Browsing Nursing and Midwifery (Scholarly Publications) by Subject "Making Ireland"
Now showing items 1-8 of 8
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Accident Occurrence and Functional Health Patterns. A Pilot Study of Relationships in a Graduate Population.
(2012)PURPOSE: This pilot study sought to examine the relationship between functional health patterns and accident proneness. METHODS: A quantitative-descriptive design was employed assessing accident proneness by collecting ... -
British Association for the study and prevention of Child abuse
(BASPCAN U.K., 2012) -
Defining sexuality for holistic nursing practice: an analysis of the concept
(2000)Sexuality is an integral part of personhood, permeating all aspects of being. Nonetheless, agreement is lacking as to what sexuality actually is. The objective of this paper is to examine the usage and understanding ... -
Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Childhood Development Initiative's Healthy Schools Programme
(Childhood Development Initiative (CDI)., 2012) -
Frontline Care in Irish Intellectual Disability Services: The Contribution of Nurses and Non-Nurse Care Staff
(2008)The ongoing development of generic intellectual disability services in Ireland, driven by a policy of inclusion and normalisation, has posed significant challenges to the interdisciplinary team, with the creation of new ... -
Identifying the foci for nursing in Irish intellectual disability services
(2004)Many of the attempts to classify nursing phenomena (or diagnoses) have been developed within the context of acute/chronic general nursing, and may , as such, be seen to represent only a subsection of the profession as ... -
Learning disabilities nursing: a model for wellness diagnosis
(2002)The idea that nursing diagnoses confirm the relevance of the medical model of nursing has been proposed by many authors, who argue that it is solely another approach to the categorisation and reductionism said to be ... -
Marginalisation in learning disability services: an exploration of the issues.
(1998)In order to understand the reasons for the rapid growth of eugenics in late nineteenth century Britain and the U.S.A, one must first take account of the influence which the industrial and scientific revolution was ...