: Victoria University of Wellington.
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Gilmour, J. A. (2001). On the margins: Nurses and the intermittent care of people with dementia: A discourse analysis. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Turner, C. L. E. A process evaluation of a shared leadership model in an intensive care unit. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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McArthur, J. Discursive understanding of knowledge within advanced nursing practice roles: A co-operative inquiry in an acute health care organisation. Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Davidson, L. (2000). Family-centred care perceptions and practice: A pilot study.
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McDonald, S. (2000). A study to investigate the role of the registered nurse in an acute mental health inpatient setting in New Zealand: Perceptions versus reality. [Manukau City]: Manukau Institute of Technology.
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Phillips, S. (1999). Exploration of the socio-cultural conditions and challenges which may impede nursing development in the twenty-first century and proactive strategies to counter these challenges.
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Neehoff, S. M. (1999). Pedagogical possibilities for nursing. Ph.D. thesis, , .
Abstract: This thesis is about what the author terms the 'invisible bodies of nursing'. The physical body of the nurse, the body of practice, and the body of knowledge. The physical body of the nurse is absent in most nursing literature, it is sometimes inferred but seldom discussed. The contention is that the physical body of the nurse is invisible because it is tacit. Much nursing practice is invisible because it is perceived by many nurses to be inarticulable and is carried out within a private discourse of nursing, silently and secretly. Nursing knowledge is invisible because it is not seen as being valid or authoritative or sanctioned as a legitimate discourse by the dominant discourse. These issues are approach through an evolving 'specular' lens. Luce Irigaray's philosophy of the feminine and her deconstructing and reconstructing of psychoanalytic structures for women inform this work. Michel Foucault's genealogical approach to analysing discourses is utilized, along with Maurice Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology. Nursing's struggle for recognition is ongoing. The author discusses strategies that nurses could use to make themselves more 'visible' in healthcare structures. The exploration of the embodied self of the nurse and through this the embodied knowledge of nursing is nascent.
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