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Nursing Commons

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University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Theses/Dissertations

2007

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Nursing

Nursing In Hell: The Experience Of Providing Care During And After Hurricane Katrina, Marti L. Jordan-Welch Dec 2007

Nursing In Hell: The Experience Of Providing Care During And After Hurricane Katrina, Marti L. Jordan-Welch

Doctoral Dissertations

Hurricane Katrina, a Category Four hurricane, made landfall on August 29, 2005, along the Gulf Coast of Mississippi and Louisiana. The strength and the extent of winds resulted in the worst destruction and the largest storm surge in the history of the United States. Within hours after the hurricane hit, the earthen levees in New Orleans were breached and 80% of the city became submerged in up to 20 feet of water. Health care workers and patients were stranded in hospitals, where they experienced extreme environmental conditions. The death toll was reported at, 1836 persons, and the damage was estimated …


Becoming Tied: A Theory Of Adolescent Maternal-Infant Interaction, Melinda K. Sprinkle Collins Aug 2007

Becoming Tied: A Theory Of Adolescent Maternal-Infant Interaction, Melinda K. Sprinkle Collins

Doctoral Dissertations

The purpose of this study was to describe the interaction that occurs between adolescent mothers and their newborns while situated together in the immediate postpartum period. The researcher sought to determine: 1) What are the interactive process (es) that occur between adolescent mothers and their newborns while situated together in the immediate postpartum period, 2) What categories emerge from the adolescents’ descriptions of the mother infant situation?, and 3) How do the emergent categories relate?

Ten primiparous adolescent mothers age 17 years or less were purposively sampled to participate in this qualitative Grounded Theory study. Face to face interviews about …


Waiting For The Other Shoe To Drop: The Lived Experience Of Hope For Mothers Of Premature Infants In The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Kristina Maria Plaas May 2007

Waiting For The Other Shoe To Drop: The Lived Experience Of Hope For Mothers Of Premature Infants In The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Kristina Maria Plaas

Doctoral Dissertations

The purpose of this study was to describe the lived experience of hope for mothers of premature infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). This study was grounded in the existential-phenomenologic philosophy of Merleau-Ponty. A purposive sample of six mothers of infants born between 23 ½ and 31 weeks gestation were interviewed by the researcher 10 months to 2 ½ years after birth. Mothers were asked to think back to when their infant was in the NICU and tell about a specific time when they were aware of hope. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed following a hermeneutic process …


Why Am I Still Here, You Ask? A Phenomenological Study Of The Lived Experience Of Nurse Managers, Wendy Carlton Shea-Messler May 2007

Why Am I Still Here, You Ask? A Phenomenological Study Of The Lived Experience Of Nurse Managers, Wendy Carlton Shea-Messler

Doctoral Dissertations

Fewer people are entering the profession of nursing. There is already a shortage of nurses, yet, many abandon the bedside for lucrative ways to practice their art and for respected positions less inhibited by bureaucratic initiatives. A significant percentage of nurses will soon retire, further diminishing the number of experienced caregivers.

Good nurses require great leaders. A primary goal of organizations is to retain and recruit effective nurse managers. This study provides insight to the needs of nurse managers and aspects that keep them from leaving their jobs. The purpose of this study was to gain a differentiated understanding of …