The Nursing of Families
Theory/Research/Education/Practice
Edited by:
- Suzanne L. Feetham
- Susan Meister
- Janice Bell
- Catherine L. Gilliss - University of California, San Francisco, USA
October 1992 | 328 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Respected scholars contribute chapters to this comprehensive volume that provide state-of-the-art nursing care for families. Based upon papers presented at the Second International Conference on Family Nursing, it offers significant directions for cross-cutting issues in practice, education research, and theory to bridge the gap between perceived needs and expectations of families and the practice of nursing of families. Among the diverse and compelling issues explored are policy and economic issues, theory development, research methodology (sampling and scoring family data, practice issues, and education), and contemporary topics such as cross-cultural concerns, HIV/AIDS, feminist perspectives on family nursing research, and homeless mothers and their children. A final section utilizes meta-analysis techniques to answer the question, "Does family intervention make a difference?"
This volume will be a valuable resource for graduate students and faculty of nursing, family studies, health services, and social work programs. Clinicians, and others interested in the most recent developments in the field of family nursing, will also benefit from this outstanding volume.
"The strengths of this book are many. . . . The contributors are leaders in the family nursing and health care field. This book belongs on the shelf of serious family health care professionals, whether they practice in the clinical area, conduct research, teach, or are involved in policymaking. The book also provides a good reference for graduate students in any health care discipline. I am proud that nurses, along with other family social scientists, are embracing the family as a unit of care/analysis, and this collection represents some of the latest thinking toward this end."
--Family Relations
PART ONE: THE FAMILY'S AGENTS: POLICY AND NURSING
PART TWO: THEORY DEVELOPMENT AND FAMILIES
Ann L Whall
Disciplinary Issues Related to Family Theory Development in Nursing
Virginia E Hayes
Nursing Science in Family Care 1984-1990
Maureen A Frey
A Theoretical Perspective of Family and Child Health Derived from King's Conceptual Framework for Nursing
Janet A Deatrick, Kathleen A Knafl and Kim Guyer
Uncovering the Meaning of Caregiving Behaviors
Marilyn A McCubbin
Family Stress Theory and the Development of Nursing Knowledge About Family Adaptation
PART THREE: RESEARCH METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES
Janet A Deatrick, Sandra A Faux and Carol Murphy Moore
The Contribution of Qualitative Research to the Study of Families' Experiences with Childhood Illness
Kathleen A Knafl et al
One Approach to Conceptualizing Family Response to Illness
Helene J Moriarty and Margaret Cotroneo
Sampling Issues, and Recruitment and Sampling Strategies in Family Research
Carol J Loveland-Cherry et al
Scoring Family Data
Suzanne Feetham, Mary Perkins and Ruth Carroll
Exploratory Analysis
PART FOUR: PRACTICE
Lorraine M Wright and Anne Marie C Levac
The Non-Existence of Non-Compliant Families
Teresa A Savage et al
Ethical Decision-Making with Families in Crisis
Robin B Thomas, Kathryn E Barnard and Georgina A Sumner
Family Nursing Diagnosis as a Framework for Family Assessment
Sharon Jackson Barton, Arlene M Sperhac and Sheila A Haas
Family Nursing Approach for a Clinical Ladder
PART FIVE: EDUCATION
Janet A Deatrick et al
Development of a Model to Guide Advanced Practice in Family Nursing
Mary Perkins and Kathy Rigney
Education for Family Health Care in Clinical Settings
Catherine A Chesla, Catherine L Gilliss and Maribelle B Leavitt
Preparing Specialists in Family Nursing
PART SIX: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
Marta A Browning and Jean H Woods
Cross Cultural Family-Nurse Partnerships
Julie E Sprott
The Black Box in Family Assessment
Mary M Cardwell
Family Nursing Research
Marie Annette Brown
Caregiver Stress in Families of Persons with HIV/AIDS
Edna M Menke and Janet D Wagner
The Health of Homeless Mothers and Their Children
Lee Smith
Mothering in the Midst of Danger
Jeri W Dunkin, Colleen Holzwarth and Terry Stratton
Assessment of Rural Family Hardiness
PART SEVEN: DOES FAMILY INTERVENTION MAKE A DIFFERENCE? AN INTEGRATIVE REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS