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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 (up) Abbreviated Journal NZNA P. O. Box 2128 Wellington
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
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 Thompson, J.
Title Budgeting for nursing services Type
Year 2000 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract The author suggests that a nursing service would benefit by using the concept of budgets and budgeting control, in terms of management accounting and its applicability to a hospital based nursing service. The main objective of this study was to suggest a possible line of approach towards the construction of an information system designed to yield reliable and useful data, without which there can be little hope of any truly effective guide to the development of nursing services.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 36
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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 (up) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
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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Author Nevatt, E.A.
Title Occupational health care: An entrepreneurial venture in New Zealand Type Report
Year 2000 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract A description of the establishment and the first year's operation of an occupational health service set up as a limited liability company and offering contracted fee- for- service health care for employees of clients' businesses. The report tells how the two nurses established the company and how the company secured contracts, it describes the delivery of health care in the workplace. The nurses' perception of their work and the client managers' evaluation of the service are included.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 89
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Author Paterson(now Fleming), B.L.
Title The types of information nurses pass on to other nurses verbally regarding their patients, which is not discussed in the legal nursing record Type
Year 2000 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Dunedin Hospital Staff Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract This study was undertaken in a combined medical/surgical unit in an acute general hospital in New Zealand using the grounded theory research methodology. It aimed at identifying the types of information nurses pass on verbally regarding their patients, but which they do not document in the legal nursing record.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 129
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Author Churcher, R.L.; Bowden, J.; Grogan, J.; Grofski, H.; Parker, R.; Berry, A.
Title Trends in theatre nurse education Type
Year 2000 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Theatre Nurses Section, NZNO
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract This reports the results of a national survey to ascertain what direction education of theatre nursing personnel is taking. It includes method and content preselection, orientation and in service education/ staff development phases of education. Options for the future are also addressed.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 144
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Author Booth, W.
Title Towards partnerships in praxis Type
Year 1997 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library, Waiarik
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract This action research project explored the factors that helped or hindered student nurse clinical learning from the perspective of nurse educators, practitioners and students. Participant analysis of their own discussions identified both common and disparate views regarding the student's learning experience. Researcher analysis identified five practical and three organizational issues that influenced the development of more effective partnerships between these three stakeholder groups that would facilitate student clinical learning. The practical issues were how to deal with the 'problem' people in the learning process, how to clarify and develop the various roles in the learning context, how to generate more effective communication, how to respond more effectively to the impact of the changing environment, and how to maximize 'moments of learning'. The organizational issues were identified as the schisms between the disparate personal and organizational cultures that direct the way educators, practitioners and students, perceive, think, feel and act
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 161
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Author Fleming, Valerie E M
Title Partnership, power and politics: feminist perceptions of midwifery practice Type Book Whole
Year 1994 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 237 p
Keywords Midwifery; Feminism; Power
Abstract Provides an interpretative critique of the partnership of a group of independent midwives and their clients in urban NZ. Uses a theoretical basis grounded in the principles of feminism, incorporating aspects of critical social science and post-modernism, to underpin both the methodological approach and the data analysis. Utilises the concepts of subjectivity, power/knowledge and praxis as tools for analysis of data which is collected through semi-structured interviews.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 253
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Author Beale, T.M.
Title Psychiatric nurses: the influence of their personal life experiences on therapeutic readiness Type
Year 1995 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract This research investigates the impact of fifteen psychiatric nurses' personal experiences on their therapeutic relationships with clines. A hermeneutic phenomenological methodology informed by Heidegger is employed to gain an understanding of the human experience of these nurses in the context of the therapeutic relationship.The research illuminates the significant impact of these nurses' experiences on their relationships. Some experiences are found to enhance therapeutic readiness while the other personal experiences impede it, some impeding it to a degree that nurses are unable to work therapeutically with certain clients. The stories that describe the personal experiences that lead towards therapeutic readiness care special, as are the accounts of the professionalism and care that these nurses bring to their clients
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 256
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Author Papps, Elaine
Title Knowledge, power, and nursing education in New Zealand: a critical analysis of the construction of the nursing identity Type Book Whole
Year 1998 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 330 p.
