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  1. Bedside nurses’ roles in discharge collaboration in general internal medicine: Disconnected, disempowered and devalued?Joanne Goldman, Kathleen MacMillan, Simon Kitto, Robert Wu, Ivan Silver & Scott Reeves - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (3):e12236.
    Collaboration among nurses and other healthcare professionals is needed for effective hospital discharge planning. However, interprofessional interactions and practices related to discharge vary within and across hospitals. These interactions are influenced by the ways in which healthcare professionals’ roles are being shaped by hospital discharge priorities. This study explored the experience of bedside nurses’ interprofessional collaboration in relation to discharge in a general medicine unit. An ethnographic approach was employed to obtain an in‐depth insight into the perceptions and practices of (...)
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  • The Recovery Model: Discourse Ethics and the Retrieval of the Self. [REVIEW]Joseph A. Fardella - 2008 - Journal of Medical Humanities 29 (2):111-126.
    The recovery model, as applied in mental health, is significant because it intends to foster a critical retrieval by the subject of herself as a self-determining agent of change. This paper will show that the recovery model represents an approach to caring for the self that is congruent with critical themes inherent in some forms of contemporary philosophy, particularly that of Michel Foucault and Jurgen Habermas. The paper will also consider the contribution that Habermas’ discourse ethics could make towards the (...)
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