The March issue of Journal of Nursing Management has a lot of interesting content, and the following is a selection of them. If you have access to the journal on-line or as hard copy, you may follow up to get the articles, but if not, please feel free to e-mail me at Leeds University and I will forward the ones you request.
Hendel T, M Fish & V Galon(2005) 'Leadership style and choice of strategy in conflict management aamong Israeli nurse managers in general hospitals, Journal of Nursing Management [JNM] V.13 No 2 :pp137-146.
Henderson A, S Winch, R Henney et al (2005) 'Working from the inside', an infrastructure for the continuing development of nurses' professional clinical practice, JNM V. 13 No.2,pp106-110.
Murphy L (2005) Transformational leadership: a cascading chain reaction, JNM V.13 No.2,pp128-136.
Nilsson K, & U S Larsson(2005)Conceptions of gender - a study of female and male head nurses' statements, JNM V.13 No.2,pp179-186.
Rutherford J, J Leigh, J Monk & C Murray (2005) Creating an organizational infrastructure to develop and support new nursing roles - a framework for debate, JNM V.13 No.2,pp97-105.
Suominen T, Savikko N et al (2005) Work empowerment as experienced by head nurses, JNM V.13 No.2,pp147-153.
Wednesday, February 23, 2005
Friday, February 18, 2005
Quiet times...turbulent times.
Quiet times recently: a week ago I had a tooth extraction, and have had a terrible time for a week, lots of pain, just feeling awful. I had forgotten what a shock to the system a dental extraction is - like an assault. Today, for the first time since before the event, I have energy enough for anything else than trying to manage the pain. I was able to read a short book, "Rain" by Kirsty Gunn, and listen to some music, Brahms' First Symphony.
This is a piece of music forever associated with my last year in high school. I heard it first while lying in the Botanical Garden in Wellington, New Zealand, in August 1968,just when the Russian tanks moved into Czechoslovakia. I was in Wellington for a selection course for the New Zealand Volunteer Servce Abroad [VSA] scheme. Those seemed like quiet days in turbulent times.
This is a piece of music forever associated with my last year in high school. I heard it first while lying in the Botanical Garden in Wellington, New Zealand, in August 1968,just when the Russian tanks moved into Czechoslovakia. I was in Wellington for a selection course for the New Zealand Volunteer Servce Abroad [VSA] scheme. Those seemed like quiet days in turbulent times.
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