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Author | Gaskin, C.J.; O'Brien, A.P.; Hardy, D.J. | ||||
Title | The development of a professional practice audit questionnaire for mental health nursing in Aotearoa/New Zealand | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2003 | Publication | International Journal of Mental Health Nursing | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 12 | Issue | 4 | Pages | 259-270 |
Keywords | Professional competence; Psychiatric Nursing; Clinical decision making; Nursing research | ||||
Abstract | This paper reports the three-stage development of a professional practice audit questionnaire for mental health nursing in Aotearoa/New Zealand. In Study 1, clinical indicator statements (n = 99) generated from focus group data, which were considered to be unobservable in the nursing documentation in consumer case notes, were included in a three-round Delphi process. Consensus of ratings occurred for the mental health nurse and academic participants (n = 7) on 83 clinical indicator statements. In Study 2, the clinical indicator statements (n = 67) that met importance and consensus criteria were incorporated into a questionnaire, which was piloted at a New Zealand mental health service. The questionnaire was then modified for use in a national field study. In Study 3, the national field study, registered mental health nurses (n = 422) from 11 New Zealand district health board mental health services completed the questionnaire. Five categories of nursing practice were identified: professional and evidence-based practice; consumer focus and reflective practice; professional development and integration; ethically and legally safe practice; and culturally safe practice. Analyses revealed little difference in the perceptions of nurses from different backgrounds regarding the regularity of the nursing practices. Further research is needed to calibrate the scores on each clinical indicator statement with behaviour in clinical practice. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1064 | ||
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Author | Water, T. | ||||
Title | The meaning of being in dilemma in paediatric practice: A phenomenological study | Type | |||
Year | 2008 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | NZNO Library | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | 259 pp | ||
Keywords | Psychology; Paediatric nursing; Paedetric practice; Problem solving | ||||
Abstract | This study explores the phenomenon of dilemma in paediatric practice. Using a hermeneutic phenomenological method informed by the writings of Heidegger [1889-1976] and Gadamer [1900-2002] this study provides an understanding of the meaning of 'being in dilemma' from the perspective of predominantly paediatric health care professionals but also families in New Zealand. Study participants include four families who had a child requiring health care and fifteen health care practitioners from the disciplines of medicine, nursing, physiotherapy, play specialist and occupational therapy who work with families and children requiring health care. Participants' narratives of their experiences of 'being in dilemma' were captured via audio taped interviewing. These stories uncover the everyday realities facing health professionals and families and provide an ontological understanding for the notion of dilemma. The findings of this study suggest that experience of dilemma for health professionals reveals a world that is uncertain and questionable where they are thrown into having to make uncomfortable choices and must live with the painful consequences of their actions. The consequences of being in such dilemma are having to find ways of living with the angst, or risk becoming too sensitive or desensitizing. For families the experience of dilemma reveals a similar phenomenon most evident in circumstances where they feel totalized by the impact of heath care encounters. This study has uncovered that the perspectives that health professionals and families bring to the experience of dilemma reveal different concerns and commitments and may be hidden from each other. This thesis proposes that health professionals and families need support in living with their own personal encounters of enduring experiences of dilemma. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1234 | ||
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Author | Gilder, Eileen | ||||
Title | To suction or not to suction; that is the question: Studies of endotracheal suction in post-operative cardiac patients | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 261 p. | ||
Keywords | Endotracheal suction; Post-operative cardiac patients; Post-operative nursing; Patient safety | ||||
Abstract | Assesses the safety of actively avoiding endotracheal suction in post-operative cardiac surgical patients ventilated for less than 12 hours. Describes local endotracheal suction practice, and elucidates patient experience of the endotracheal tube and endotracheal suction. Conducts an observational audit describing endotracheal sucion practice within the cardiothoracic and vascular intensive care unit in Auckland City Hospital. Undertakes a prospective, non-inferiority, randomised controlled trial investigating the safety of avoiding endotracheal suction. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1769 | ||
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Author | Pirret, A.M. | ||||
Title | A preoperative scoring system to identify patients requiring postoperative high dependency care | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2003 | Publication | Intensive & Critical Care Nursing | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 19 | Issue | 5 | Pages | 267-275 |
Keywords | Hospitals; Quality of health care; Surgery; Nursing; Clinical assessment | ||||
Abstract | The incidence of postoperative complications is reduced with early identification of at risk patients and improved postoperative monitoring. This study describes the development and effect of a nursing preoperative assessment tool to identify patients at risk of postoperative complications and to reduce the number of acute admissions to ICU/HDU. All surgical patients admitted to a surgical ward for an elective surgical procedure (n=7832) over a 23-month period were concurrently scored on admission using the preoperative assessment tool. During the time period studied, acute admissions to ICU/HDU reduced from 40.37 to 19.11%. Only 24.04% of patients who had a PAS >4 were identified by the surgeon and/or anesthetist as being at risk of a postoperative complication, or if identified, no provision was made for improved postoperative monitoring. This study supports the involvement of nurses in identifying preoperatively patients at risk of a postoperative complication and in need of improved postoperative monitoring. The postoperative monitoring requirements for the PAS >4 patients were relatively low technology interventions. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ 904 | Serial | 888 | ||
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Author | Holloway, Kathy; Baker, Jacqueline; Lumby, Judy | ||||
Title | Specialist nursing famework for New Zealand: A missing link in workforce planning | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2009 | Publication | Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 10 | Issue | 4 | Pages | 269-275 |
Keywords | Workforce planning; Nursing workforce; Specialist nursing frameworks; Advanced practice nurses | ||||
Abstract | Explores the NZ context underpinning adequate specialist nurse workforce supply, contending that effective workforce planning would be supported by the development of a single unified framework for specialist nursing practice in NZ, with the potential to support accurate data collection and to enable service providers to identify and plan transparent and transferable pathways for specialist nursing service provision and development. Argues that advanced practice nursing frameworks assist in increasing productivity through building an evidence base about advanced practice, enhancing consistency and equity of expertise, supporting a reduction in role duplication, and enabling succession planning and sustainability. |
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Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1826 | ||
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Author | Rook, Helen | ||||
Title | Living nursing values: a collective case study | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2017 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 278 p. | ||
Keywords | Nursing values; Value dissonance; Burn-out; Medical wards; Case studies | ||||
Abstract | Explores the humanistic values of professional nurses practising in medical ward environments and how these values are lived in day-to-day nursing practice on three medical wards in NZ using observations, focus groups, interviews, a burn-out survey and theoretical application. Challenges the nursing profession to acknowledge and address the visibility of nursing values in contemporary practice, as well as acknowledge the dissonance that exists between the values of nursing and the values that drive healthcare delivery. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1694 | ||
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Author | Wilson, H.V. | ||||
Title | Paradoxical pursuits in child health nursing practice: Discourses of scientific mothercraft | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2003 | Publication | Critical Public Health | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 13 | Issue | 3 | Pages | 281-293 |
Keywords | Plunket; Nurse-family relations; Paediatric nursing; Nursing philosophy | ||||
Abstract | The purpose of this paper is to examine the discourses of scientific mothercraft and their implications for the nurse-mother relationship, drawing on the author's recent research into surveillance and the exercise of power in the child health nursing context. The application of Foucauldian discourse analysis to the texts generated by interviews with five New Zealand child health nurses confirms that this paradoxical role has never been fully resolved. Plunket nurses primarily work in the community with the parents of new babies and preschool children. Their work, child health surveillance, is considered to involve routine and unproblematic practices generally carried out in the context of a relationship between the nurse and the mother. However, there are suggestions in the literature that historically the nurse's surveillance role has conflicting objectives, as she is at the same time an inspector and family friend. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ 1116 | Serial | 1101 | ||
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Author | Jamieson,I | ||||
Title | What are the views of Generation Y New Zealand Registered Nurses towards nursing, work and career?: A descriptive exploratory study | Type | |||
Year | 2012 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | Available from the NZNO Library | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | 290 pp | ||
Keywords | Generation Y; Young nurses; Registered Nurses; Workforce planning; Attitudes to nursing; Surveys; Nursing shortages | ||||
Abstract | The author has taken a broad approach to this research to explore the views of Generation Y New Zealand Registered Nurses towards the nursing profession, the work itself and their career plans. This study arose out of the author?s interest in health care workforce planning for nursing and in particular the retention of young nurses given the current national and global shortage of nurses. Because of the broad and descriptive nature of the research, a wide variety of topics are included in the literature reviewed. Chapter one provides background to the study and an overview of generational cohorts. Chapter two explores selected literature relevant to the concept of work and the characteristics of the Generation Y workforce. Other topics included in this chapter include Herzberg?s work motivation hygiene/maintenance theory and a selection of literature about key workforce recruitment and retention issues. A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Health Sciences |
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Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1393 | ||
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Author | Alavi, C. | ||||
Title | Breaking-in bodies: Teaching, nursing, initiations or what's love got to do with it? | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2005 | Publication | Contemporary Nurse | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 18 | Issue | 3 | Pages | 292-299 |
Keywords | Nursing; Education; Psychology; Nurse-patient relations; Students | ||||
Abstract | This paper discusses how students become able to work with sick patients for whom they may feel disgust or discomfort. It is a sustained engagement with the literature on abjection and disgust and is not the outcome of evaluation research. It considers the role of problem-based learning pedagogy in facilitating students' negotiation of their own discomfort and horror, and describes experiences which enable them to approach abject patients with more comfort and less disgust. The paper argues the importance of creating spaces where students can explore issues which are distressing and disturbing so that they will feel able to remain in nursing. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 658 | ||
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Author | McKillop, A.M. | ||||
Title | Evaluation of the implementation of a best practice information sheet: Tracheal suctioning of adults with an artificial airway | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2004 | Publication | JBI Reports | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 2 | Issue | 9 | Pages | 293-308 |
Keywords | Evidence-based medicine; Nursing; Guidelines; Evaluation | ||||