Keywords Nursing education; Nursing identity; Michel Foucault; Curriculum; Governmentality
Abstract Describes and critically analyses the construction of the nursing identity through curriculum and social relations of power. Conducts a critical analysis using Foucault's power/knowledge problematic to unmask power relations positioning the nurse in the discourses of medicine and gender. Analyses the construction of the nursing identity through curriculum and the social relations of power, using the Foucauldian notion of governmentality.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 330
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Author Clark, R.R.
Title My fat arm: Living with lymphoedema following treatment for breast cancer Type
Year 1998 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 350
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Author Cook, Deborah.
Title Open visiting: does this benefit adult patients in intensive care units Type
Year 2006 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal NZNO Library
Volume Issue Pages 32 pp
Keywords
Abstract A dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Master of Nursing at Otago Polytechnic, Dunedin, New Zealand.

As the healthcare system moves toward a consumer-driven paradigm, visiting hours for family and significant others of the intensive care unit patient have become a topic of interest and discussion. Research since the 1970s has generated controversy and speculation over the ideal visiting practices in the adult intensive care unit. Analysis of the growing body of research can now be reviewed to enable existing visiting policies to be revised.
Call Number NZNO @ research @ Serial 1332
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Author Litchfield, M.; Clarke, M.; Edwards, R.; Richardson, F.; Tansley, R.; Woodman, K.
Title A description of the needs of people with cancer and support people Type
Year 1995 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Author, Wellington Division of the Cancer Society
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords
Abstract The report of a research project commissioned by the Wellington Division of the New Zealand Cancer Society to provide a foundation for policy to give direction to development of its services. The research approach and methodology had an ecological theory foundation. It involved a survey and in-depth interviews with people with cancer and those caring for them to understand their experience. Needs were identified from the data and presented according to three distinct phases in the course of living with cancer. People moved from the shock of diagnosis, through the time of treatment when usual living was suspended and focus narrowed on the intensive fight against the disease, then into a very different phase of on-going ?wait-and-see? time requiring a new way of living with uncertainty for both patient and carers. The last phase was where most of the unmet needs lay. Recommendations were made for services to provide a continuous caring relationship for patients and carers with a knowledgeable person from the point of diagnosis.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 387
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Author Haggerty, C.
Title Critical case study: Supporting the new graduate entering specialist psychiatric mental health nursing practice Type
Year 2000 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal ResearchArchive@Victoria
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords Psychiatric Nursing; Clinical supervision; Students; Preceptorship
Abstract This critical case study was undertaken for the purposes of illuminating information relating to new graduate nurses' experiences in their first clinical placement, in order to consider ways an established entry to practice programme can better support and enhance the students' transition from student nurse to staff nurse within psychiatric mental health nursing practice. Seven current students of the programme participated in the research. This provided the researcher with a variety of challenges related to her dual role as researcher and programme coordinator. Data was collected through the use of discussion groups, with participants and researcher jointly identifying the themes that were explored. These themes related to preceptorship and support, socialisation of the new graduate and risk management. The research has provided rich data that has already, and will continue to be used to inform future developments within both the educational and clinical components of the programme. The research has also provided opportunities for personal and professional growth through the sharing of experiences, and working together to identify emancipatory action which has in turn lead to transformation.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 450
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Author Blair, K.M.
Title Recognising the sick patient: An emergency nurses view: A research paper Type
Year 2006 Publication (up) Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords Emergency nursing; Patient safety; Diagnosis; Training; Clinical decision making
Abstract This paper reports on a literature review that examines how health professionals (mainly nurses) recognise the signs of physical deterioration in their patients. It includes discussion of how nurses' clinical decision making skills influence how physical deterioration is identified and determines what changes in the delivery of care could have an impact on emergency department patients at risk of life threatening deterioration.
Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 467
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