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  1. Invisible economics of nursing: analysis of a hospital bill through a Foucauldian perspective.Karen B. Lasater - 2014 - Nursing Philosophy 15 (3):221-224.
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  • The politics of knowledge: implications for understanding and addressing mental health and illness.Emily K. Jenkins - 2014 - Nursing Inquiry 21 (1):3-10.
    While knowledge represents a valuable commodity, not all forms of knowledge are afforded equal status. The politics of knowledge, which entails the privileging of particular ways of knowing through linkages between the producers of knowledge and other bearers of authority or influence, represents a powerful force driving knowledge development. Within the health research and practice community, biomedical knowledge (i.e. knowledge pertaining to the biological factors influencing health) has been afforded a privileged position, shaping the health research and practice community's view (...)
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  • Reviewing Foucault: possibilities and problems for nursing and health care.Julianne Cheek & Sam Porter - 1997 - Nursing Inquiry 4 (2):108-119.
    This paper addresses Foucauldian theory and its usefulness to nursing research. It is written in the form of a discussion between the authors on the merits and liabilities of Foucauldian theory as applied to analyses of nursing. As such, it focuses upon some of the more pertinent critiques of both Foucauldian and postmodern theory. By addressing Foucault from two different positions, the discussion seeks to demonstrate the complexity of Foucauldian theory and warns against oversimplification in its application to nursing research. (...)
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  • Nurses and medication error: a discursive reading of the literature.Terri Gibson - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (2):108-117.
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  • Doctors' orders and the language of representation.Em M. Pijl-Zieber - 2013 - Nursing Philosophy 14 (2):139-147.
    The term doctors' orders or physicians' orders is endemic to nurses' work, to the degree perhaps that few nurses give the term much thought. The nursing profession has progressed over its historical trajectory, from a level of considerable dependence upon physicians' directives, in its beginning, to much greater professional autonomy. However, the term order remains a stronghold in nurses' professional reality, despite the fact that this term is laden with anachronistic ideological interests that are embedded within the historical, sociopolitical and (...)
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  • A discursive exploration of the practices that shape and discipline nurses’ responses to postoperative delirium.Mary Kjorven, Kathy Rush & Rachelle Hole - 2011 - Nursing Inquiry 18 (4):325-335.
    KJORVEN M, RUSH K and HOLE R. Nursing Inquiry 2011; 18: 325–335 A discursive exploration of the practices that shape and discipline nurses’ responses to postoperative deliriumAlthough delirium is classified as a medical emergency, it is often not treated as such by health care providers. The aim of this study was to critically examine, through a poststructural, Foucauldian concept of discourse, the language practices and discourses that shape and discipline nurses' care of older adults with postoperative delirium (POD) with a (...)
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