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Author | Gage, J.; Everrett, K.D.; Bullock, L. | ||||
Title | Integrative review of parenting in nursing research | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2006 | Publication ![]() |
Journal of Nursing Scholarship | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 38 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 56-62 |
Keywords | Parents and caregivers; Nursing research; Evaluation | ||||
Abstract | The authors synthesise and critically analyse parenting research in nursing. They focused on studies published between 1993 and 2004 by nurse researchers in peer-reviewed journals. Data were organised and analysed with a sample of 17 nursing research studies from core nursing journals. The majority of parenting research has been focused on mothers, primarily about parenting children with physical or developmental disabilities. Research about fathers as parents is sparse. Parenting across cultures, parenting in the context of family, and theoretical frameworks for parenting research are not well developed. The authors conclude that the scope of nursing research on parenting is limited. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 709 | ||
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Author | Paton, B.; Martin, S.; McClunie-Trust, P.; Weir, N. | ||||
Title | Doing phenomenological research collaboratively | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2004 | Publication ![]() |
Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing | Abbreviated Journal | Wintec Research Archive |
Volume | 35 | Issue | 4 | Pages | 176-181 |
Keywords | Qualiltative research; Nursing research; New graduate nurses | ||||
Abstract | The purpose of this article is twofold. The first is to clarify some of the challenges experienced while conducting collaborative research and describe the steps taken to ensure consistency between the purpose of the research and the phenomenological research design used to explore the learning that nursing students acquire in their final clinical practicum. Second, it was thought that by illuminating this learning, registered nurses working as preceptors and those supporting new graduates could gain insight into the complexities of learning the skills of safe and competent practice from the student's perspective. This insight is essential in creating a strategy between education and practice to minimise the duplication of learning opportunities and lessen the cost of supporting newly registered nurses, which may be at the expense of investment in the professional development of experienced registered nurses. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1202 | ||
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Author | Jonsdottir, H.; Litchfield, M.; Pharris, M. | ||||
Title | The relational core of nursing practice as partnership | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | Publication ![]() |
Journal of Advanced Nursing | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | 47 | Issue | 3 | Pages | 241-250 |
Keywords | Nurse-patient relations; Nursing philosophy; Nursing research | ||||
Abstract | This article elaborates the meaning of partnership in practice for nurses practising in different and complementary way to nurses in specialist roles and medical practitioners. It positions partnership as the relational core of nursing practice. Partnership is presented as an evolving dialogue between nurse and patient, which is characterised by open, caring, mutually responsive and non-directive approaches. This partnership occurs within a health system that is dominated by technologically-driven, prescriptive, and outcome-oriented approaches. It is the second of a series of articles written as a partnership between nurse scholars from Iceland, NZ and USA. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ 1188 | Serial | 1173 | ||
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Author | Howie, L. | ||||
Title | Contextualised nursing practice | Type | Book Chapter | ||
Year | 2008 | Publication ![]() |
Jean Ross (Ed.), Rural nursing: Aspects of practice (pp. 33-49) | Abbreviated Journal | Ministry of Health publications page |
Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Rural nursing; Nursing models; Nursing research | ||||
Abstract | This is the first of three chapters that describe nursing practice. The author presents the Rural Framework Wheel to elaborate aspects of the rural context. The Framework comprises four systems which describe aspects of rurality; being are socio-cultural, occupational, ecological, and health. These systems each comprise of subsystems, which provide a detailed analysis of the way nursing practice is particular in diverse rural settings. The Framework is presented as a work in progress, and is grounded in international nursing literature. It highlights rural nursing as a unique and challenging field, with the dominant themes of partnership and nursing emerging as underpinning the practice when nurses live and work in small, sometimes isolated communities. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ 766 | Serial | 750 | ||
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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 | Drake, M. | ||||
Title | The sonata form of musical composition as a framework for thesis writing | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2004 | Publication ![]() |
Contemporary Nurse | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 16 | Issue | 3 | Pages | 252-258 |
Keywords | Nursing research; Nursing; Education | ||||
Abstract | This article introduces an innovation in writing master's level research and suggests that other structures may offer new and different frameworks for reporting nursing research. This is exemplified by reference to an example of nursing research which adopted the sonata form of musical composition as the framework for presentation of the thesis. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 876 | ||
