1st Edition

Nursing Perspectives on Quality of Life

By Peter Draper Copyright 1997
200 Pages
by Routledge

198 Pages
by Routledge

200 Pages
by Routledge

One of the fundamental aims of nursing is to safeguard or promote patients' 'quality of life'. In Nursing Perspectives on Quality of Life , Peter Draper examines existing ways of defining the concept and argues that nurses need to adopt a fresh approach, which more accurately reflects patients' concerns and helps them to develop practical ways of promoting the well-being of people in their care.... Read more
Introduction Part I The concept of quality of life and its use in health research 1 Introducing quality of life 2 Social indicators of quality of life 3 The quality adjusted life year (QALY) 4 Quality of life and medical research 5 The social scientific approach to quality of life: positivism and it limits Part II Quality of life and nursing practice: philosophy and methods 6 The case for a nursing approach to quality of life 7 Hermeneutics: a philosophical basis for the study of quality of life Part III Quality of life: a nursing perspective 8 Research decisions 9 Being at home: the relationship of places and personal possessions to quality of life 10 Being an individual 11 Organising care to promote quality of life 12 Conclusion: quality of life and its contribution to nursing practice

Biography

Peter Draper is Lecturer in Nursing at the University of Hull

'This excellent book would be of value to all nurses interested in quality issues and in nursing's contribution to health care provision.' - Journal of Community Nursing

'I find it refreshing when authors challenge the prevailing wisdom of established views on important issues. Draper does this in relation to quality of life ... I congratulate him for raising awareness of issues that may not occupy the everyday thinking of nurses.' - Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing

'An invaluable resource for nurses interested in promoting the quality of life of their patients ... both stimulating and interesting, and should encourage nurses to critically examine their practice and promote clinical effectiveness.' - Clinical Effectiveness in Nursing