Results for 'home health'

991 found
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  1.  6
    New home for OPRR.National Institutes of Health Panel - 1999 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 9 (3):285-287.
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  2.  74
    Remote home health care technologies: how to ensure privacy? Build it in: Privacy by Design.Ann Cavoukian, Angus Fisher, Scott Killen & David A. Hoffman - 2010 - Identity in the Information Society 3 (2):363-378.
    Current advances in connectivity, sensor technology, computing power and the development of complex algorithms for processing health-related data are paving the way for the delivery of innovative long-term health care services in the future. Such technological developments will, in particular, assist the elderly and infirm to live independently, at home, for much longer periods. The home is, in fact, becoming a locus for health care innovation that may in the future compete with the hospital. However, (...)
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  3.  53
    New Models for Home Health Care under Uncertainty with Consideration of the Coordinated Development of Economy and Environment.Yan Cui, Lijun Zhang, Qiuye Gao, Bohao Li & Yumei Hou - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-15.
    With the aggravation of population aging, home health care services are paid more and more attention by the elderly. Previous studies aim at improving service quality and reducing cost, ignoring the coordinated and sustainable development of the economy and environment. From the perspective of sustainable development, this paper first establishes a linear optimization model considering transportation, time, and carbon emission costs. However, the uncertainty of service demand is a very difficult problem for HHC research. Most of the previous (...)
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  4.  77
    Mapping ethical issues in the use of smart home health technologies to care for older persons: a systematic review.Nadine Andrea Felber, Yi Jiao Tian, Félix Pageau, Bernice Simone Elger & Tenzin Wangmo - 2023 - BMC Medical Ethics 24 (1):1-13.
    Background The worldwide increase in older persons demands technological solutions to combat the shortage of caregiving and to enable aging in place. Smart home health technologies (SHHTs) are promoted and implemented as a possible solution from an economic and practical perspective. However, ethical considerations are equally important and need to be investigated. Methods We conducted a systematic review according to the PRISMA guidelines to investigate if and how ethical questions are discussed in the field of SHHTs in caregiving (...)
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  5.  10
    Effect of Medicare home health care payment on informal care.Ezra Golberstein, David C. Grabowski, Kenneth M. Langa & Michael E. Chernew - 2009 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 46 (1):58-71.
  6.  17
    The Influence of Medicare Home Health Payment Incentives: Does Payer Source Matter?David C. Grabowski, David G. Stevenson, Haiden A. Huskamp & Nancy L. Keating - 2006 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 43 (2):135-149.
  7.  29
    The Re-contextualization of the Patient: What Home Health Care Can Teach Us About Medical Decision-Making.Erica K. Salter - 2015 - HEC Forum 27 (2):143-156.
    This article examines the role of context in the development and deployment of standards of medical decision-making. First, it demonstrates that bioethics, and our dominant standards of medical decision-making, developed out of a specific historical and philosophical environment that prioritized technology over the person, standardization over particularity, individuality over relationship and rationality over other forms of knowing. These forces de-contextualize the patient and encourage decision-making that conforms to the unnatural and contrived environment of the hospital. The article then explores several (...)
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  8.  18
    Development of a home health agency nursing ethics committee.Pamela A. Miya & Marlene E. Tully - 1997 - HEC Forum 9 (1):27-35.
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  9.  49
    Smart homes, private homes? An empirical study of technology researchers’ perceptions of ethical issues in developing smart-home health technologies.Giles Birchley, Richard Huxtable, Madeleine Murtagh, Ruud ter Meulen, Peter Flach & Rachael Gooberman-Hill - 2017 - BMC Medical Ethics 18 (1):23.
