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Author Francis, H. openurl 
  Title Exploring continuity of wound care: a critical approach Type
  Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Deakin University Library, Eastern Institute of Te  
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  Abstract This study aimed to explore the range of issues that surround the continuity of wound care between hospital and community care settings in a provincial area of New Zealand, from the perspective of the health care professionals providing the wound care. Previous research into continuity of care concentrated predominantly upon purely nursing issues. This means that both the profound implications of the interprofessional relationships of the various health care professionals involved in wound care, and the far-reaching effects of the socio-economic context within which wound care was given were often not considered. A critical ethnographic approach was employed to explore continuity of care in this community. Health professionals were interviewed twice. A first interview discussed some of the unacknowledged power relations and the contextual issues that effect continuity of wound care, as well as offering the opportunity for the participants to reflect on the issues that emerged. Following preliminary analysis of the data from the first interview, a summary of findings was given to each of the participants which served as a focus for the second interview. Following these, the data were analysed, and the main themes that influenced the continuity of wound care for the participants were identified. Analysis of the data revealed all the participants practicing under considerable socio-political constraints which interfered with their ability to provide high quality wound care for their patients: these constraints dictated both who gave the wound care and how they were able to do it. The data also revealed the various relationships between the different professionals as another major area of influence upon continuity of wound care. Medical dominance was identified as having a profound impact upon nurses ability to optimise continuity of wound care. The study concluded there are a number of areas that need to be addressed in order to optimise continuity of wound care, at both local and governmental level. The development of a nurse-led wound clinic is one initiative that would go a long way to address these issues  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 325 Serial 325  
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Author Davies, B. openurl 
  Title Midwifery competencies: students' stories Type
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 326 Serial 326  
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Author Wilson, A.M. openurl 
  Title Practice-based reflection: learning grounded in practice Type
  Year 1996 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 327 Serial 327  
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Author Ellison-Loschmann, L. openurl 
  Title Maori women's experiences of breast-feeding Type
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 328 Serial 328  
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Author Wanasinghe, V. openurl 
  Title Students' and tutors' perspectives on what contributes to the academic success of mature aged students in a pre-registration nursing program Type
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 329 Serial 329  
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Author Kapoor, S.D. openurl 
  Title Application of the process in the care of an alcohol dependent client Type
  Year 1978 Publication Abbreviated Journal Author  
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  Abstract Feasibility for Nursing studies component of B.A. degree, Wellington Victoria University, Wellington 1978. With health workers and clients in 4 different health districts, an Industry, Health Centre, Intermediate School and University Health and Counselling  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 33 Serial 33  
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Author Wood, P.J. openurl 
  Title Constructing colonial dirt: a cultural history of dirt in the nineteenth century colonial settlement of Dunedin, New Zealand Type
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal University of Otago Library  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 331 Serial 331  
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Author Wade, M.R. openurl 
  Title Community based nurse case management: the experience of consumers Type
  Year 1996 Publication Nursing Praxis in New Zealand Abbreviated Journal Flinders University of South Australia  
  Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 4-10  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 332 Serial 332  
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Author Wheeler, K. openurl 
  Title Metabolism of riboflavin by the human term placenta Type
  Year 1995 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 333 Serial 333  
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Author King, B.E.; Fletcher, M.P. openurl 
  Title The nursing workforce in New Zealand 1980 Type
  Year 1981 Publication Abbreviated Journal Department of Health, Wellington  
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  Abstract Factual information of the size and composition of the Nursing workforce in New Zealand as well as on the distribution of Nurses, their qualifications and their employment. Two basic factors affecting the workforce, external migration and long term absences, are also discussed. This is the first issue of a planned series, to be updated annually by the division of Nursing, Department of Health  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 334 Serial 334  
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Author White, G.E. openurl 
  Title Toward autonomy: an examination of midwifery education in New Zealand 1990 Type
  Year 1990 Publication Abbreviated Journal University of Auckland Library  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 335 Serial 335  
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Author Hendry, C. openurl 
  Title Comparison between consumers and providers perceptions of quality maternity hospital care Type
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Christchurch Medical School Library , Christchurc  
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  Abstract Maternity services in New Zealand have undergone some fundamental and unique changes over the last few years. The promotion of competition among providers for clients have had repercussions on the way that maternity hospitals offers services to women. In adapting to this change, it is important that 'the baby is not thrown out with the bathwater'. Unfortunately the most commonly used indicators, and the standard “Patient Satisfaction Survey”, neither of which contain many valuable clues for maternity facility providers to determine the quality of their service from the consumer's perspective. The need was identified for the development of quality indicators to evaluate maternity hospital care. Closely related to this was the need to determine of how dependable providers are at determining what consumers would describe as an optimal maternity hospital service  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 336 Serial 336  
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Author Euswas, P.W. openurl 
  Title The actualized caring moment: a grounded theory of caring in nursing practice Type
  Year 1991 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
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  Abstract The purpose of this study was to provide a partial theoretical description of the phenomenon of caring in nursing practice. Three practice settings involving cancer patients were selected: hospital, hospice, and community with thirty patients and thirty-two nurses participating in the study. A research design combining a phenomenological perspective and grounded theory strategies was implemented. Data were collected by interview, participant observation and records. The data were analysed by the method of constant comparative analysis.A number of concepts were developed from the data and the theoretical framework of “The Actualized Caring Moment” was formulated to explain how the actual caring process occurs in nursing practice. This caring moment is the moment at which the nurse and the patient realise their intersubjective connectedness in transforming healing-growing as human beings in a specific-dynamic changing situation. The actualized caring moment is a gestalt configuration of three carting moments. The pre-conditions, The on-going interaction, and The situated context.The Pre-conditions, which consist of the nurse, personally and professionally prepared to care, and the patient, a person with compromised health and wellbeing, are pre-requisites for the occurrence of the caring process. The nurses has the qualities of benevolence, commitment, and clinical competency to be ready to care. The patient is a unique person in a vulnerable state and requires assistance from the nurse to meet personal health needs.The on-going interaction, the actual caring process, is the continuity of the nurse-patient interaction moment by moment which brings together six caring elements: Being there, Being mindfully present, A relationship of trust Participation in meeting needs, Empathetic communication, and Balancing knowledge-energy-time. The Situated Context is the situation and environment where the actual caring process is taking place, and this is comprised of circumstances of the nurse-patient meeting and care-facilitating working conditions.The conceptual framework of “The Actualised Caring Moment” offers nurses an opportunity to understand their practice more fully in providing effective nursing service. Consequently, its implications are valuable for education, research, and the development of knowledge focussed on the discipline of nursing  
  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 337 Serial 337  
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Author Ross, J. openurl 
  Title Rural practice nurse skills project 1996 Type Journal Article
  Year 1999 Publication Journal of Australian Rural Health Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume Issue 7 Pages 7  
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  Call Number (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 338 Serial 338  
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Author Boyle, S.D. openurl 
  Title Nursing education in New Zealand: a case study of experiential learning Type
  Year 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 (up) NRSNZNO @ research @ 339 Serial 339  
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