Literature DB >> 19906278

The Nurse Project: an analysis for nurses to take back our work.

Janet M Rankin1.   

Abstract

This paper challenges nurses to join together as a collective in order to facilitate ongoing analysis of the issues that arise for nurses and patients when nursing care is harnessed for health care efficiencies. It is a call for nurses to respond with a collective strategy through which we can 'talk back' and 'act back' to the powerful rationality of current thinking and practices. The paper uses examples from an institutional ethnographic (IE) research project to demonstrate how dominant approaches to understanding nursing position nurses to overlook how we activate practices of reform that reorganize how we nurse. The paper then describes two classroom strategies taken from my work with students in undergraduate and graduate programs. The teaching strategies I describe rely on the theoretical framework that underpin the development of an IE analysis. Taken into the classroom (or into other venues of nursing activism) the tools of IE can be adapted to inform a pedagogical approach that supports nurses to develop an alternate analysis to what is happening in our work.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19906278     DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1800.2009.00458.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurs Inq        ISSN: 1320-7881            Impact factor:   2.393


  2 in total

1.  An inquiry into what organised difficult advance care planning conversations in a Scottish residential care home using institutional ethnography.

Authors:  Lorna Reid; Angela Kydd; Bonnie Slade
Journal:  J Res Nurs       Date:  2018-03-07

2.  The business of care: the moral labour of care workers.

Authors:  Eleanor K Johnson
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2015-01
  2 in total

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