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Author | Bland, M.F. | ||||
Title | Patient observation in nursing home research: Who was that masked woman? [corrected] [published erratum appears in Contemporary Nurse 2002 Apr; 12(2): 135] | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2002 | Publication ![]() |
Contemporary Nurse | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 12 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 42-48 |
Keywords | Nursing research; Ethics; Rest homes; Nurse-patient relations | ||||
Abstract | This article discusses the issues that one nurse researcher faced during participant observation in three New Zealand nursing homes. These include the complexity of the nurse researcher role, the blurring of role boundaries, and various ethical concerns that arose, including the difficulties of ensuring that all those who were involved in the study were kept informed as to the researcher's role and purpose. Strategies used to maintain ethical and role integrity are outlined, with further debate and discussion around fieldwork issues and experiences for nurse researchers called for. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 892 | ||
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Author | Darbyshire, P. | ||||
Title | 'Never mind the quality, feel the width': The nonsense of 'quality', 'excellence', and 'audit' in education, health and research | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2008 | Publication ![]() |
Collegian: Journal of the Royal College of Nursing Australia | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 15 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 35-41 |
Keywords | Accountability; Quality assurance; Organisational change; Nursing research; Nursing; Education | ||||
Abstract | The author contends that health care and education have been colonised by 'The Audit Society' and managerialism. It is argued that under the benign guise of 'improving quality' and 'ensuring value for money' a more Orwellian purpose operates. Academics had to be transformed into a workforce of 'docile bodies', willing to scrutinise and survey themselves and their 'performance' as outcome deliverers and disciples of the new 'Qualispeak'. This paper critiques the current obsession with audit and performativity, and the constant and often pointless 'change' that is held to be so self-evidently 'a good thing' and identifies policy discussion as a linguistic wasteland. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 967 | ||
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Author | Giddings, D.L.S.; Grant, B.M. | ||||
Title | A Trojan Horse for positivism? A critique of mixed methods research | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2007 | Publication ![]() |
Advances in Nursing Science | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 30 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 52-60 |
Keywords | Nursing research; Methodology; Evaluation | ||||
Abstract | This paper presents an analysis of mixed methods research, which the authors suggest is captured by a pragmatically inflected form of post-positivism. Although it passes for an alternative methodological movement that purports to breach the divide between qualitative and quantitative research, most mixed methods studies favour the forms of analysis and truth finding associated with positivism. The authors anticipate a move away from exploring more philosophical questions or undertaking modes of enquiry that challenge the status quo. At the same time, they recognise that mixed methods research offers particular strengths and that, although it serves as a Trojan Horse for positivism, it may productively carry other paradigmatic passengers. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 650 | ||
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Author | Litchfield, M. | ||||
Title | Practice wisdom | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 1999 | Publication ![]() |
Advances in Nursing Science | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 22 | Issue | 2 | Pages | 62-73 |
Keywords | Nursing research; Nursing; Health knowledge | ||||
Abstract | The paper is the report of two cumulative research projects studying the nature of nursing knowledge and methodology to develop it. They were undertaken as theses for masters and doctoral degrees at the University of Minnesota, USA. Nursing knowledge is depicted as relational: an evolving participatory process of research-as-if-practice of which 'health' (its meaning), dialogue, partnership and pattern recognition are threads inter-related around personal values of vision and community. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ 1186 | Serial | 1171 | ||
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Author | Litchfield, M.; Jonsdottir, H. | ||||
Title | A practice discipline that's here and now | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2008 | Publication ![]() |
Advances in Nursing Science | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 31 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 79-92 |
Keywords | Nursing research; Policy; Nursing philosophy | ||||
Abstract | The article is a collaborative writing venture drawing on research findings from New Zealand and Iceland to contribute to the international scholarship on the status and future direction of the nursing discipline. It takes an overview of the international historical trends in nursing knowledge development and proposes a framework for contemporary nursing research that accommodates the past efforts and paradigms of nurse scholars and reflects the changing thinking around the humanness of the health circumstance as the focus of the nursing discipline. It addresses contemporary challenges facing nurses as practitioners and researchers for advancement of practice and delivery of health services, and for influencing health policy. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1174 | ||
