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  1. Assessing enablement in clinical practice: a systematic review of available instruments.Catherine Hudon, Denise St-Cyr Tribble, France Légaré, Gina Bravo, Martin Fortin & José Almirall - 2010 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 16 (6):1301-1308.
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  • Enablement in health care context: a concept analysis.Catherine Hudon, Denise St-Cyr Tribble, Gina Bravo & Marie-Eve Poitras - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (1):143-149.
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  • Heidegger and meaning: implications for phenomenological research.Mary E. Johnson - 2000 - Nursing Philosophy 1 (2):134-146.
    Recently the relevance of the philosophy of Martin Heidegger has been critiqued in nursing literature. However, this critique is based primarily upon an appropriation of Heidegger that does not reflect an understanding of meaning as grounded in temporality. Therefore, this paper aims to (1) explicate Heidegger's grounding of meaning, (2) briefly contrast Heidegger's and Husserl's notions of the origin of meaning, (3) describe how Heidegger was first introduced to nursing, and (4) illustrate through examples from a research study how the (...)
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  • Nursing concept analysis in north America: State of the art.Kathryn Weaver & Carl Mitcham - 2008 - Nursing Philosophy 9 (3):180-194.
    Abstract The strength of a discipline is reflected in the development of a set of concepts relevant to its practice domain. As an evolving professional discipline, nursing requires further development in this respect. Over the past two decades in North America there have emerged three different approaches to concept analysis in nursing scholarship: Wilsonian-derived, evolutionary, and pragmatic utility. The present paper compares and contrasts these three methods of concept in terms of purpose, procedures, philosophical underpinnings, limitations, guidance for researchers, and (...)
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  • The myth of induction in qualitative nursing research.Elisabeth Bergdahl & Carina M. Berterö - 2015 - Nursing Philosophy 16 (2):110-120.
    In nursing today, it remains unclear what constitutes a good foundation for qualitative scientific inquiry. There is a tendency to define qualitative research as a form of inductive inquiry; deductive practice is seldom discussed, and when it is, this usually occurs in the context of data analysis. We will look at how the terms ‘induction’ and ‘deduction’ are used in qualitative nursing science and by qualitative research theorists, and relate these uses to the traditional definitions of these terms by Popper (...)
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  • The dissection of risk: a conceptual analysis.Patrick O’Byrne - 2008 - Nursing Inquiry 15 (1):30-39.
    Recently, patient safety has gained popularity in the nursing literature. While this topic is used extensively and has been analyzed thoroughly, some of the concepts upon which it relies, such as risk, have remained undertheorized. In fact, despite its considerable use, the term ‘risk’ has been largely assumed to be inherently neutral — meaning that its definition and discovery is seen as objective and impartial, and that risk avoidance is natural and logical. Such an oversight in evaluation requires that the (...)
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