    Smart-home technologies, comprising environmental sensors, wearables and video are attracting interest in home healthcare delivery. Development of such technology is usually justified on the basis of the technology’s potential to increase the autonomy of people living with long-term conditions. Studies of the ethics of smart-homes raise concerns about privacy, consent, social isolation and equity of access. Few studies have investigated the ethical perspectives of smart-home engineers themselves. By exploring the views of engineering researchers in a large smart- (...) project, we sought to contribute to dialogue between ethics and the engineering community. Either face-to-face or using Skype, we conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with 20 early- and mid-career smart-home researchers from a multi-centre smart-home project, who were asked to describe their own experience and to reflect more broadly about ethical considerations that relate to smart-home design. With participants’ consent, interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed using a thematic approach. Two overarching themes emerged: in ‘Privacy’, researchers indicated that they paid close attention to negative consequences of potential unauthorised information sharing in their current work. However, when discussing broader issues in smart-home design beyond the confines of their immediate project, researchers considered physical privacy to a lesser extent, even though physical privacy may manifest in emotive concerns about being watched or monitored. In ‘Choice’, researchers indicated they often saw provision of choice to end-users as a solution to ethical dilemmas. While researchers indicated that choices of end-users may need to be restricted for technological reasons, ethical standpoints that restrict choice were usually assumed and embedded in design. The tractability of informational privacy may explain the greater attention that is paid to it. However, concerns about physical privacy may reduce acceptability of smart-home technologies to future end-users. While attention to choice suggests links with privacy, this may misidentify the sources of privacy and risk unjustly burdening end-users with problems that they cannot resolve. Separating considerations of choice and privacy may result in more satisfactory treatment of both. Finally, through our engagement with researchers as participants this study demonstrates the relevance of ethics as a critical partner to smart-home engineering. (shrink)
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  10.  40
    Nurses as Guests or Professionals in Home Health Care.Stina Öresland, Sylvia Määttä, Astrid Norberg, Marianne Winther Jörgensen & Kim Lützén - 2008 - Nursing Ethics 15 (3):371-383.
    The aim of this study was to explore and interpret the diverse subject of positions, or roles, that nurses construct when caring for patients in their own home. Ten interviews were analysed and interpreted using discourse analysis. The findings show that these nurses working in home care constructed two positions: `guest' and `professional'. They had to make a choice between these positions because it was impossible to be both at the same time. An ethics of care and an (...)
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  11.  30
    Patients as `Safeguard' and Nurses as `Substitute' in Home Health Care.Stina Öresland, Sylvia Määttä, Astrid Norberg & Kim Lützén - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (2):219-230.
    One aim of this study was to explore the role, or subject position, patients take in the care they receive from nurses in their own home. Another was to examine the subject position that patients say the nurses take when giving care to them in their own home. Ten interviews were analysed and interpreted according to a discourse analytical method. The findings show that patients constructed their subject position as `safeguard', and the nurses' subject position as `substitute' for (...)
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  12.  12
    Eileen Boris & Jennifer Klein, Caring for America: home health workers in the shadow of the welfare state.Sonya Michel - 2019 - Clio 49:290-293.
    Bien que Caring for America ait fait l’objet de nombreuses recensions au moment de sa publication en 2012, ce n’est que maintenant, sept ans plus tard, que l’on peut saisir l’importance de son apport à la littérature sur le travail de care. Depuis une dizaine d’années, cette littérature s’étoffe, surtout dans les sciences sociales mais Caring for America s’en distingue par sa dimension historique. Eileen Boris et Jennifer Klein montrent que les caractéristiques associées par les chercheurs au...
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  13. Determinants and costs of Medicare post acute care provided by skilled nursing facilities and home health agencies.K. Lui, D. Wissoker & C. Rimes - 1998 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 35 (1):49-61.
     
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  14.  93
    Book Review: Rosalinde Ekman Ladd, Lynn Pasquerella, and Sheri Smith eds. Ethical Issues in Home Health Care. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, 2002. 208 pp. $31.95 (paper). ISBN 0-398-07283-3. [REVIEW]Lucia Galvagni - 2006 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 27 (2):175-183.
  15.  28
    Environmental health research on hazards in the home and the duty to warn.David B. Resnik & Darryl C. Zeldin - 2008 - Bioethics 22 (4):209–217.
    When environmental health researchers study hazards in the home, they often discover information that may be relevant to protecting the health and safety of the research subjects and occupants. This article describes the ethical and legal basis for a duty to warn research subjects and occupants about hazards in the home and explores the extent of this duty. Investigators should inform research subjects and occupants about the results of tests conducted as part of the research protocol (...)
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  16.  22
    Short Notices of Books Medicine without doctors: home health care in American history. Edited by Guenter B. Risse, Ronald L. Numbers, and Judith Waltzer Leavitt. New York: Science History Publications, 1977. Pp. 124. $7·95/$4·95. [REVIEW]Andrew Wear - 1979 - British Journal for the History of Science 12 (2):236-236.
