Professional and Patient Responsibilities in Home Health Care Nursing
Author: | Marrone, Catherine |
Year: | 1999 |
Pages: | 196 |
ISBN: | 0-7734-7975-9 978-0-7734-7975-3 |
Price: | $159.95 |
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Discussions in this book include home care nursing, who enters home care, what home health care nurses do, and working relationships.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents:
1.Home Care Nursing: new meanings; more than women's work; interviews with home health care nurses; observation of home care nurses; patient interviews; hospital nurse interviews and observation; mail questionnaire
2.Who Enters Home Care: change in the life course; nursing gets medical; the cohort effect; transitions; return to ideals
3.What Home Health Care Nurses Do: distinctly nursing; little time for the real caring; making time in Waterview; opening a case – first visit with Ethel Langston; the usual at Waterview; re-visit to Mrs. Margeaux Evian; an exception among hospital care
4.Doctors and Nurses – and Patients: on hospital grounds; tensions unveiled; home care advantage; leaving the bother to nurses; the nurse's gain
5.Working Relationships: working together – the hospital mentality; the tensions of teamwork; on their own – home health care nursing; home care and technical support; a different kind of social support; less to say about supervisors; price of independence
6.Something to Look Forward to – Nurses' Relationships with Patients: the hospital-produced relationship; afraid of the future; a patient-centered relationship – the home health difference intimacy and its price importance of patient census; reliance on caregivers
7.Autonomy Revisited, New sources in Home Care: making sense of autonomy in home care; the impulse to disassociate; collective we fall
8.Conclusion: costs control home care nurses
References, Index