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  1. Does the emphasis on caring within nursing contribute to nurses' silence about practice issues?Sherry Dahlke & Sarah Stahlke Wall - 2017 - Nursing Philosophy 18 (3):e12150.
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  • A discursive exploration of the practices that shape and discipline nurses’ responses to postoperative delirium.Mary Kjorven, Kathy Rush & Rachelle Hole - 2011 - Nursing Inquiry 18 (4):325-335.
    KJORVEN M, RUSH K and HOLE R. Nursing Inquiry 2011; 18: 325–335 A discursive exploration of the practices that shape and discipline nurses’ responses to postoperative deliriumAlthough delirium is classified as a medical emergency, it is often not treated as such by health care providers. The aim of this study was to critically examine, through a poststructural, Foucauldian concept of discourse, the language practices and discourses that shape and discipline nurses' care of older adults with postoperative delirium (POD) with a (...)
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  • How nurses understand and care for older people with delirium in the acute hospital: a Critical Discourse Analysis.Irene Schofield, Debbie Tolson & Valerie Fleming - 2012 - Nursing Inquiry 19 (2):165-176.
    SCHOFIELD I, TOLSON D and FLEMING V. Nursing Inquiry 2012; 19: 165–176 [Epub ahead of print]How nurses understand and care for older people with delirium in the acute hospital: a Critical Discourse AnalysisDelirium is a common presentation of deteriorating health in older people. It is potentially deleterious in terms of patient experience and clinical outcomes. Much of what is known about delirium is through positivist research, which forms the evidence base for disease‐based classification systems and clinical guidelines. There is little (...)
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  • Slavery and jouissance: analysing complaints of suffering in UK and A ustralian nurses' talk about their work.Alicia Evans Michael Traynor - 2014 - Nursing Philosophy 15 (3):192-200.
    Nursing has a gendered and religious history where ideas of duty and servitude are present and shape its professional identity. The profession also promotes idealized notions of relationships with patients and of professional autonomy both of which are, in practice, highly constrained or even impossible. This paper draws on psychoanalytic concepts in order to reconsider nursing's professional identity. It does this by presenting an analysis of data from two focus group studies involving nurses in England and Australia held between 2010 (...)
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  • Slavery and jouissance: analysing complaints of suffering in UK and A ustralian nurses' talk about their work.Michael Traynor & Alicia Evans - 2014 - Nursing Philosophy 15 (3):192-200.
    Nursing has a gendered and religious history where ideas of duty and servitude are present and shape its professional identity. The profession also promotes idealized notions of relationships with patients and of professional autonomy both of which are, in practice, highly constrained or even impossible. This paper draws on psychoanalytic concepts in order to reconsider nursing's professional identity. It does this by presenting an analysis of data from two focus group studies involving nurses in England and Australia held between 2010 (...)
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  • A discursive exploration of nursing work in the hospital emergency setting.Liza Heslop - 1998 - Nursing Inquiry 5 (2):87-95.
    Emergency nurses apply specialist knowledge to the practice of emergency care. This paper discusses the ways in which three emergency nurses understand the nature of their care from their own frames of reference and experiences and presents some of the data collected in a larger study. Various discourses, which compete to inform emergency nurses' understandings of practice, are linked with the notion of nurses as subjects; that is, each discourse may inform, shape and constitute the practice of the nurse and, (...)
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