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  17.  16
    Book Review: Smith S, Ladd R, Pasquerella L 2008: Ethical issues in home health care, second edition. Springfield, IL: Thomas. 243 pp. USD36.95 . ISBN: 978 0 398 07808 9. [REVIEW]J. Shellman - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (3):383-383.
  18.  6
    Public Health at the Kitchen Table: Lessons from the Home HIV Test's Long Road to Approval.Abigail Zuger - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (1):10-16.
    Home diagnostic testing is becoming part of the modern medical landscape, but many ethical and policy questions remain unresolved. Most of them first surfaced during the long regulatory deliberations over the home HIV test, the first home test for a contagious illness sold in the United States. Between 1989 and 2012, federal regulators and their consultants debated the ideal metrics for such a test, its benefits, and its potential harms for both individuals and communities. Ultimately, two iterations (...)
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  19.  26
    Coming home to Hume: A sociobiological foundation for a concept of 'health' and morality.Kenneth F. Schaffner - 1999 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 24 (4):365 – 375.
    Assessing the normative status of concepts of health and disease involves one in questions regarding the relationship between fact and value. Some have argued that Christopher Boorse's conception of health and disease lacks such a valuational element because it cannot account for types of harms which, while disvalued, do not have evolutionarily dysfunctional consequences. I take Boorse's account and incorporate some Humean-like sociobiological assumptions in order to respond to this challenge. The possession of moral sentiments, I argue, offers (...)
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  20.  21
    Understanding health decisions using critical realism: home-dialysis decision-making during chronic kidney disease.Lori Harwood & Alexander M. Clark - 2012 - Nursing Inquiry 19 (1):29-38.
    HARWOOD L and CLARK AM. Nursing Inquiry 2012; 19: 29–38Understanding health decisions using critical realism: home-dialysis decision-making during chronic kidney diseaseThis paper examines home-dialysis decision making in people with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) from the perspective of critical realism. CKD programmes focus on patient education for self-management to delay the progression of kidney disease and the preparation and support for renal replacement therapy e.g.) dialysis and transplantation. Home-dialysis has clear health, societal and economic benefits yet (...)
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  21.  21
    Mental health problems of preschool children during the COVID-19 home quarantine: A cross-sectional study in Shanghai, China.Chen-Huan Ma, Lian Jiang, Li-Ting Chu, Chun-cao Zhang, Yuan Tian, Jin-jin Chen & Yu Wang - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    ObjectiveAs the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic spread across Shanghai, China, in late February 2022 and protective measures to mitigate its impact were enacted, this study aimed to estimate how home quarantine affected the mental health of preschool children in Shanghai, China and explore the association between lifestyle factors and mental health during this special period.MethodsA cross-sectional online survey of 2,110 preschool students from Shanghai, China, was conducted during May 20–25,2022. Preschooler’ mental health and daily activities were (...)
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  22.  39
    Returning Home: Incarceration, Reentry, Stigma and the Perpetuation of Racial and Socioeconomic Health Inequity.Elizabeth Tobin Tyler & Bradley Brockmann - 2017 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 45 (4):545-557.
    This article describes overlapping links among incarceration, poor health, race, and stigma, and stigma's impact on the health of former prisoners and their families and communities. The authors include policy recommendations to reduce the impact of incarceration and stigma.
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  23.  12
    The position of home‐care nursing in primary health care: A critical analysis of contemporary policy documents.Ann-Kristin Fjørtoft, Trine Oksholm, Oddvar Førland, Charlotte Delmar & Herdis Alvsvåg - 2022 - Nursing Inquiry 29 (2):e12445.
    Internationally, primary health care has in recent years gained a more central position in political priorities to ensure sustainable health care for the population. Thus, more people receive health care locally and in their own homes, where home‐care nursing plays a large role. In this article, we investigate how home‐care nursing is articulated and made visible in contemporary Norwegian policy documents. The study is a Fairclough‐inspired critical discourse analysis seeking to uncover the position of nursing (...)
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  24.  9
    A Home for the Homeless: The Half-Forgotten Heart of Mental Health Services.Thomas S. Szasz - 1986 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 6 (1):29-39.
