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  1. Radical nursing and the emergence of technique as healthcare technology.Alan Barnard - 2016 - Nursing Philosophy 17 (1):8-18.
    The integration of technology in care is core business in nursing and this role requires that we must understand and use technology informed by evidence that goes much deeper and broader than actions and behaviours. We need to delve more deeply into its complexity because there is nothing minor or insignificant about technology as a major influence in healthcare outcomes and experiences. Evidence is needed that addresses technology and nursing from perspectives that examine the effects of technology, especially related to (...)
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  • Philosophy of technology and nursing.Alan Barnard - 2002 - Nursing Philosophy 3 (1):15–26.
    This paper outlines the background and significance of philosophy of technology as a focus of inquiry emerging within nursing scholarship and research. The thesis of the paper is that philosophy of technology and nursing is fundamental to discipline development and our role in enhancing health care. It is argued that we must further our responsibility and interest in critiquing current and future health care systems through philosophical inquiry into the experience, meaning and implications of technology. This paper locates nurses as (...)
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  • Pursuing the meaning of meaning in the commercial world: An international review of marketing and consumer research founded on semiotics.David Glen Mick, James E. Burroughs, Patrick Hetzel & Mary Yoko Brannen - 2004 - Semiotica 2004 (152 - 1/4):1-74.
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  • Simulated human patients and patient-centredness: The uncanny hybridity of nursing education, technology, and learning to care.Aileen V. Ireland - 2017 - Nursing Philosophy 18 (1):e12157.
    Positioned within a hybrid of the human and technology, professional nursing practice has always occupied a space that is more than human. In nursing education, technology is central in providing tools with which practice knowledge is mobilized so that students can safely engage with simulated human patients without causing harm to real people. However, while there is an increased emphasis on deploying these simulated humans as emissaries from person‐centred care to demonstrate what it is like to care for real humans, (...)
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