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Author |
Jones, M. |
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Title |
The complexities of post operative pain management and a study of the effectiveness of continuous intravenous narcotic infusion pumps as a means of pain relief in the first 48 hours post operatively |
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Year |
1985 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
Author, Auckland Hospital, Auckland Institute of |
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Abstract |
The purpose of this paper was to observe the effectiveness of continuous intravenous narcotic infusions as a means of pain relief in the first 48 hours post operatively. 12 patients who had experienced major thoracic or abdominal surgery participated in the study. Pain was assessed at rest and on activity on visual analogues at 5 specific times daily for up to 48 hours post operatively. Data was also collected from a structured interview within the first 48 hours and a retrospective interview when the infusion was discontinued. Results indicated- 1. Very little correlation of changes in pain relief dose to the assessment of pain intensity. 2. Documentation and assessment was not always thoroughly completed. 3. Inadequate treatment of pain post operatively was evident especially on activity. It should be emphasised that pain management could be improved through a focus in interdisciplinary consultation, continuing in service education on pain management and accountability in procedure. |
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Call Number |
NRSNZNO @ research @ 102 |
Serial |
102 |
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Author |
Fielding, S. |
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Title |
Learning to do, learning to be: The transition to competence in critical care nursing |
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Year |
2006 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
Auckland University of Technology Library |
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Keywords |
Intensive care nursing; Preceptorship; Nursing specialties |
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Abstract |
Making the transition to an area of specialist nursing practice is challenging for both the learner and staff who are responsible for education and skill development. This study uses grounded theory methodology to explore the question: “How do nurses learn critical care nursing?” The eight registered nurses who participated in this study were recruited from a range of intensive care settings. The criteria for inclusion in the study included the participant having attained competency within the critical care setting. Data was collected from individual interviews. This study found that nurses focus on two main areas during their orientation and induction into critical care nursing practice. These are learning to do (skill acquisition) and learning to be (professional socialisation). The process of transition involves two stages: that of learning to do the tasks related to critical care nursing practice, and the ongoing development of competence and confidence in practice ability. The relationship of the learner with the critical care team is a vital part of the transition to competency within the specialist area. This study identifies factors that influence the learner during transition and also provides an understanding of the strategies used by the learners to attain competency. These findings are applicable to educators and leaders responsible for the education and ongoing learning of nurses within critical care practice. The use of strategies such as simulated learning and repetition are significant in skill acquisition. However attention must also be paid to issues that influence the professional socialisation process, such as the quality of preceptor input during orientation and the use of ongoing mentoring of the learner. |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
509 |
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Author |
Mearns, G. |
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Title |
Developing autonomous ownership: A grounded theory study of how registered nurses working in aged care are advancing their nursing practice |
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Year |
2005 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
Auckland University of Technology Library |
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Keywords |
Nurse practitioners; Geriatric nursing; Older people; Registered nurses |
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Abstract |
The introduction of nurse practitioner registration into New Zealand in 2001 was heralded as a move that would open up a wealth of opportunities for registered nurses to extend their practice into more independent roles and to provide a client-centred health service. It was also seen as a way to retain experienced registered nurses in the clinical practice area by providing a credible clinical career pathway. If nurse practitioner's are to meet these expectations, then, the author suggests, it is important to understand the processes that encourage or discourage nurses from advancing their practice. One of the early scopes of practice to be introduced was nurse practitioner with an endorsement in aged care scope of practice. Grounded theory was the method used to generate an explanation of how registered nurses working in aged care were preparing for the introduction of nurse practitioner roles. An analysis of early data highlighted codes around registered nurses in aged care extending and advancing their practice rather than preparing specifically for the nurse practitioner role. The research question for this study was: 'How are registered nurses in aged care advancing their nursing practice?' Semi-structured interviews were used to collect data from ten experienced registered nurses working in aged care clinical practice settings ranging from secondary hospital facilities, to community settings and residential care villages. Dimensional analysis of the data eventually generated three major conceptual categories: 'ownership of nursing', 'extending practice', and 'moving out of a comfort zone'. Of these, 'ownership of nursing' was identified as the core construct that linked the other categories together. The substantive theory that explains how registered nurses in aged care advance their clinical practice is 'developing autonomous ownership'. Nurses who develop autonomous ownership of nursing are more likely than other nurses to move out of a current comfort zone and advance their practice into more independent roles that suit their autonomous ownership of nursing. This study identified important contextual factors and conditions that support the development of an autonomous ownership of nursing and that subsequently facilitate advancing nursing practice. These include creating supportive environments, organisational commitment to advanced nursing practice roles, visible nursing leadership, congruence between organisational and nursing philosophies, interdisciplinary collaboration and participating in postgraduate education. The author suggests that the significance of this study is that it generated a theory about the processes that encourage or discourage nurses from preparing for, and progressing into, advanced nursing practice roles such as nurse practitioner. |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
585 |
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Author |
Hall, J. |
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Title |
Building trust to work with a grounded theory study of paediatric acute care nurses work |
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Year |
2004 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
Auckland University of Technology Library |
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Keywords |
Nurse-family relations; Nurse-patient relations; Children; Paediatric nursing; Intensive care nursing |
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Abstract |
