#1 Nursing Resource: 8 Million pageviews per month

Log in   Sign up   Why join?   | Layout: Switch to narrow layout Color: gold style blue style rose style
Nursing Community for Nurses
Home Forums Articles Specialty Students Region Career Resources

Advanced Search Site Help Site Map

Classifying Nursing Work



Currently Online
Members: 121
Guests: 1,113
1,234

Job Spotlight
ER & L&D RN
Houston, Texas
Administrator
Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria
Forum Spotlight
Distance Learning for Nursing

Nursing Degrees

Nursing Articles

Funny Nursing Stories
Funny Nursing Stories
Funny Nursing Stories
Be Kind to Co-workers, Or Else
Fixodent or Forget it!
Me and Mr. Smith and Waffles
How quickly we forget.
It is my X-ray
Thanksgiving Humor
Halloween Humor
Submit An Article

Nursing Jobs

Job Seeker: Employer:

Scrubs & Gear

Newsletter

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the free allnurses.com Nurse-zine Newsletter.

Enter email address:


Read current:
Nursing Newsletter

How-To allnurses

allnurses videos

Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses

The largest most active online nursing community. Join 312,414 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.

Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old Mar 03, 2002, 10:10 PM
NRSKarenRN's Avatar
Co-Administrator
Join Date: Oct 2000
Classifying Nursing Work

Bowker, G. C., Star, S. and Spasser, M. (March, 2001) "Classifying Nursing Work" Online Journal of Issues in Nursing

The Erasure of Nursing

"Nursing work has traditionally been invisible, and its traces have been expunged at the earliest opportunity from the medical record. This has been accomplished both externally, by hospital administrations, and internally, by nurses themselves."

Check out this article re classifying nursing work...some powerful and thought provoking statements here. Karen

Abstract
The attempt to produce a scientific classification of nursing work represents one important direction for building up robust nursing knowledge. It also, at the same time, represents a significant strategy for defending the profession of nursing.

In this paper, we take the example of the Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) to study the tensions that arise when developing and applying a "working memory" or record of nursing interventions.

On one hand, such a record helps to build a knowledge base for the development of scientific nursing and for teaching. In addition, by documenting and representing nursing work in the form of atomic, indivisible units, it allows both the integration of nursing informatics into medical informatics and the recognition of heretofore invisible nursing work by hospital information systems, accounting information systems, and other integrated health care information systems.

On the other hand, such a representation risks exposing nursing to process re-engineering which could result in the reassignment of the "unskilled" portions of nursing work. We show how NIC has developed a rich strategy for dealing with the central tension between the desire for--and the dangers of--visibility.

http://www.nursingworld.org/ojin/tpc7/tpc7_6.htm

Top
  #2  
Old Mar 05, 2002, 08:55 AM
oramar's Avatar
Granny Gidget
Join Date: Nov 1998

I have just been reading through this Karen and it might be one of the most important articles you have posted. It is odd, I almost missed it. Sometimes I think there is an inverse ratio between how important for the long term something you post is and how many people read and respond to it. I love sinking my teeth into something as meaty as this but I think most people are put off by the length and the need to really think.

Top
Sponsored Links
 
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
To work or not to work while in nursing school? momma&nurse2B General Nursing Discussion 18 Jul 19, 2008 11:17 PM
What field of Nursing will you work in??? & best/worst place to work? Soon2bRN_Cali General Nursing Discussion 124 Jun 26, 2008 08:06 PM


Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search



New To Site?
Need Help?

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:39 AM.

Classifying Nursing Work

Copyright © 1996-2008, allnurses.com. All rights reserved.  allnurses.com, Inc. Advertising Information