Nursing science quarterly
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The scholar in this paper presents a concept inventing model of feeling ashamed. It consists of a literature review across many disciplines, an exploration of many artforms, dialoguing with others, and a distinctive description of feeling ashamed. ⋯ With the use of humanbecoming concept inventing model, the now-truth of feeling ashamed for the scholar was raised as unbearable stillness with desired escape arising with isolating affiliations. The ingenuous proclamation as a theoretical statement was communicated in the humanbecoming sciencing language as languaging the powering of connecting-separating with the artform of Shame by Rosa Gunasingha.
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Nursing science quarterly · Apr 2021
Shaming or Courage? A Scholarly Examination of a Press Release.
Shame is an ethical tenet of the humanbecoming ethos, dignity. While shame is a difficult concept to discuss, it is used by some disciplines to transform society. ⋯ A recent press release noted that nursing is complicit with racism if they do not speak up against it. The press release is examined using Milton's straight talk of nursing ethics and Parse's leading-following model to determine if shaming was used to transform nursing related to racism or if it was a nurse leader's act of courage.
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Nursing science quarterly · Jan 2021
Humanbecoming Hermeneutic Sciencing: A Global Perspective on Presence in "In Harm's Way".
The purpose of this article is to report the details of the humanbecoming hermeneutic sciencing of presence in In Harm's Way. Humanbecoming hermeneutic sciencing is dialoguing with an artform by discoursing with penetrating engaging, interpreting with quiescent beholding, and understanding with inspiring envisaging. The artform explored in this article is the comments and images of 60 nurses from around the world included in The New York Times story titled "In Harm's Way." The report is on the meaning of presence as lived and talked about by nurses on the front lines at the peak of the COVID-19 outbreak.
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The purpose of this paper is to explore how people from diverse backgrounds and places, who are severely ill, disabled, or facing death, use art to help themselves and others not only make sense of such experiences but live fully with loss and the limited time remaining. The humanbecoming paradigm is used to provide a language to talk about Western and non-Western experiences of life-threatening illness, disability and death, and art. The persons discussed in the paper suggest that age and place, although influences, are not particularly relevant, nor is severe illness, even those associated with significant failing capacities, because they cannot contain the human spirit or relationships.
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Telehealth utilizes technology that connects nurses and persons receiving healthcare services. Rather than focusing on telehealth as a financial burden or a disruptive technology, telehealth nursing should be considered an opportunity to operationalize and transform the art of care, especially when it is guided by nursing theory.