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Author | Ventura-Madangeng, Judee; Wilson, Denise | ||||
Title | Workplace violence experienced by registered nurses : a concept analysis | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2009 | Publication | Nursing Praxis in New Zealand | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 25 | Issue | 3 | Pages | 37-50 |
Keywords | Workplace violence; Registered nurses and violence; Concept analysis | ||||
Abstract | Undertakes a concept analysis, based on the relevant literature from 1990-2005, to develop an operational definition of workplace violence as experienced by registered nurses (excluding mental health nurses), together with a set of criteria to identify the phenomenon. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1450 | ||
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Author | Entwistle, M. | ||||
Title | Women only? An exploration of the place of men within nursing | Type | |||
Year | 2004 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | Victoria University of Wellington Library | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Nursing; Male nurses; Gender; Recruitment and retention | ||||
Abstract | This dissertation came out of the author's wondering why there are still so few men going into nursing especially when the history of nursing reveals that men have been a part of nursing for a long time. In New Zealand it is only since the mid seventies that men have been able to gain the exact same nursing qualifications as their women colleagues. The author notes that men in nursing are still seen as unusual in that they work in a predominantly female occupation and have had their masculinity questioned by the myth that all men in nursing must be gay. There is also the notion that caring is a difficult task for men and is seen by society as a uniquely feminine ability. Both issues are related to dominant notions of masculinity. In addition to this there is currently a crisis in terms of a nursing shortage and it has been suggested that one way to resolve this crisis is to encourage more men into nursing. Thus this exploration as to why there are so few men in nursing is timely. Men who choose nursing as a career risk challenging the traditional roles of their gender stereotype. A comprehensive search of the literature from different disciplines reveals deeper issues than just the commonly held assumption that nursing is not masculine. Exploring the issues of gender with a particular focus on masculinity has uncovered the concept of hegemonic masculinity. This describes how gender is practiced in a way that legitimises patriarchy, reinforcing the dominant position of men over women as well as over other groups of men. It is these patriarchal attitudes that have seen men marginalised within nursing. On the one hand men in nursing could be seen as challenging the current dominant masculine ideal. However, on the other hand men in nursing may not challenge this hegemonic masculinity; instead often supporting the status quo in an effort to maintain their own masculinity. The author suggests that the implication for nursing, if it is to increase the numbers of men in the profession, is to challenge this notion of hegemonic masculinity. This needs to be done appropriately by critically examining this concept rather than by merely replacing one hegemony with another. He goes on to say that it is now time for nursing education to include a critical exploration of gender issues and how it relates to men as part of undergraduate nursing education for both men and women students. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 601 | ||
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Author | Atherfold, C. | ||||
Title | Will someone walk with me? A case study exploration of graduate nurses' perceptions of the preceptored experience | Type | |||
Year | 2008 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | Unitec New Zealand Library | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Preceptorship; New graduate nurses | ||||
Abstract | The transition from student to registered nurse is a challenging and often stressful time in a nurse's career. This thesis is a case study research project that explores the graduate nurses' perceptions of preceptorship as a strategy to support this transition at Lakes District Health Board (DHB). As a provider of graduate nurse programmes since 1995, Lakes DHB has provided preceptorship for the nurse in the initial period of clinical practice. Annual evaluation by questionnaire identified that this has been applied in a range of ways in different clinical settings with varying degrees of effectiveness. Further inquiry into graduate nurses' perceptions of the preceptored experience during the first twelve weeks of practice within Lakes DHB forms the basis of this research project. The intention is to utilise this insight to further inform the development of preceptor education programmes and application of the preceptor role in the practice setting. Using the case study research method, data has been collected from fourteen participants using semi-structured interviews, focus groups and secondary data from the previous year's questionnaire undertaken by preceptors and graduate nurses. Thematic analysis of the data has resulted in two categories, each with three associated themes. The first category relates to functional factors in the way the preceptorship role is applied. This explores the role of the Clinical Nurse Educator (CNE), organisation within the unit and the teaching of clinical skills. The second category relates to psychosocial considerations and includes the graduate's sense of being scared and advocacy of