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Author Richardson, A.
Title Health promotion and public health nursing Type
Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal University of Otago Library
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 405 Serial 405
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Author Bridge, R.; Grinter, K.
Title How prepared is your field of nursing to care for people with AIDS? Type Miscellaneous
Year Publication Abbreviated Journal
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Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate what attitudes do District Nurses have towards people with AIDS and what knowledge do they have of AIDS. It is hoped that the results will help indicate the direction of future inservice education.102 District Nurses were given a questionnaire that examined knowledge and attitudes, using both Yes/No responses, and a five point likert scale.The results show that there is a relationship between knowledge and attitudes (p=3.8%). Attitudes were generally more positive than knowledge. The study indicated that attitudes deteriorated with increasing age whereas they improved with increasing experience. For those who claimed to have had little or no education the study showed a relationship between lower knowledge and poorer attitudes. The study showed that further education is needed in areas such as: transmission of HIV, care involved for people with AIDS, resources available and the issues surrounding this disease
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 406 Serial 406
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Author Henderson, A.P.
Title Nursing a colonial hangover: towards bicultural planning in New Zealand Type
Year 1994 Publication Abbreviated Journal University of Otago Library
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 409 Serial 409
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Author Blanchard, D.L.
Title Nursing practice in the changing health care environment “just keep going until you see it right” Type
Year 1995 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 410 Serial 410
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Author Prebble, K.; McDonald, B.
Title Adaptation to the mental health setting: the lived experience of comprehensive nurse graduates Type Journal Article
Year 1997 Publication Australian & New Zealand Journal of Mental Health Nursing Abbreviated Journal
Volume 6 Issue 1 Pages 30-36
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Abstract The aim of this qualitative descriptive study was to explore the experience of new comprehensive nursing graduates as they adapted to working in the acute psychiatric setting. Interviews were conducted with four participants, focussing on their current work experiences and how the philosophical beliefs and values derived from their educational preparation fit with those they encountered within the practice setting. The data were analysed by noting common experiences, values and meanings and identifying the themes as they emerged. The themes were: transition to practice, conflict, contradiction, structural constraints, and the reality of the psychiatric setting. The results of the study confirm the concern that has been voiced by new graduates about the quality and quantity of current orientation programmes. Conflicting values and beliefs concerning the nature of mental health/psychiatric nursing has also become evident. It appears that the graduates' Comprehensive nursing preparation may have contributed to their feelings of unease as they attempted to fit their own values and beliefs about nursing with those of the acute psychiatric setting
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 412 Serial 412
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Author Dowland, J.
Title A look at nursing in three surgical wards Type
Year 1975 Publication Abbreviated Journal Management Services and Research Unit, Department
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 414 Serial 414
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Author Lind, C.A.
Title Step by Step: the history of nursing education in Southland Type Miscellaneous
Year Publication Abbreviated Journal
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 427 Serial 427
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Author Shepherd, M. 1893-
Title Some of my yesterdays: the autobiography of Marion Shepherd, (Maisie) Northern Ireland, 1893-1920; New Zealand from 1921 Type Miscellaneous
Year Publication Abbreviated Journal
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 428 Serial 428
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Author McEldowney, R.A.
Title A new lamp is shining: life histories of five feminist nurse educators Type
Year 1992 Publication Abbreviated Journal Author
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 439 Serial 439
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Author Ramsden, I.
Title Kawa Whakaruruhau: cultural safety in nursing education in Aotearoa (New Zealand) Type
Year 1991 Publication Nursing Praxis in New Zealand Abbreviated Journal Libraries A2 -
Volume 8 Issue 3 Pages 4-10
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Abstract
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 440 Serial 440
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Author Wood, P.J.; Schwass, M.
Title Cultural safety: a framework for changing attitudes Type Journal Article
Year 1993 Publication Nursing Praxis in New Zealand Abbreviated Journal
Volume 8 Issue 1 Pages 4-14
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Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 441 Serial 441
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Author Clendon, J.
