8 results on '"McCaffrey G"'
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2. Enactivism: Embodied cognition, sense-making, and nursing.
- Author
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McCaffrey G
- Abstract
Enactivism is a branch of embodied cognition theory that argues for a highly distributed model of cognition as a sense-making process involving brain, body, environment, and subjective experience. It is a theoretical framework with potential value for nursing since it offers an integrated framework for human sense-making that includes physiological and psychological factors as well as the primary experience of subjective perceptions. This paper presents an introduction to the background and main tenets of enactivist theory. These are discussed in relation to nursing, and mental health nursing to argue for the relevance of enactivism in nursing knowledge., (© 2024 The Author(s). Nursing Inquiry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pediatric psychiatric inpatients' perspectives of aggression management: Discernment in the doorway.
- Author
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McCaffrey G and Adrian M
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Female, Male, Psychiatric Nursing, Psychiatric Department, Hospital, Nurse-Patient Relations, Mental Disorders therapy, Qualitative Research, Aggression psychology, Inpatients psychology, Restraint, Physical, Patient Isolation psychology
- Abstract
Problem: Aggressive behavior is common on psychiatric inpatient units. Seclusion and restraint interventions to manage patients' aggressive behavior may have the consequence of being traumatizing for patients. Pediatric psychiatric patients' perspective on the use of seclusion and restraint interventions is not present in the literature., Methods: This hermeneutic nursing research study asked the question, "How might we understand children's experiences of seclusion and restraints on an inpatient psychiatric unit?" Four past pediatric psychiatric inpatients shared their hospitalization experiences that occurred within the previous year when they were 10 years old. The texts of the research interviews were compared to Attachment Theory for a deeper understanding of the meaning of the message., Findings: Participants commonly described experiences with seclusion and restraints as feeling trapped and alone in a dark room. They recommended the nurses step into the room with them to help them heal. Interpretively, the rooms on inpatient units could be considered as actual and metaphorical spaces of possible harm or healing., Conclusion: The participant's voices expand understanding of nurse's use of discernment at the doorway of a patient room to ensure the most therapeutic care is provided to the patient in these spaces through a secure nurse-patient relationship., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Kasulis' intimacy/integrity heuristic and epistemological pluralism in nursing.
- Author
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McCaffrey G
- Subjects
- Humans, Nursing instrumentation, Nursing methods, Translational Research, Biomedical methods, Knowledge
- Abstract
Epistemological pluralism is a recognized feature of nursing knowledge, which embraces both objective, scientific knowledge and situated knowledge that include subjective experience, values and affect, and is encountered in relationship. While there is a lively literature about describing and validating the need for pluralism in nursing's knowledge base, there has been less discussion of how to work with and across different kinds of knowing that are used in practice. In this paper, I describe Kasulis' heuristic framework for understanding more clearly what is entailed in different kinds of knowledge, and what some of their advantages and disadvantages might be. The framework was created by Thomas Kasulis, an American scholar of Japanese philosophy who identified broad orientations in Asian and Western philosophies that he characterized as 'intimacy' and 'integrity', respectively. Kasulis emphasized that his framework is a heuristic, a tool for making distinctions more clearly between different styles of thinking, that can manifest not only between cultural traditions from different parts of the world, but also between subcultures within one of the dominant orientations. He breaks his two orientations down by five distinguishing categories of objectivity, relating, affect, embodiment and transparency. In this paper, each category is described and discussed in relation to aspects of nursing knowledge. Looking at different epistemological viewpoints in this way helps to clarify their differences, and to explain the difficulty of reading across them, when they entail basic assumptions that are not commensurable with each other. Kasulis' framework offers a new way of reading across viewpoints commonly seen in the epistemological pluralism of nursing. It is a tool that can sharpen critical discernment about what is at stake, what can be gained, and what might get missed while operating in either the intimacy or integrity orientation., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A humanism for nursing?
