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1.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 31(4): 296-307, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19033745

ABSTRACT

Much emphasis has been placed on the importance of nurses' articulating what they do to counteract the invisibility of nursing practice. Yet there has been minimal focus on why nurses are silent. This article explores the link between technical and caring discourses and nurses' silence and suggests an alternative discourse that conceptualizes nursing as a knowledge-driven enterprise that shifts the focus from what nurses do to what nurses know by promoting nurses' practice knowledge as a language for articulating their practice.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Communication , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Knowledge , Nurse's Role/psychology , Semantics , Assertiveness , Attitude to Health , Community Health Planning , Empathy , Evidence-Based Nursing/organization & administration , Holistic Health , Humans , Narration , Nurse Clinicians/organization & administration , Nurse Clinicians/psychology , Nursing Methodology Research , Philosophy, Nursing , Postmodernism , Power, Psychological , Professional Autonomy , Self Efficacy , Social Perception
2.
Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont) ; 18(4): 70-89, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16463647

ABSTRACT

As the advanced practice nursing initiative in Canada gains momentum, effort is being directed towards clarifying and defining advanced practice roles. A qualitative study was undertaken to increase understanding of the clinical nurse specialist role of advanced practice. Sixteen nurses who worked in advanced practice roles, organizing and providing healthcare for children with complex health needs and their families across the continuum of care, participated in in-depth conversations about the nature of their practice, the knowledge that informs it and the factors that influence it. Findings suggest that clinical nurse specialists have a unique role in the organization and delivery of healthcare for specialized populations with complex health needs in their dual focus on the system level of healthcare and on population health needs. Initiatives directed to children and families within the study participants' specialties included program development, consultation and educational outreach and the development of clinical guidelines and policies. Although the nurses described their practice as focusing both on individual children and families and on the population of children and families within their specialty, it is at the population level that they see their greatest potential for contributing to the delivery of high-quality, cost-effective healthcare.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Nurse Clinicians/organization & administration , Nurse Clinicians/psychology , Nurse's Role/psychology , Pediatric Nursing/organization & administration , Canada , Community Health Planning , Community-Institutional Relations , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Education, Nursing, Continuing , Health Services Needs and Demand , Humans , Nurse Clinicians/education , Nursing Methodology Research , Organizational Objectives , Parents/education , Parents/psychology , Patient Education as Topic , Pediatric Nursing/education , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Professional Autonomy , Professional Competence , Professional-Family Relations , Program Development , Qualitative Research , Self Concept , Surveys and Questionnaires
3.
J Adv Nurs ; 44(1): 34-41, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12956667

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: An essential component of quality nursing care is nurses' ability to work with parents in the hospital care of their children. However, changes in the health care environment have presented nurses with many new challenges, including meeting family-centred care expectations. AIM OF THE PAPER: To report a research study examining the experiences of parents who interacted with nurses in a hospital setting regarding the care of their children. METHODS: A qualitative approach was employed for this study. In-depth audiotaped interviews were conducted with eight parents representing seven families. Data collection was completed over a 7-month period in 2001. FINDINGS: Parents characterized their experiences with nurses caring for their children as interactions, and identified the elements of establishing rapport and sharing children's care as key to a positive perception of the interactions. These elements were influenced by parental expectations of nurses. Changes in nurses' approach were reported by parents as the children's conditions changed. CONCLUSION: Nurses were able to work with families in the hospital care of their children in ways that parents perceived as positive. However, in parents' views, their interactions with nurses did not constitute collaborative relationships. A deeper understanding of these interactions may provoke new thinking about how to promote an agency's philosophy, and how nurses enact this philosophy in practice.


Subject(s)
Child, Hospitalized/psychology , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology , Professional-Family Relations , Quality of Health Care/standards , Attitude to Health , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Nurse-Patient Relations , Parents/psychology
4.
West J Nurs Res ; 25(2): 119-33, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12666639

ABSTRACT

Qualitative researchers have long recognized that fatigue is a common concern among those with chronic illness; however, the insights derived from this body of inquiry have not been synthesized into a coherent body of clinical knowledge that could provide direction for nursing practice. Using a synthesis approach of meta-study, the authors identify four predominant assumptions embedded in qualitative studies that have influenced the way researchers have interpreted and made sense of their findings about fatigue in chronic illness over the past two decades. They argue that these assumptions may have inhibited the development of more dynamic, comprehensive understandings of fatigue. They conclude that addressing some of the methodological issues within this body of research might lead to a more accurate portrayal of the complexity, fluidity, and contextual nature of the fatigue experienced in chronic illness.


Subject(s)
Fatigue/etiology , Fatigue/nursing , Nursing Methodology Research , Chronic Disease , Fatigue/psychology , Humans
5.
Qual Health Res ; 12(4): 437-52, 2002 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11939247

ABSTRACT

Concurrent with the recent enthusiasm for qualitative research in the health fields, an energetic call for methods by which to synthesize the knowledge has been generated on various substantive topics. Although there is an emerging literature on meta-analysis and metasynthesis, many authors overestimate the simplicity of such approaches and erroneously assume that useful knowledge can be synthesized from limited collections of study reports without a thorough analysis of their theoretical, methodological, and contextual foundations and features. In this article, the authors report some of the insights obtained from an extensive and exhaustive metastudy of qualitative studies of chronic illness experience. Their findings reveal the complexities inherent not only in any phenomenon of interest to health researchers but also in the study of how we have come to know what we think we know about it.


Subject(s)
Chronic Disease/psychology , Health Services Research , Meta-Analysis as Topic , Sick Role , Humans
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