the preceptor, socialisation and team support, and the preceptor's own experience as a registered nurse. Recommendations from the research include the allocation of a dedicated preceptor selected with consideration for relational ability; complementary rostering and workload allocation to ensure that the preceptor and graduate nurse work together; early notification when preceptor arrangements break down; implementation of a clinical coaching plan; and strengthening the CNE's role as a leader facilitating and supporting preceptorship in the units. Opportunities for further research that arise from the study include the perceptions of the preceptors and the nursing leadership in clinical areas. Structuring the application of preceptorship, to ensure that all of these aspects are woven throughout the graduate nurse's transition results in Korowai Aroha, a cloak of covering for a supported transition that facilitates the development of practice. | ||||
Call Number | NRSNZNO @ research @ | Serial | 866 | ||
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Author | Walker, Leonie; Clendon, Jill; Willis, Jinny | ||||
Title | Why older nurses leave the profession | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Kai Tiaki Nursing Research | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 9 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 5-11 |
Keywords | Attrition, Early retirement, Older nurses, Retention | ||||
Abstract | Examines whether reasons reported in the international 'intention to leave nursing' literature match those given by NZ nurses who left the profession before retirement age. Conducts an online survey in 2016 of nurses who had left the NZNO. Asks about their decision-making process, factors that led to the decision, and what workplace changes might have helped them remain. Analyses results by age cohort. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1594 | ||
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Author | McKelvie, Rhonda | ||||
Title | Where we are and how we got here: an institutional ethnography of the Nurse Safe Staffing Project in New Zealand | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2019 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 289 p. | ||
Keywords | Safe staffing; Short staffing; Frontline nurses; Patient safety; Care Capacity Demand Programme; Nurse Safe Staffing Project; Trendcare; Institutional ethnography; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Charts a detailed description and analysis of how aspects of the strategies of the Nurse Safe Staffing Project work in everyday hospital settings. Argues that nurses' situated knowledge and work are being organised and overridden by competing institutional knowledge and priorities in a competitive institutional environment. Demonstrates the consequences for nurses, patients and staffing strategies. Conducts 30 interviews with 26 participants, including frontline nurses and participants in safe staffing projects. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1651 | ||
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Author | Brunton, Margaret; Cook, Catherine; Walker, Leonie; Clendon, Jill | ||||
Title | Where are we?: workplace communication between RNs in culturally-diverse healthcare organisations; Analysis of a 2-phase, mixed-method study: a report prepared for the New Zealand Nursing Education and Research Foundation | Type | Report | ||
Year | 2017 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 82 p. | ||
Keywords | Communication in nursing; Registered nurses; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Examines cultural influences on perceptions and practices of cross-cultural communication among registered nursing staff from diverse ethnicities in NZ. Employs an exploratory approach to obtain qualitative feedback by means of semi-structured interviews with 36 Internationally Qualified Nurses (IQN) and 17 NZ Registered Nurses (NZRN). Uses data from the interviews to construct a questionnaire survey to seek responses from a random national sample of RNs. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1543 | ||
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Author | Foster, Pamela Margaret | ||||
Title | What undergraduate nurse education actually teaches student nurses about people named as older: A Foucauldian discourse analysis | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 198 p. | ||
Keywords | Nursing education; Aged care; Nurses' perceptions; Stereotypes | ||||
Abstract | Traces the origins of gerontology knowledge among student nurses while considering how people designated as older are perceived by the student nurse, and the effects of functional decline and biomedical discourses on their views of older people when on clinical placement in aged residential care (ARC) facilities. Hghlights the contested domain of gerontology knowledge to generate dialogue about how older age is actually represented in student nurse education, as the current iteration perpetuates stereotypical assumptions about older age. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1745 | ||
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Author | Hawes, Philip C. | ||||
Title | What educational and other experiences assist recently qualified nurses to understand and deal with clinical risk and patient safety? | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2016 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 131 p. | ||