Grounded theory methodology has guided the grounded theory methods used to explore the acute care paediatric nurses' perspective of what they do when a child has had a severe accident. The research was initiated from the experience of nursing children in the context of a rehabilitation centre and wondering how acute care nurses promoted a child's recovery after a severe unintentional injury. Many avenues were used to search international and New Zealand literature but the scarcity of literature related to what acute care paediatric nurses do was evident. Nursing children in the acute care ward after a severe accident is complex. It encompasses nursing the family when they are experiencing a crisis. It is critical that the acute care nurse monitors and ensures the child's physiological needs are met, and the nurse “works with” the child to maintain and advance medical stability. Nursing interactions are an important part of “working with”, communication is the essence of nursing. This research has focussed on the nurses' social processes whilst caring for the physical needs of the child and interacting with the family and multidisciplinary team when appropriate. An effective working-relationship with a nurse and family is founded on trust. Grounded theory methods supported the process of exploring the social processes of “building trust” whilst “working with” families in a vulnerable position. Nurses rely on rapport to be invited into a family's space to “work with” and support the re-establishment of the parenting role. The “stepping in and out” of an effective working-relationship with a family is reliant on trust. Nurses build trust by spending time to “be with”, using chat to get to know each other, involving and supporting the family to parent a “different” child and reassuring and giving realistic hope to help the child and parents cope with their changed future. A substantive theory of the concept of “building trust to work with” has been developed using grounded theory methods. The theory has been conceptualised using the perspective of seven registered nurses working in paediatric acute care wards that admit children who have had a severe traumatic accident. |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
597 |
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Author |
Best, G.A. |
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Title |
Being pruned: Student nurses experience of being shaped in clinical practice by lecturers |
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Year |
2004 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
Auckland University of Technology Library |
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Keywords |
Students; Nursing; Education |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
599 |
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Author |
Murray, D.J. |
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Title |
The roles of nurses working with adolescents in Auckland secondary schools |
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Year |
2004 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
University of Auckland Library |
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Keywords |
Adolescents; Nurse-patient relations |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
605 |
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Author |
Shelah, G.E. |
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Title |
Enabling pedagogy: An enquiry into New Zealand students' experience of bioscience in pre-registration nursing education |
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Year |
2003 |
Publication |
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Abbreviated Journal |
University of Auckland Library |
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Keywords |
Teaching methods; Nursing; Education |
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Call Number |
NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
856 |
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Author |
Stokes, G. |
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Title |
Who cares? Accountability for public safety in nurse education |
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Year |
2005 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
Online at Research Space @ Auckland University |
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Keywords |
Nursing; Education; Accountability; Patient safety |
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Abstract |
The focus of this study is the management of unsafe nursing students within the tertiary education context. The moral dilemmas experienced by nurse educators, specifically linked to the issue of accountability for public safety, are explored. The theoretical framework for the thesis is informed by the two moral voices of justice and care identified by Gilligan and further developed using the work of Hekman and Lyotard. Case study methodology was used and data were collected from three schools of nursing and their respective educational organisations. Interviews were conducted with nurse educators and education administrators who had managed unsafe nursing students. Interviews were also conducted with representatives from the Nursing Council of New Zealand and the New Zealand Nurses Organisation to gain professional perspectives regarding public safety, nurse education and unsafe students. Transcripts were analysed using the strategies of categorical aggregation and direct interpretation. Issues identified in each of the three case studies were examined using philosophical and theoretical analyses. This thesis explores how students come to be identified as unsafe and the challenges this posed within three educational contexts. The justice and care moral voices of nurse educators and administrators and the ways in which these produced different ways of caring are made visible. Different competing and conflicting discourses of nursing and education are revealed, including the discourse of safety – one of the language games of nursing. The way in which participants positioned themselves and positioned others within these discourses are identified. Overall, education administrators considered accountability for public safety to be a specific professional, nursing responsibility and not a concern of education per se. This thesis provides an account of how nurse educators attempted to make the educational world safe for patients, students, and themselves. Participants experienced different tensions and moral dilemmas in the management of unsafe students, depending upon the moral language games they employed and the dominant discourse of the educational organisation. Nurse educators were expected to use the discourses of education to make their case and manage unsafe students. However, the discourses of nursing and education were found to be incommensurable and so the moral dilemmas experienced by nurse educators were detected as differends. This study bears witness to these differends. |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
1106 |
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Author |
Seton, K.M. |
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Title |
Diversity in action: Overseas nurses' perspectives on transition to nursing practice in New Zealand |
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Year |
2004 |
Publication |
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Abbreviated Journal |
University of Auckland Library |
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Keywords |
Nursing; Cross-cultural comparison; Education |
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Call Number |
NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
1110 |
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Author |
Doughty, L. |
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Title |
Evaluation of the 2002 Auckland District Health Board: First year of clinical practice programme |
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Year |
2004 |
Publication |
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Abbreviated Journal |
University of Auckland Library |
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Keywords |
Clinical supervision; Nursing; Education |
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NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
1113 |
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Author |
Williams, J.L. |
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Title |
The Cummins model: An adaption to assist foreign nursing students in New Zealand |
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Year |
2003 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
University of Auckland Library |
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Keywords |
Nursing; Education; Students |
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Call Number |
NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
1114 |
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Author |
Whitehead, N. |
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Title |
Quality and staffing: Is there a relationship in aged residential care |
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Year |
2007 |
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Abbreviated Journal |
University of Auckland Library |
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Keywords |
Rest homes; Patient safety; Older people; Nursing specialties |
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Abstract |
This thesis reports a mixed methods study, longitudinal in nature, of consenting Age Related Residential Care (ARRC) hospitals in the upper half of the North Island, which was conducted to examine several factors, including AARC hospital efficiency at producing adverse event free days for residents. An interpretativist approach examined what best practice strategies were implemented by the ARRC hospitals that were identified to be most successful at producing adverse event free days for the residents. |
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Call Number |
NRSNZNO @ research @ |
Serial |
1159 |
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Permanent link to this record |