1st Edition

Nurses and Nursing The Person and the Profession

Edited By Pádraig Ó Lúanaigh Copyright 2017
230 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

This textbook draws on international contributors with a range of backgrounds to explore, engage with and challenge readers in understanding the many aspects and elements that inform and influence contemporary nursing practice. With a focus to the future, this book explores the challenges facing health services and presents the arguments for a nursing contribution and influence in ensuring safe... Read more

Part I: Understanding nursing and nurses

Chapter 1. Nursing’s public image: toward a professional future

Chapter 2. Nursing, a trusted brand: do we dare to care?

Chapter 3. The changing nature of nurse education: preparing our future workforce

Chapter 4. The unique role of the nurse: the organisation of nursing careers

Part II: Developing your nursing practice

Chapter 5. Nursing regulation: being a professional

Chapter 6. Nurses influencing health care: leading as a professional 

Chapter 7. Creating your professional identity: becoming the nurse you want to be

Part III: Contexts of health care and nursing

Chapter 8. Health literacy and the nurse.patient partnership  

Chapter 9. The global context of health care delivery  

Chapter 10. The economic challenge for health care services  

Chapter 11. Political and policy influences on health care : are nurses political and do they need to be?

Biography

Pádraig Ó Lúanaigh is Deputy Director of Nursing, Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals Foundation NHS Trust, Norwich, UK. With over 28 years’ experience of working within health and higher education, Pádraig has a broad and integrated range of experiences gained from working in organisations across the UK, Australia and New Zealand.

Although offered as a textbook, it is much more: it is a delightful dialogue between the author and reader. This book offers something for everyone, whether a nursing student or a more experienced nurse, at whatever stage of their career.

—Eleanor Sherwen, patient experience and quality manager, NHS England Midlands and East nursing and quality directorate

The strengths of the book include international contributors, well referenced text, additional resources for the reader to access and poignant points to reflect on the issues discussed. The writing style and choice of subjects addressed make this book an enjoyable journey of contemplation, which offers insight to the personal and professional capacity of nursing. Who should read it? Anyone who is interested in gaining insight into nursing’s professional identity and considering the future of nursing as a specialised entity amongst the political and economic complexities that face health care.

- Ibadete Fetahu, Nursing Times