Keywords | Patient safety; Clinical risk; Graduate nurses; Professional development; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Interviews 9 nurses in their first year of clinical practice to investigate how newly-qualified nurses recognise and develop those skills relating to clinical risk and patient safety. Identifies workplace culture, clinical role models, exposure to the clinical environment, experiential learning, narrative sharing, debriefing and simulation as contributing to learning and understanding clinical risk and safe patient care. Considers strategies to facilitate professional development. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1696 | ||
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Author | Walker, Rachael; Abel, Sally; Meyer, Alannah | ||||
Title | What do New Zealand pre-dialysis nurses believe to be effective care? | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2010 | Publication | Nursing Praxis in New Zealand | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 26 | Issue | 2 | Pages | .26-34 |
Keywords | Pre-dialysis nursing; Effective care; Qualitative research; Nurses' perceptions; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Conducts semi-structured phone interviews with 11 pre-dialysis nurses from around NZ. Identifies key themes by means of inductive analysis. Argues that qualitative elements of pre-dialysis nursing care must be considered in addition to quantifiable parameters. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1456 | ||
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Author | Sandford, Germaine | ||||
Title | What do critical care nurses perceive as barriers to mentorship within the critical care environment? | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2013 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 151 p. | ||
Keywords | Critical care nursing; Mentorship; Student nurses; Novice nurses; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Seeks to describe the perceptions and experiences of a sample of nurses working in a critical-care tertiary referral centre in New Zealand, engaged in mentorship of new staff and/or student nurses. Undertakes a descriptive study which identifies four barriers within the critical care environment: the impact that clinical workload has on the provision of mentorship; lack of acknowledgement of the mentorship role; challenge of assessment of new and student nurses; insufficient training and knowledge opportunities for mentors. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1569 | ||
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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 | 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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Author | Kaur, Harpreet | ||||
Title | What are the factors affecting patients with diabetes in regards to their attendance and non-attendance with Diabetes Nurse-Led Clinics in Counties Manukau Health? | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 196 p. | ||
Keywords | Nurse-led clinics; Diabetes nurses; Patients; Non-attendance; Attendance; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Performs a retrospective audit of eight Diabetes Nurse-Led Clinics (DNLC) in two regions of DNLC provision in Auckland over a 12-month period from 2016-2017, at which 707 patients were booked for appointments. Undertakes a nested sampling of two randomly-selected DNLCs, in which 71 participants were invited to participate. Explores patients' perspectives of attendance or non-attendance at their booked appointments. Examines whether patients perceive any benefits of attendance at the clinics, and identifies factors that might improve their experiences with DNLCs. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1650 | ||
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Author | Komene, Ebony; Sami, Lisa; Wiapo, Coral; Davis, Josephine; Adams, Sue | ||||
Title | Whakaropu: an exemplar fostering professional development and cultural growth with a collective grouping of Maori and Pacific nurses | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2023 | Publication | Nursing Praxis in Aotearoa New Zealand | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 39 | Issue | 2 | Pages | |
Keywords | Enrolled nurses; Maori nurses; Pacific nurses; Whakaropu; Professional development; Surveys | ||||
Abstract | Reports on the experiences of five Maori and two Pacific nurses, and three senior indigenous nurse leaders, of being involved in a whakaropu (collective grouping) to attend and present at the National Enrolled Nurse Conference. Conducts face-to-face and online interviews with the members of the group to determine the value of the innovation to foster learning experiences for Maori and Pacific nurses. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1860 | ||
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Author | Richardson, S.K.; Grainger, P.C.; Ardagh, M.W.; Morrison, R. | ||||
Title | Violence and aggression in the emergency department is under-reported and under-appreciated | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | New Zealand Medical Journal | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 131 | Issue | 1476 | Pages | 50-58 |
Keywords | Workplace violence; Emergency nurses; Nurse retention; Audits | ||||
Abstract | Examines levels of reported violence and aggression within a tertiary-level emergency department (ED) in NZ. Explores staff attitudes to violence and the reporting of it. Conducts a one-month intensive prospective audit of the reporting of violence and aggression within the ED. Compares results with previously-reported data, and finds that failure to report acts of violence is common. Highlights that emergency nurses are the primary targets of abuse and confirms the effect it has on retention. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1787 | ||
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