Title The Nurse Practitioner-led Primary Health Care Clinic; A Community Needs Analysis Type
Year 1999 Publication Abbreviated Journal Albany, Auckland
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Abstract Aim: To determine the feasibility of establishing a nurse practitioner-led, family focused, primary health care clinic within a primary school environment as an alternate or complementary way of addressing the health needs of 'at risk' children and families to the services already provided by the public health nurse.Method: Utilising needs analysis method, data was collected from three sources – known demographic data, 17 key informant interviews and two focus group interviews. Questions were asked regarding the health needs of the community, the perceptions of participants regarding the role of the public health nurse in order to determine if a public health nurse would be the most appropriate person to lead a primary health care clinic, and the practicalities of establishing a clinic including services participants would expect a clinic to provide. Analysis was descriptive and exploratory.Results: A wide range of health needs were identified from both the demographic data and from participant interviews. Findings also showed that participant's understanding of the role of the public health nurse was not great and that community expectations were such that for a public health nurse to lead a primary health care clinic further skills would be required. Outcomes from investigating the practicalities of establishing a nurse practitioner-led clinic resulted in the preparation of a community-developed model that would serve to address the health needs of children and families in the area the study was undertaken.Conclusion: Overall findings indicated that the establishment of a nurse practitioner-led, family focused, primary health care clinic in a primary school environment is feasible. While a public health nurse may fulfil the role of the nurse practitioner, it was established that preparation to an advanced level of practice would be required. It is likely that a similar model would also be successful in other communities in New Zealand, however the health needs identified in this study are specific to the community studied. Further community needs assessments would need to be completed to ensure health services target health needs specific to the communities involved.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 447 Serial 447
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Author Spence, D.
Title Prejudice, paradox and possibility Type
Year 1999 Publication Abbreviated Journal Auckland
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Abstract This study explores the the experience of nursing a person, or people, form cultures other than one's own. Informed by the tradition of philosophical hermeneutics, and drawing specifically on some of the notions articulated by Hans-Georg Gadamer and Charles Taylor, it seeks to understand everyday nursing practices within their cultural and historical context.Against a background of Maori resurgence, nurses in New Zealand have been challenged in Aotearoa-New Zealand to recognise and address racism in their practice. Meeting the health needs of all people has long been important in nursing yet the curricular changes implemented in the early 1990s to enhance nursing's contribution to a more equitable health service created uncertainty and tension both within nursing, and between nursing and the wider community.In this study, I have interpreted the experiences of seventeen nurses practising in an increasingly ethnically diverse region. Personal understandings and those from relevant literature have been used to illuminate further the nature of cross-cultural experience from a nurse's perspective. The thesis asserts that the notions of prejudice, paradox and possibility can be used to describe the experience of nursing a person from another culture. Prejudice refers to the prior understandings that influence nursing action in both a positive and a negative sense. Paradox relates to the coexistence and necessary interplay of contradictory meanings and positions, while possibility points to the potential for new understandings to surface from the fusion of past with present, and between different interpretations. As New Zealand nurses negotiate the conflicts essential for ongoing development of their practice, the play of prejudice, paradox and possibility is evident at intra-personal and interpersonal levels as well as in relation to professional and other social discourses. This thesis challenges nurses to persist in working with the tensions inherent in cross-cultural practice. It encourages continuation of their efforts to understand and move beyond the prejudices that otherwise preclude the exploration of new possibilities.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 448 Serial 448
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Author Churcher, R.L.; Bowden, J.; Grogan, J.; Grofski, H.; Parker, J.; Berry, A.
Title Recovery room nursing – conditions and practice Type
Year 2000 Publication Abbreviated Journal NZNA P. O. Box 2128 Wellington
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Abstract This report is the results of a national survey to establish base-line information about recovery room nursing. Factors addressed are: general statistics, physical conditions, staffing, orientation and education, support networks and procedure performed
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 11
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Author Wenmoth, J.D.A.
Title Involuntary unemployment: A grounded theory analysis of the experience of five nurses Type
Year 2000 Publication Abbreviated Journal
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Abstract This study outlines the use of grounded theory strategy to analyse the experience of nurses who become involuntarily unemployed. It then proceeds to develop a theoretical framework that explain the common patterns in this experience. Using the Glasser and Strauss (1967) Grounded Theory approach, empirical observation was undertaken expressly for the purpose of generating insights which may lead to new understanding of the subject of this study. Using two inter-related procedures known as theoretical sampling and constant comparative analysis, data is systematically collected, coordinated and subjected to an ongoing analysis. Theory is then 'grounded ' in the real world. The study involved in depth interviewing of five mid-career nurses who were involuntarily unemployed. The data was transcribed and analysed to yield theoretical concepts and categories that were integrated into propositions to explain common patterns. It will be argued that this experience is a grieving process that is more that just grieving a job loss. It is proposed that there are three phases – 1. Personal devastation due to losses experienced.. 2. A period of healing. 3. Recovery and re-establishment of the 'new' person.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 69
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