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  1. Connecting philosophy and practice: implications of two philosophic approaches to pain for nurses' expert clinical decision making: Original article.Barbara Pesut - 2007 - Nursing Philosophy 8 (4):256-263.
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  • On the misguided search for a definition of nursing.Sally Thorne - 2023 - Nursing Inquiry 30 (4):e12610.
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  • Can nursing epistemology embrace p -values?Christine H. K. Ou, Wendy A. Hall & Sally E. Thorne - 2017 - Nursing Philosophy 18 (4):e12173.
    The use of correlational probability values (p‐values) as a means of evaluating evidence in nursing and health care has largely been accepted uncritically. There are reasons to be concerned about an uncritical adherence to the use of significance testing, which has been located in the natural science paradigm. p‐values have served in hypothesis and statistical testing, such as in randomized controlled trials and meta‐analyses to support what has been portrayed as the highest levels of evidence in the framework of evidence‐based (...)
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  • Community nurses and chronic disease in Israel: Professional dominance as a social justice issue.Rachel Nissanholtz–Gannot & Ephraim Shapiro - 2021 - Nursing Inquiry 28 (1):e12376.
    Chronic diseases are major causes of health inequalities. Community nurses can potentially make large contributions to chronic illness prevention and management in Israel but may be obstructed by professional dominance of physicians. However, insufficient research exists about community nursing in Israel, and how it may differ from other countries. This study aims to document chronic disease‐related community nursing roles in Israel, identify changes and trends in community nursing roles that may increase social justice, and understand how the roles and trends (...)
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  • Cells and the (imaginary) patient: the multistable practitioner–technology–cell interface in the cytology laboratory. [REVIEW]Anette Forss - 2012 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 15 (3):295-308.
    Modern health care is inextricably bound up with technologically mediated knowledge and practice. It is vital to investigate its use and role in different clinical contexts characterized, on one hand, by face to face practitioner and patient encounters (where technology may be conceptualised as hindering therapeutic relations) and, on the other hand, by practitioners’ encounter with bodily parts in laboratories (where conceiving of patients may be thought of as confounding objectivity). To contribute to the latter, I offer an ethnographic analysis (...)
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