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E-raamat: Critical Resilience for Nurses: An Evidence-Based Guide to Survival and Change in the Modern NHS [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(Middlesex University, UK)
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The nursing profession is under pressure. Financial demands, student debt, the target culture, political scrutiny in the wake of major care scandals and increasing workloads are all taking their toll on professional morale and performance. This timely book considers the meaning of resilience in this adverse context and explains why measures to preserve individual nurses and students well-being are flawed if they dont take into account wider political and organizational perspectives.

Arguing that healthcare can be thought about and experienced differently, this book:











provides a summary of the latest research on resilience, explaining its relevance and also limitations for nurses;





considers debates about compassion and highlights the effects of policy agendas on nurse education and nursing work;





re-evaluates nursings professional identity, including where nursing has come from and the effects of class, gender and race on its powerbase;





assesses the role of politics and social media, both in driving change and feeding resistance; and





introduces the idea of critical resilience as a complete framework for resisting bullying and fostering survival and change in the nursing workforce.

Direct, upbeat, at times provocative and witty, this agenda-setting book enables nurses to understand why they feel the way they do. It also lists what opportunities are available to them to change, resist and survive in what has become a complex, challenging if still deeply rewarding line of work.
Foreword ix
Author's introduction xi
Acknowledgements xix
1 Resilience: where did it come from? Research on resilience and its use in nursing
1(14)
Origins of research into resilience: psychoanalysis and trauma
2(3)
A debate develops: can resilience be grown?
5(3)
Four waves of resilience research?
8(1)
Resilience and nursing
9(6)
2 The limits of resilience: introducing `critical resilience'
15(20)
Resilience as wish fulfilment
16(2)
Resilience and `responsibilization'
18(2)
The focus of resilience is individualistic
20(3)
Critiques of resilience from radical social justice
23(1)
Is the argument for resilience circular?
24(3)
So is resilience any use?
27(1)
Help, why shouldn't I build up resilience?
27(2)
It's decision time: what are the alternatives?
29(1)
An alternative: critical resilience
29(2)
What is critique and how is it different from `criticism' or `complaint'?
31(4)
3 How compassionate are you?
35(20)
Why compassion? Why now?
36(7)
What happens to nurses who care?
43(4)
When good people do bad things
47(1)
Compassion, empathy and alternatives
48(7)
4 Nursing work is difficult work and what to do about it
55(14)
Burnout: a short history
57(2)
Emotional labour
59(5)
Nursing work in depth
64(3)
What might resilience mean? Supervision and peer-support
67(2)
5 Nursing: whose idea was it anyway?
69(14)
At last -- an occupation for respectable women
70(1)
Are we better off like doctors or not?
71(1)
Nursing after the Second World War
72(1)
`We need to do something about nursing': modernizing and more
73(3)
Fallen angels?
76(1)
What's next? Nurses in debt and another new worker
77(4)
Where are we now?
81(2)
6 Politicians: part of the solution and part of the problem
83(18)
Are politicians to be trusted?
83(2)
Democracy
85(2)
Influencers
87(2)
Science
89(1)
Ideology
90(1)
Neoliberalism and the market
91(2)
Policy examples: the creation of a welfare state in the UK
93(1)
Healthcare as a market
94(2)
Professions are the problem: nursing as a policy instrument
96(2)
Post-Francis, post-everything
98(1)
What nurses can do
99(2)
7 Being a student, being a worker
101(16)
Pros and cons of being in the university
102(2)
Structural forces on university nursing
104(4)
How the NHS workplace works
108(3)
What to do about bullying at work or at college
111(2)
Action you can take
113(4)
8 Critical resilience and critical theory
117(14)
What was there before theory?
118(1)
The Frankfurt School
119(5)
Marxism
124(2)
Critiques of Marxism Other critiques: the Enlightenment and critique, Nietzsche and Foucault
126(2)
Where and how to find out more
128(1)
So, what does this mean for me?
128(3)
9 Nursing solidarity, organizing and resistance
131(10)
Radical nurses past and present
132(2)
Nursing unions and their achievements
134(2)
Social media and activism
136(2)
Benefits and risks
138(1)
Nurses of all countries unite: no nurse need be alone
139(2)
Appendix: Summary of research papers on resilience in nursing included in this book 141(8)
References 149(14)
Index 163
Michael Traynor is Professor of Nursing Policy at Middlesex University, London, UK, where he works in the Centre for Critical Research in Nursing and Midwifery.