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  25.  31
    No Longer Home Alone? Home Care and the Canada Health Act.Monique Lanoix - 2017 - Health Care Analysis 25 (2):168-189.
    In this paper, I argue that addressing the medical needs of older persons warrants expanding the array of insured services as described by the Canada Health Act to include home care. The growing importance of chronic care supports my call for federally regulated home care services as the nature of disease management has changed significantly in the last decades. In addition, if the values of equity, fairness and solidarity, which are the keystone values of the CHA, are (...)
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  26.  10
    Readability Level of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Notices of Privacy Practices Used by Nursing Homes.Steven Walfish & Bryan B. Ducey - 2004 - Jona's Healthcare Law, Ethics, and Regulation 6 (4):96-99.
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  27.  9
    “Being at Home”, White Racism, and Minority Health.Asha Bhandary - 2021 - In Elizabeth Victor & Laura K. Guidry-Grimes (eds.), Applying Nonideal Theory to Bioethics: Living and Dying in a Nonideal World. New York: Springer. pp. 217-234.
    The negative health effects of stress are well documented in medical and psychological research, but these effects are underexplored in political philosophy. This essay evaluates these effects in relation to the explanatory and normative value of the concept that I call “being at home.” The phenomenological description of the state of being at home is the sense of feeling safe and at ease in your context, and therefore able to relax. Although it characterizes a particular state of (...)
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  28.  14
    Nurse‐led health promotion interventions improve quality of life in frail older home care clients: lessons learned from three randomized trials in Ontario, Canada.Maureen Markle-Reid, Gina Browne & Amiram Gafni - 2013 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 19 (1):118-131.
  29.  12
    Nursing Home Implementation of Health Information Technology: Review of the Literature Finds Inadequate Investment in Preparation, Infrastructure, and Training. [REVIEW]Michelle Ko, Laura Wagner & Joanne Spetz - 2018 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 55:004695801877890.
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  30.  14
    A conceptual framework for clinicians working with artificial intelligence and health‐assistive Smart Homes.Gordana Dermody & Roschelle Fritz - 2019 - Nursing Inquiry 26 (1):e12267.
    The Smart Home designed to extend older adults independence is emerging as a clinical solution to the growing ageing population. Nurses will and should play a key role in the development and application of Smart Home technology. Accordingly, conceptual frameworks are needed for nurse scientists who are collaborating with multidisciplinary research teams in developing an intelligent Smart Home that assists with managing older adults’ health. We present a conceptual framework that is grounded in critical realism and (...)
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  31.  23
    The Changing Role of Health Care Professionals in Nursing Homes: A Systematic Literature Review of a Decade of Change.Arend R. van Stenis, Jessica van Wingerden & Isolde Kolkhuis Tanke - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  32.  38
    The Web-Rhetoric of Companies Offering Home-Based Personal Health Monitoring.Anders Nordgren - 2012 - Health Care Analysis 20 (2):103-118.
    In this paper I investigate the web-rhetoric of companies offering home-based personal health monitoring to patients and elderly people. Two main rhetorical methods are found, namely a reference to practical benefits and a use of prestige words like “quality of life” and “independence”. I interpret the practical benefits in terms of instrumental values and the prestige words in terms of final values. I also reconstruct the arguments on the websites in terms of six different types of argument. Finally, (...)
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  33.  17
    Supplement: Veterans’ Health Care on the Home Front.Keynan Hobbs, Chuck Dean, Amber Jensen, Anonymous One, William L. Freeman & Brian T. Ipock - 2018 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 8 (1):80-95.
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  34.  24
    Individual and Collective Considerations in Public Health: Influenza Vaccination in Nursing Homes.Marcel Verweij - 2001 - Bioethics 15 (5-6):536-546.
    Many nursing homes have an influenza vaccination policy in which it is assumed that express (proxy) consent is not necessary. Tacit consent procedures are more efficient if one aims at high vaccination rates. In this paper I focus on incompetent residents and proxy consent. Tacit proxy consent for vaccination implies a deviance of standard proxy consent requirements. I analyse several arguments that may possibly support such a deviance. The primary reason to offer influenza vaccination is that vaccinated persons have a (...)
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  35.  18
    Ethical Considerations for Providing In-Home Mental Health Services for Homebound Individuals.Kelly M. Boland - 2019 - Ethics and Behavior 29 (4):287-304.
