The Emotional Labour of Nursing Revisited - 2nd Edition by Pam Smith (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- As nurses become responsible for increasingly technical service delivery, has the profession lost its focus on the emotional and human aspects of the role?
- About the Author: PAM SMITHis Professor of Nurse Education and Head of Nursing Studies in the School of Health in Social Science at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
- 248 Pages
- Medical, Nursing
Description
About the Book
1st ed. published in 1992 as Emotional labour of nursing.Book Synopsis
As nurses become responsible for increasingly technical service delivery, has the profession lost its focus on the emotional and human aspects of the role?
Do care and compassion remain at the heart of contemporary nursing practice? In this major reworking of a classic text, respected author Pam Smith emphasizes the continued relevance of emotional labour within the modern healthcare context. Revisiting her original findings in light of fresh theoretical perspectives and data drawn from her own new research studies, Smith explores the ways in which the experience of learning nursing and caring is changing in the twenty-first century. A vivid example of the significance of nursing's evidence base, this timely new edition: addresses the most emotionally challenging aspects of the nursing role, including encountering death and dying on the ward; examines the impact of race, age, gender and violence in providing patient centred care; interrogates the importance of the role of practice educators and mentors in practice settings. An inspiring text for the next generation of nurses, The Emotional Labour of Nursing Revisited is an essential read for anyone interested in the contemporary challenges of keeping the whole person at the centre of their practice.From the Back Cover
As nurses become responsible for increasingly technical service delivery, hasthe profession lost its focus on the emotional and human aspects of the role?
Do care and compassion remain at the heart of contemporary nursing practice?
In this major reworking of a classic text, respected author Pam Smith emphasizes
the continued relevance of emotional labour within the modern healthcare
context. Revisiting her original findings in light of fresh theoretical perspectives
and data drawn from her own new research studies, Smith explores the ways
in which the experience of learning nursing and caring is changing in the twentyfirst
century.
A vivid example of the significance of nursing's evidence base, this timely new
edition:
addresses the most emotionally challenging aspects of the nursing role,
including encountering death and dying on the ward;
examines the impact of race, age, gender and violence in providing patientcentred
care; interrogates the importance of the role of practice educators and mentors in
practice settings.
An inspiring text for the next generation of nurses, The Emotional Labour of
Nursing Revisited is an essential read for anyone interested in the contemporary
challenges of keeping the whole person at the centre of their practice.
About the Author
PAM SMITHis Professor of Nurse Education and Head of Nursing Studies in the School of Health in Social Science at the University of Edinburgh, UK. As the General Nursing Council (GNC) Trust Endowed Chair in Nurse Education, she held the post of Director of the Centre for Research in Nursing and Midwifery Education at the University of Surrey, UK from 2002 to 2009.
PAM SMITHis Professor of Nurse Education and Head of Nursing Studies in the School of Health in Social Science at the University of Edinburgh, UK. As the General Nursing Council (GNC) Trust Endowed Chair in Nurse Education, she held the post of Director of the Centre for Research in Nursing and Midwifery Education at the University of Surrey, UK from 2002 to 2009.