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Author Turia, D. openurl 
  Title Women's knowledge sources and management decisions Type (down)
  Year 1999 Publication Nursing Praxis in New Zealand Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library, Whitirea Community Poly  
  Volume 14 Issue 1 Pages 53  
  Keywords  
  Abstract It is evident from the prevalence of items in the popular press and incased research by health professional that, over the last two decades, menopause as been discussed more openly. However, medical information is still largely oriented toward menopause as a disease with emphasis on the pharmacological interventions needed to correct the disease. Literature in medical and nursing journals is also predominantly oriented towards menopause as a state of oestrogen, nurse researchers and feminists writers are challenging this viewsThe aim of the research was to discover how women gain knowledge about menopause, and how they make decisions about “managing” their menopause. In the study knowledge was defined as being more than information. It is seen as being more than information. It is seen as understanding derived from synthesis of data about menopause collected from various sources. Eleven women aged 46-55 recruited through a letter in the researcher's local newspaper, were interviewed. The resulting data was analysed by the constant comparison method as used in grounded theory.A descriptive model was developed including the basic social process of “integrating menopause into midlife”. A tertiary level of education and good social support were found to be associated with the women being seekers of knowledge about their menopause. These women, the majority of the participants, revealed themselves as being self-controlling with respect to their menopause. Among the few who had allowed their menopause to be managed by others, if they experienced adverse effects of the treatment, then there was a move toward greater self management.,Generally, nurses were not seen by the participants as possible sources of information. That finding highlights menopause as an area of health education in which nurses have the potential to play a more active role  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 376 Serial 376  
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Author Andrew, C. openurl 
  Title Optimising the human experience: the lived world of nursing the families of people who die in intensive care Type (down)
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 380 Serial 380  
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Author Litchfield, M. openurl 
  Title The process of nursing partnership in family health Type (down)
  Year 1997 Publication Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand Abbreviated Journal University of Minnesota Library  
  Volume 4 Issue 9 Pages 23-25  
  Keywords  
  Abstract The study reconceptualises the process of nursing practice where health is expanding consciousness. The praxis methodology and design derive from the findings of the previous study (Litchfield, 1993) through which a framework for personal practice was articulated. The philosophical premises were hermeneutic and dialogic reflecting a narrative orientation within a participatory paradigm. Ontology and epistemology merge and language is fundamental. The findings from this subsequent study depict the process of modeling practice as a tetrahedron to show inter-relatedness of four facets, each defined completely by the others: partnership, dialogue, pattern recognition and health as dialectic. Five young families with complex health circumstances were preferred by Plunket Nurses and visited at hole to talk about health and the family. Th e process of health patterning ended with indication of insight as the potential for action; the partnership ended as the closure of the initial contract to provide a summary text to the family. Transformative change in family living was identified. The continuous analysis of the scripts of the evolving conversations and summary text showed the relational, dialogic processes were identified as vision – finding purpose to act in the here-and-now against the backdrop of past and potential of the future; and community – a sense of being connected, participant and relevant in society. This process of research, as if practice, presented health and caring as synonymous and core of the discipline of nursing  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 385 Serial 385  
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Author Litchfield, M.; McCombie, M.-L. openurl 
  Title The introduction of an advanced nurse practitioner role in mental health: report of the evaluation research undertaken for the Mental Health Service of Capital Coast Health Ltd Type (down)
  Year 1994 Publication Abbreviated Journal Chief Nurse Advisor, Ministry of Health, PO Box 50  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract The study was commissioned to define the role of Advanced Nurses Practitioner to inform the establishment of a clinical career pathway. Four new, loosely defined ANP positions were created and the role evolution over three months was described. The impact on the multidisciplinary team functioning was to be given particular attention. The research design was developed in collaboration with the ANP Project Team of the service. Data were derived from surveys of nurses in the units and other staff before and at the end of the 3 months period; interviews with the ANPs and official client advocates; daily journals and weekly logs kept by the ANPs; statistical records of patient loads and staffing. The findings presented the role as the interface of unit management and direct client care, with the ANPs orchestrating the activities of the unit. The ANPs developed the role differently according to quite distinct conceptualisations of nursing which influenced whether direct client care was pivotal or peripheral to the role. This had an effect on whether the strains of the service were seen as inhibitory of focal to the development of the ANP practice. There was little change in unit staff satisfaction. Attempts to incorporate client advocacy to determine change in client satisfaction were unsuccessful. The ANPs used the research as a process of role development  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 386 Serial 386  