    The number of homebound individuals in the United States is on the rise, causing health-care professionals to expand in-home health services to help meet the increased demand. Due to the prevalence of feelings of isolation and depression in this population, it is imperative that mental health professionals join this effort to increase access to mental health services. Delivering psychotherapy in clients’ homes presents many advantages to these homebound individuals, but there is a dearth of literature (...)
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  36.  25
    Home Care in America: The Urgent Challenge of Putting Ethical Care into Practice.Coleman Solis, Kevin T. Mintz, David Wasserman, Kathleen Fenton & Marion Danis - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (3):25-34.
    Home care is one of the fastest‐growing industries in the United States, providing valuable opportunities for millions of older adults and people with disabilities to live at home rather than in institutional settings. Home care workers assist clients with essential activities of daily living, but their wages and working conditions generally fail to reflect the importance of their work. Drawing on the work of Eva Feder Kittay and other care ethicists, we argue that good care involves attending (...)
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  37.  23
    The spatial anticipation of the future in the homes of mental health service users.Ian Tucker - 2013 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 14 (1):26 - 40.
    This paper develops an approach to analysing the importance of anticipations of the future on present actions in the lives of mental health service users, for whom sensing stability in the future is important as part of the recovery process. The work of Henri Bergson and Alfred North Whitehead is drawn upon to argue that temporality is understood spatially, and that past and future experience only exist in relation to their shaping of present activity. This process is produced spatially (...)
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  38.  16
    Preserving Integrity: experiences of people with mental health problems living in their own home in a new neighbourhood.Arild Granerud & Elisabeth Severinsson - 2003 - Nursing Ethics 10 (6):602-613.
    For patients with mental health problems, de-institutionalization has meant a shift from institutional care to living in the community. However, several studies show that problems of stigmatization, loneliness and negative attitudes devalue the dignity and autonomy of these patients. The aim of this study was to gain a deeper understanding of how people with mental health problems experience living in an apartment of their own. The data collection method was focus group interviews. The constant comparative method revealed the (...)
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  39.  91
    Maternal History of Adverse Experiences and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms Impact Toddlers’ Early Socioemotional Wellbeing: The Benefits of Infant Mental Health-Home Visiting.Julie Ribaudo, Jamie M. Lawler, Jennifer M. Jester, Jessica Riggs, Nora L. Erickson, Ann M. Stacks, Holly Brophy-Herb, Maria Muzik & Katherine L. Rosenblum - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    BackgroundThe present study examined the efficacy of the Michigan Model of Infant Mental Health-Home Visiting infant mental health treatment to promote the socioemotional wellbeing of infants and young children. Science illuminates the role of parental “co-regulation” of infant emotion as a pathway to young children’s capacity for self-regulation. The synchrony of parent–infant interaction begins to shape the infant’s own nascent regulatory capacities. Parents with a history of childhood adversity, such as maltreatment or witnessing family violence, and who (...)
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  40.  15
    Perception Analysis and Early Warning of Home-Based Care Health Information Based on the Internet of Things.Yi Mao, Lei Zhang & Xin Wu - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-10.
    Aiming at the problem of insufficient health monitoring of the elderly in the existing home care system, this paper designs a health information analysis and early warning system based on the Internet of Things technology, which can monitor the physiological data of the elderly in real time. It also can be based on the elderly real-time monitoring data, physical examination data, and other types of health data, which can be used to predict diseases, so as to (...)
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  41.  14
    Home‐care nurses’ distinctive work: A discourse analysis of what takes precedence in changing healthcare services.Ann-Kristin Fjørtoft, Trine Oksholm, Charlotte Delmar, Oddvar Førland & Herdis Alvsvåg - 2021 - Nursing Inquiry 28 (1):e12375.
    Ongoing changes in many Western countries have resulted in more healthcare services being transferred to municipalities and taking place in patients’ homes. This greatly impacts nurses’ work in home care, making their work increasingly diverse and demanding. In this study, we explore home‐care nursing through a critical discourse analysis of focus group interviews with home‐care nurses. Drawing on insights from positioning theory, we discuss the content and delineation of their work and the interweaving of contextual changes. Nurses (...)