- Author
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McCaffrey G
- Subjects
- Humans, Humanism, Philosophy, Nursing
- Abstract
Humanism has appeared intermittently in the nursing literature as a concept that can be used in understanding nursing. I return to the concept in response to noticing the term appearing in the context of health humanities, where it is loosely associated both with humanities and being humane. I review the usage and critiques of humanism in both nursing and medical literature and then re-evaluate what the idea of humanism might hold for nursing, trying to avoid the traps of an over-determination of the human subject, or dichotomizing nursing as art or science, technology or caring. I draw on writings on humanism primarily from Emmanuel Levinas and Edward Said to emphasize strands in humanism of obligation towards others and of critical discernment within history and culture directed towards democratic practices. I discuss in passing the strong association in the UK particularly between humanism and scientism as a note of caution about the plurality of the term humanism. I conclude that humanism is a tradition that does offer productive ways of thinking about nursing with the proviso that it ought to be treated carefully as a problematic tradition and not as a new essence for nursing., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Host and guest: an applied hermeneutic study of mental health nurses' practices on inpatient units.
- Author
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McCaffrey G
- Subjects
- Buddhism, Humans, Qualitative Research, Hermeneutics, Hospital Units, Nurse's Role, Nurse-Patient Relations, Psychiatric Nursing
- Abstract
The metaphor of host and guest has value for exploring the practice and role identity of nurses on inpatient mental health units. Two complementary texts, one from the ancient Zen record of Lin-chi, and the other from the contemporary hermeneutic philosopher Richard Kearney, are used to elaborate meanings of host and guest that can be applied to the situation of mental health nurses. In a doctoral study with a hermeneutic design, I addressed the topic of nurse-patient relationship using an interpretive framework that included sources from Buddhist thought. The positions of host and guest emerged from interviews with nurses as one interpretive theme to open up new understanding of the topic. The two texts, originally distant in era and culture, both employ the host and guest metaphor. They are applied to extracts from interviews to open up discussions of hierarchy, status, patients' perspectives, otherness and resistances as features of nurses' complex experience. These provide insights into understanding practice and suggest implications for how institutional environments shape practice. An intercultural reading of texts can provide a source of new understanding of nurse-patient relationships., (© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Buddhist thought and nursing: a hermeneutic exploration.
- Author
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McCaffrey G, Raffin-Bouchal S, and Moules NJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Philosophy, Nursing, Western World, Buddhism, Nursing, Religion and Medicine
- Abstract
In this paper I lay out the ground for a creative dialogue between Buddhist thought and contemporary nursing. I start from the observation that in tracing an arc from the existential human experience of suffering to finding compassionate responses to suffering in everyday practice Buddhist thought already appears to present significant affinities with nursing as a practice discipline. I discuss some of the complexities of entering into a cross-cultural dialogue, which is already well under way in the working out of Western forms of Buddhism, and which is beginning to be reflected in nursing literature. I introduce philosophical hermeneutics as a useful framework for elaborating an open and constructive exchange. I then discuss key Mahayana Buddhist concepts of emptiness and two truths that lead to a dynamic and open way of understanding reality and responding in the world. I turn to examples of original texts to give a flavour of the varied and distinctive forms of literature in the Buddhist tradition. This is intended partly to keep the reader alert to cultural difference (from a Western standpoint, that is) while exploring the creative potential of Buddhist thought. Hermeneutics again provides a framework for interpretation. This paper establishes a philosophical ground for a critical and creative dialogue between Buddhist thought and nursing., (© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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8. High-resolution fractionation of signaling endosomes containing different receptors.
- Author
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McCaffrey G, Welker J, Scott J, der Salm Lv, and Grimes ML
- Subjects
- Animals, Endosomes ultrastructure, ErbB Receptors metabolism, Humans, Neurons metabolism, Neurons ultrastructure, PC12 Cells, Rats, Receptor, Nerve Growth Factor metabolism, Receptor, trkA metabolism, Receptors, Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide, Type I metabolism, Cell Fractionation methods, Endocytosis physiology, Endosomes chemistry, Endosomes metabolism, Signal Transduction physiology
- Abstract
Receptor endocytosis is regulated by ligand binding, and receptors may signal after endocytosis in signaling endosomes. We hypothesized that signaling endosomes containing different types of receptors may be distinct from one another and have different physical characteristics. To test this hypothesis, we developed a high-resolution organelle fractionation method based on mass and density, optimized to resolve endosomes from other organelles. Three different types of receptors undergoing ligand-induced endocytosis were localized predominately in endosomes that were resolved from one another using this method. Endosomes containing activated receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), TrkA and EGFR, were similar to one another. Endosomes containing p75(NTR) (in the tumor necrosis receptor superfamily) and PAC1 (a G-protein-coupled receptor) were distinct from each other and from RTK endosomes. Receptor-specific endosomes may direct the intracellular location and duration of signal transduction pathways to dictate response to signals and determine cell fate.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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