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Author | Stewart, A. | ||||
Title | When an infant grandchild dies: Family matters | Type | |||
Year | 2000 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | ResearchArchive@Victoria | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Grief; Nurse-family relations; Infants; Nursing research | ||||
Abstract | This research undertaken by a nurse working with bereaved families, aimed to explore how grandparents, parents and health/bereavement professionals constructed grandparent bereavement when an infant grandchild died unexpectedly. The 26 participants, living in New Zealand and the United Kingdom, included 16 grandparents and 6 parents from 11 families, in addition to three health/bereavement professionals. A constructivist inquiry informed by writings on nursing, storying and postmodernism was used. Through an exploration of the methodological and ethical issues that arose and were addressed during the study, this work adds to knowledge of how constructivist inquiry can be used in nursing and bereavement research. In addition, the context of this research as a partnership with multiple family members contributes to the ongoing debate about whether participation in bereavement research may be harmful or therapeutic. Conversations in this research formed a series of interviews and letters, which led to the development of a joint construction and each individual's story. A grandchild's death was constructed as a challenge which grandparents faced, responded to and then managed the changes that arose from the challenge. The context of their bereavement was seen as underpinned by their relationship as “parents of the adult parents” of the grandchild who died. This meant that grandparents placed their own pain second to their wish to support and “be with” the parents. Outside the family was where many grandparents found friends, colleagues or their community forgot, or chose not to acknowledge, their bereavement. This work shows how some grandparents help to create a space within the family which maintains a continuing relationship with the grandchild who died. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1205 | ||
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Author | Little, S. | ||||
Title | An exploration of vicarious traumatisation in emergency nurses | Type | |||
Year | 2002 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | Victoria University of Wellington Library | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Emergency nursing; Occupational health and safety; Nursing research; Stress | ||||
Abstract | This thesis explores the theoretical notions of suffering and caring within the nurse patient relationship in the context of emergency nursing. It includes a small pilot study that aimed to assess the feasibliity of a major research project, by describing the impact of vicarious traumatisation in emergency nurses, specifically in relation to their self capacities. This pilot study utilised a descriptive, correlational design. Data was collected by using the Inner Experience Questionnaire (IEQ) a twenty four-item questionnaire developed by Dr Pearlman (1995), and a profile sheet which identified demographic details. Twenty-seven emergency nurses participated in this pilot study. The IEQ was assessed for internal reliability by applying the Cronbachs alpha and utilising a focus group to gain insight into the usability and relevance of the questions. The internal reliability of the IEQ suggests that it may be an appropriate tool to measure disruption of self capacities in the population of emergency nurses. Although the results are limited, and conclusions cannot be drawn, findings suggest a correlation between the variables of age, experience, nursing qualifications and a history of personal trauma and the IEQ. There is evidence that emergency nurses are affected psychologically when caring for the victims of trauma in emergency departments and the IEQ has the potential as a tool to be integrated into future emergency nursing studies. A multidimensional methodological approach is recommended to capture the many contours of the complex phenomena of vicarious traumatisation and the emergency nurse. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1249 | ||
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Author | Kidd, J.D. | ||||
Title | What's going on? Mental health nursing in New Zealand | Type | |||
Year | 2002 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | Otago Polytechnic Library | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Psychiatric Nursing; Nursing research | ||||
Abstract | |||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1255 | ||
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Author | Litchfield, M | ||||
Title | To advance health care: The origins of nursing research in New Zealand | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2009 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 129 pp | ||
Keywords | Nursing Research Section, New Zealand Nurses Organisation | ||||
Abstract | This book examines in detail the confluence of personalities and professional and practice agendas, out of which emerged the research section, intent on placing research at the centre of the profession's evolution. It provides a fascinating look at how a group of women, utterly committed to nursing, drove their research agenda and it expands understandings of why nursing research is significant for the development of nursing. It also provides an insight into that web of relationships between the professional body, NZNA, the Department of Health, service delivery and education. To order a copy: Email: publications@nzno.org.nz NZNO members: $25 (incl GST + p&p) Non-NZNO members: $35 (incl GST + p&p) |
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Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1341 | ||
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