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  42.  21
    Meanings of living at home on a ventilator.Berit Lindahl, Per-Olof Sandman & Birgit H. Rasmussen - 2003 - Nursing Inquiry 10 (1):19-27.
    Meanings of living at home on a ventilator Nine adults were interviewed in order to illuminate the meanings of being dependent on a ventilator and living at home. The data were analysed using a phenomenological‐hermeneutic method inspired by the philosophy of Ricoeur. Five main themes emerged through the analysis: experiencing home as a safe and comfortable space from which to reach out, experiencing the body as being frail, brave and resilient, striving to live in the present, surrendering (...)
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  43.  29
    Home-Based Care, Technology, and the Maintenance of Selves.Jennifer A. Parks - 2015 - HEC Forum 27 (2):127-141.
    In this paper, I will argue that there is a deep connection between home-based care, technology, and the self. Providing the means for persons to receive care at home is not merely a kindness that respects their preference to be at home: it is an important means of extending their selfhood and respecting the unique selves that they are. Home-based technologies like telemedicine and robotic care may certainly be useful tools in providing care for persons at (...)
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  44.  15
    The home as ethos of caring: A concept determination.Yvonne Hilli & Katie Eriksson - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (2):425-433.
    Background:Within nursing, the concepts of home and homelike have been used indiscriminately to describe characteristics of healthcare settings that resemble a home more than an institution.Objectives:The aim of this study was to investigate the concept of home. The main questions were as follows: What does the concept of home entail etymologically and semantically? Of what significance is the meaning of the concept to caring science and nursing?Design and methods:This study had a qualitative design with a hermeneutical (...)
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  45.  16
    Is Variation in Resident-Centered Care and Quality Performance Related to Health System Factors in Veterans Health Administration Nursing Homes?Jennifer L. Sullivan, Ryann L. Engle, Denise Tyler, Melissa K. Afable, Katelyn Gormley, Michael Shwartz, Omonyêlé Adjognon & Victoria A. Parker - 2018 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 55:004695801878703.
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  46.  6
    The gender factor in family size and health issues in modern Nigerian homes.Daisy N. Nwachuku - 1996 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 13 (3):13-15.
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  47.  5
    Reflections on RRI in “TAS for Health at Home”.Nils Jäger, Liz Dowthwaite, Pepita Barnard, Ann-Marie Hughes, Roshan das Nair, David Crepaz-Keay, Sue Cobb, Alexandra Lang, Farid Vayani & Steve Benford - 2022 - Journal of Responsible Technology 12 (C):100049.
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  48.  8
    The home as workshop:: Women as amateur nurses and medical care providers.Nona Y. Glazer - 1990 - Gender and Society 4 (4):479-499.
    The high-tech health service work done by amateur family caregivers in U.S. homes challenges the conventional division of the social world into public and private. Under new federal reimbursement systems, the diagnosis-related groups, patients are being discharged sicker than before from hospitals and nursing homes, or after treatments in outpatient clinics. Health care facilities depend on a work transfer, shifting their earlier responsibilities for the sick to the family. There, women family members do for free the work once (...)
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  49.  12
    Home Physical Exercise Protocol for Older Adults, Applied Remotely During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Protocol for Randomized and Controlled Trial.Anderson D’Oliveira, Loiane Cristina De Souza, Elisa Langiano, Lavinia Falese, Pierluigi Diotaiuti, Guilherme Torres Vilarino & Alexandro Andrade - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The emergence of the new coronavirus at the beginning of 2020, considered a public health emergency due to its high transmission rate and lack of specific treatment, led many countries to adhere to social isolation. Although necessary, social isolation causes important psychological changes, negatively affecting the health of the population, including the older population. The aim of this study is to propose a 4-week, home-based physical exercise protocol for older people in social isolation and evaluate whether will (...)
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  50.  2
    Rapid Home HIV Testing: Risk and the Moral Imperatives of Biological Citizenship.Jonathan Banda - 2015 - Body and Society 21 (4):24-47.
    This article examines the home rapid HIV test as a new practice of US biocitizenship. Via an analysis of discourse surrounding self-diagnostics, I conclude that while home HIV tests appear to expand consumer rights, they are in fact the vanguard of a new form of self-testing that carries a moral urgency to protect one’s own body and to manage societal risk. In addition, these tests extend biomedical authority into the private domain, while appearing to do the exact opposite. (...)
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