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  1. Comment.Pam Smith & Maria Lorentzon - 2005 - Nursing Ethics 12 (6):638-642.
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  • Comment.Pam Smith & Maria Lorentzon - 2005 - Nursing Ethics 12 (6):638-642.
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  • Cancer Patients' Perception of Being or Not Being Confirmed.Dagfinn Nåden & Berit Sæteren - 2006 - Nursing Ethics 13 (3):222-235.
    The aim of this study was to obtain in-depth knowledge about caring confirmation of patients with cancer, from the patients’ point of view. The research topic was: what is the significance for patients of their being confirmed by nursing personnel? Fifteen men and women between 43 and 80 years of age participated in this study. The method of data collection used was qualitative research interviewing. A hermeneutic approach was used to interpret the data, in which Kvale’s self-perception, the ‘common sense’ (...)
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  • “What a nurse suffers”: Care left undone in seventeenth‐century Madrid.Tanya Langtree, Melanie Birks & Narelle Biedermann - 2020 - Nursing Philosophy 21 (1):e12274.
    Care left undone, interchangeably referred to as missed care, unfinished nursing care and task incompletion, is pervasive in contemporary healthcare systems. Care left undone can result in adverse outcomes for the patient, nurse and organization. The rhetoric that surrounds care left undone infers it is a contemporary nursing phenomenon; however, a seventeenth‐century Spanish nursing treatise, Instruccion de Enfermeros (Instructions for Nurses), challenges this assumption. Instruccion de Enfermeros was an instructional guide that was written for members of the Congregation of Bernardino (...)
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  • A grounded theory of humanistic nursing in acute care work environments.Mojgan Khademi, Eesa Mohammadi & Zohreh Vanaki - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (8):908-921.
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  • Del insomnio provocado por el "hay", al despertar ético del rostro: tras las huellas de la vigilancia levinasiana como actitud crítica y autocrítica gracias a la "epojé".Fran Idareta Goldaracena - 2011 - Revista de Filosofía (Madrid) 36 (2):85-107.
    Our objective consists of proposing that the concept of –from the levinasian perspective– the there is is ultimately the conceptual predecessor of the face of the Other, and that the extreme vigilance to which we awaken fundamentally consists of that decategorization of the critical and autocritical notion to which the vulnerability of the Other forces us to succumb to after having prevoluntarily felt its irreducibility. We speculate that this critical and auto-critical notion corresponds to the concept of the epojé, and (...)
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  • Self‐sacrifice, self‐transcendence and nurses' professional self.Elizabeth J. Pask - 2005 - Nursing Philosophy 6 (4):247-254.
    In this paper I elaborate a notion of nurses’ professional self as one who is attracted towards intrinsic value. My previous work in 2003 has shown how nurses, who see intrinsic value in their work, experience self‐affirmation when they believe that they have made a difference to that which they see to have value. The aim of this work is to reveal a further aspect of nurses’ professional self. I argue that nurses’ desire towards that which they see to have (...)
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  • Humility and its Practice in Nursing.Kay de Vries - 2004 - Nursing Ethics 11 (6):577-586.
    Following a personal experience of transformation as a result of washing the feet of a terminally ill patient, an exploratory study was undertaken to investigate nurses’ experience of washing patients’ feet. Seven postregistration student nurses participated in the study by washing the feet of as many patients as they could over a defined period of time. They were then interviewed about the experience. The transcribed interviews were analysed using the heuristic enquiry approach. Symbolically, washing feet is an act of humility. (...)
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  • Recognition Theory in Nurse/Patient Relationships: The contribution of Gillian Rose.Rachel Cummings - 2018 - Nursing Philosophy 19 (4):e12220.
    Recognition theory attempts to conceptualize interpersonal relationships and their normative political implications. British social philosopher Gillian Rose developed her own version of recognition rooted in the work of Georg Hegel. This article applies Rose's theory of recognition to care, arguing that its emphasis on lack of identity, the dynamic process of recognition and the existential risks involved accurately describes the relationship between nurse and patient. Rose's version is compared to both contemporary notions of the interpersonal in healthcare literature, other forms (...)
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  • A Foucauldian discourse analysis of media reporting on the nurse‐as‐hero during COVID‐19.Maggie Boulton, Anna Garnett & Fiona Webster - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry.
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