Abstract | This report presents an evaluation of the implementation of a best practice information sheet related to tracheal suctioning of adults with an artificial airway. The Centre for Evidence-Based Nursing Aotearoa, based in Auckland, conducted a systematic review of the evidence and produced the best practice information sheet. A survey of 105 nurses was conducted at three sites, in New Zealand and Australia. Using a before/after design, data were collected at the time of release of the information sheet and then approximately 12 months later. The study suggests a trend towards a modest uptake of best practice recommendations into nursing practice demonstrated by some behavioural changes within a 12-month period in the context of an implementation plan and the best practice information sheet. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 696 | ||
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Author | Wilson, H.V. | ||||
Title | Power and partnership: A critical analysis of the surveillance discourses of child health nurses | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2001 | Publication | Journal of Advanced Nursing | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 36 | Issue | 2 | Pages | 294-301 |
Keywords | Paediatric nursing; Nurse-family relations; Nursing philosophy; Plunket | ||||
Abstract | The aim of this research was to explore surveillance discourses within New Zealand child health nursing and to identify whether surveillance practices have implications in this context for power relations. Five experienced and practising Plunket nurses were each interviewed twice. The texts generated by these semi-structured interviews were analysed using a Foucauldian approach to critical discourse analysis. In contrast with the conventional view of power as held and wielded by one party, this study revealed that, in the Plunket nursing context, power is exercised in various and unexpected ways. Although the relationship between the mother and the nurse cannot be said to operate as a partnership, it is constituted in the nurses' discourses as a dynamic relationship in which the mother is actively engaged on her own terms. The effect of this is that it is presented by the nurses as a precarious relationship that has significant implications for the success of their work. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1085 | ||
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Author | Officer, Tara N. | ||||
Title | Nurse practitioners and pharmacist prescribers in primary health care: A realist evaluation of the New Zealand experience | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 301 p. | ||
Keywords | Nurse practitioners; Primary health care; Advanced nursing practice; Pharmacist prescribers | ||||
Abstract | Investigates how nurse practitioner and pharmacist prescriber roles are developing in NZ primary health care, and what is needed to better support the future development of these roles. Employs a qualitative research design involving semi-structured interviews of (1) policy, training, and advocacy stakeholders; (2) primary health-care nurse practitioners, pharmacist prescribers, and general practitioners; and (3) patients of advanced practitioners and carers of patients using such services. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1693 | ||
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Author | Wilkinson, Jillian Ann | ||||
Title | The New Zealand nurse practitioner polemic : a discourse analysis : a thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2007 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 308 pp. | ||
Keywords | Nurse practitioners; Nursing history; Advanced nursing practice; Nursing identity; Discourse analysis; Nursing regulation; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Traces the development of the nurse practitioner role in NZ since its establishment in 2001, using a discourse analytical approach to examine those discourses that have defined the role. Employs both textual and discursive analysis of texts from published literature and from nine interviews with individuals influential in the evolution of the role. Examines political perspectives and disciplinary practices dating back to the Nurses Registration Act of 1901. Considers the implications of an autonomous nursing profession in both practice and regulation. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1614 | ||
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Author | Bowen-Withington, Julie | ||||
Title | Emerging discourses shaping high-fidelity simulation as an education platform in Aotearoa New Zealand pre-registration nursing education: A Foucauldian discourse analysis | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2022 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 311 p. | ||
Keywords | High-fidelity simulation (HFS); Nursing education; Discourse analysis; Michel Foucault | ||||
Abstract | Asserts that nursing needs to think critically about High-fidelity simulation (HFS) use, and its dominance, in the educational preparation of nurses. Draws on the tenets of postmodernism and Foucauldian discourse analysis methodology to question the discourses and discursive practices that influence the use of HFS as an approach to intentional and unintentional teaching and learning in pre-registration nursing education in NZ. Explores how this shapes nursing students' subjectivity and, ultimately, nursing practice. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1839 | ||
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Author | Jamieson, Isabel | ||||
Title | What are the views of Generation Y New Zealand Registered Nurses towards nursing, work and career?: a descriptive exploratory study | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2012 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 313 | ||
Keywords | Generation Y; Registered nurses; Workforce retention; Work-life balance; Careers in nursing | ||||
Abstract | Undertakes a descriptive exploratory study to ascertain the views of Generation Y NZ Registered Nurses (Gen Y nurses) towards nursing, work and career. Little empirical data exists about why young New Zealanders choose to become nurses in the 21st century. Further, little is known about their future career plans or their intentions to remain in the nursing workforce. Conducts a nationwide on-line survey of 358 Gen Y nurses from late 2009 to early 2010. Reports key findings: young NZ nurses are driven by traditional values of altruism, the desire to care for others, the ability to work closely with people, as well as being able to make a strong contribution to society when deciding to become a nurse, while seeking interesting, challenging and exciting work. Job security, the ongoing demand for nurses, the ability to leave and return, as well as the ability to combine work and family, are also important factors that help them to choose to become nurses. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1423 | ||
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