Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model

Previous theoretical and empirical models of nurses' remaining in everyday nursing practice are explained by elements such as intent to stay and desire to stay. This study provides a model that expands or expresses an increased understanding of the comprehensiveness of the issue by pointing to...

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Main Author: Margareth Kristoffersen PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-05-01
Series:SAGE Open Nursing
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2377960819866343
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spelling doaj-4d6b212148bc4bc48d91722d149c49b82020-11-25T03:38:39ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Nursing2377-96082019-05-01510.1177/2377960819866343Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive ModelMargareth Kristoffersen PhDPrevious theoretical and empirical models of nurses' remaining in everyday nursing practice are explained by elements such as intent to stay and desire to stay. This study provides a model that expands or expresses an increased understanding of the comprehensiveness of the issue by pointing to the qualitative worth of different desires. The aim of this study is to describe a comprehensive model of nurses' remaining in everyday nursing practice. This study was designed in three sequential stages: first, the empirical foundation of the model; second, the development of the model; and third, the description of the model. The described model is derived from a previous qualitative study's comprehensive understanding of empirical findings. That original study was based on a hermeneutical approach, the aim of which was to understand what is of significance for nurses to remain in everyday practice. The collected data consisted of qualitative interviews and qualitative follow-up interviews with 13 nurses. The research context was the primary and secondary somatic and psychiatric health service. The present comprehensive model is stated in a simple structure, which nonetheless provides a relevant framework for constituent elements of nurses' remaining in everyday practice. Horizons of identity and self-understanding have been identified as constituent elements or key concepts involved in remaining. By focusing on a deepened and broader understanding, the model highlights that remaining may be constituted through a process of identification and taking standpoints, which in turn has a potential to empower nurses to realize themselves.https://doi.org/10.1177/2377960819866343
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margareth Kristoffersen PhD
spellingShingle Margareth Kristoffersen PhD
Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model
SAGE Open Nursing
author_facet Margareth Kristoffersen PhD
author_sort Margareth Kristoffersen PhD
title Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model
title_short Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model
title_full Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model
title_fullStr Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model
title_full_unstemmed Nurses' Remaining in Everyday Nursing Practice—A Comprehensive Model
title_sort nurses' remaining in everyday nursing practice—a comprehensive model
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open Nursing
issn 2377-9608
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Previous theoretical and empirical models of nurses' remaining in everyday nursing practice are explained by elements such as intent to stay and desire to stay. This study provides a model that expands or expresses an increased understanding of the comprehensiveness of the issue by pointing to the qualitative worth of different desires. The aim of this study is to describe a comprehensive model of nurses' remaining in everyday nursing practice. This study was designed in three sequential stages: first, the empirical foundation of the model; second, the development of the model; and third, the description of the model. The described model is derived from a previous qualitative study's comprehensive understanding of empirical findings. That original study was based on a hermeneutical approach, the aim of which was to understand what is of significance for nurses to remain in everyday practice. The collected data consisted of qualitative interviews and qualitative follow-up interviews with 13 nurses. The research context was the primary and secondary somatic and psychiatric health service. The present comprehensive model is stated in a simple structure, which nonetheless provides a relevant framework for constituent elements of nurses' remaining in everyday practice. Horizons of identity and self-understanding have been identified as constituent elements or key concepts involved in remaining. By focusing on a deepened and broader understanding, the model highlights that remaining may be constituted through a process of identification and taking standpoints, which in turn has a potential to empower nurses to realize themselves.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2377960819866343
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