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Author Litchfield, M.; Clarke, M.; Edwards, R.; Richardson, F.; Tansley, R.; Woodman, K. openurl 
  Title A description of the needs of people with cancer and support people Type (down)
  Year 1995 Publication 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 Litchfield, M. openurl 
  Title Survey of child health care in primary schools in the Wellington area Type (down)
  Year 1979 Publication Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand Abbreviated Journal Author, New Zealand Nurses Association Library, We  
  Volume 75 Issue 2 Pages 18-20  
  Keywords  
  Abstract The study was undertaken as a project for the International Year of the Child. There was a need for information to identify what health care in needed in schools and to contribute to a review of the role of the nurses. Teachers and principals of all primary schools of the Wellington area were surveyed to describe the health care being provided and needed. Recommendations were made for school nurses who would support the health-related teaching by teachers, provide first aid and advice, and take an extended role for family health operating from a clinic in the school.  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ Serial 388  
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Author Litchfield, M.; Connor, M.; Eathorne, T.; Laws, M.; McCombie, M.-L.; Smith, S. openurl 
  Title Family nurse practice in a nurse management scheme: a pilot service study for the health reforms Type (down)
  Year 1994 Publication Abbreviated Journal Centre for Initiative in Nursing & Health Care, P.  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract The independently funded 10 month pilot project demonstrated the autonomy of nursing practice for a new role family nurse. The findings were presented as the health experience of families in strife with complex health circumstances, a description of a beginning model for the nursing practice that addressed the needs of these families as their circumstances changed over time, and its cost-effectiveness. A caseload of nineteen families was found to be optimum. The evaluation research continued throughout as a form of praxis expressed as health patterning, a methodology developed in previous research (Litchfield, 1993). The family nurse'spractice demonstrated qualities common to all nurses: the caring relationship and fiscal responsibility. The unique practice was characterised by a professional partnership of limited duration: the families referred to the service in a predicament of strife, trapped in the immediate present, gained a view to a future, moved towards assuming control over health circumstances, seeking and using services with discernment, and increasing community as family/group members and citizens. Cost containment was achieved through: a) development of a co-operative approach amongst family members, between families and professionals, and amongst all health workers, and b) the families discerning use of services by anticipating a future. Through one family case, cost of saving over the 7 months with the family nurse was estimated as $4000, a possible saving of $16000 over 13 months if the family nurse had been involved earlier, and projected savings in the long term of over a million dollars. The satisfaction of clients, nurses and professionals was shown. The service was positioned within the new health system of health reforms  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 389 Serial 389  
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Author Anderson, M. openurl 
  Title Universal change – individual responses: women's experience of the menopause and of taking hormone replacement therapy Type (down)
  Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 392 Serial 392  
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Author Dyson, L. openurl 
  Title The role of the lecturer in the preceptor model of clinical teaching Type (down)
  Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 395 Serial 395  
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Author Orchard, S.H. openurl 
  Title Characteristics of the clinical education role as percieved by registered nurses working in the practice setting Type (down)
  Year 1999 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 397 Serial 397  
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Author Wilson, D. openurl 
  Title Through the looking glass: nurses' responses to women experiencing partner abuse Type (down)
  Year 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 402 Serial 402  
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Author Davenport, F.A. openurl 
  Title A descriptive study of the spiritual needs of patients with leukemia Type (down)
  Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal Massey University Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 403 Serial 403  
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Author Richardson, A. openurl 
  Title Health promotion and public health nursing Type (down)
  Year 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal University of Otago Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
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  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 405 Serial 405  
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Author Henderson, A.P. openurl 
  Title Nursing a colonial hangover: towards bicultural planning in New Zealand Type (down)
  Year 1994 Publication Abbreviated Journal University of Otago Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 409 Serial 409  
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Author Blanchard, D.L. openurl 
  Title Nursing practice in the changing health care environment “just keep going until you see it right” Type (down)
  Year 1995 Publication Abbreviated Journal Victoria University of Wellington Library  
  Volume Issue Pages  
  Keywords  
  Abstract  
  Call Number NRSNZNO @ research @ 410 Serial 410  
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