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Suzanne Goopy [4]Suzanne E. Goopy [2]
  1.  10
    Taking account of local culture: limits to the development of a professional ethos.Suzanne E. Goopy - 2005 - Nursing Inquiry 12 (2):144-154.
    Taking account of local culture: limits to the development of a professional ethos The need to extend the discussion of culture in the study of nursing, combined with an enthusiasm for the possibility of viewing nursing from a new perspective, provides the impetus for this study. Based on fieldwork undertaken in the intensive care unit (RICU) of a major public hospital in Rome (Italy), this paper explores some of the key aspects of the social relations and local staff culture of (...)
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  2.  13
    Discipline and passion: meaning, masochism and mythology in popular medical romances.Susan DeVries, Margaret Dunlop, Suzanne Goopy, Wendy Moyle & Diane Sutherland-Lockhart - 1995 - Nursing Inquiry 2 (4):203-210.
    Discipline and passion: meaning, masochism and mythology in popular medical romancesThis paper is an interpretive analysis of the discourses within popular romance literature, with a particular focus on the genre that includes constructions of the images of nurses and nursing. An historical contrast is made along with examinations of the uses and meanings encompassed within this body of literature, and its messages for women as nurses as it reflectdcreates societal change. Deviations from the formulaic nature of these works are explored. (...)
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  3.  10
    ... that the social order prevails: death, ritual and the ‘Roman’ nurse.Suzanne Goopy - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (2):110-117.
    In this article, the importance of ritual as a collective response to death is discussed. A case example, taken from a larger ethnographic study, is used to explore the responses and reactions of a group of Italian nurses to death as it occurs within an intensive care unit in Rome, Italy. The material presented is used to analyse the significance that cultural, religious and social beliefs and quasi‐beliefs can have in nursing practice. The issues highlighted in this examination of the (...)
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  4.  22
    Nursing and music: Considerations of Nightingale’s environmental philosophy and phenomenology.Jon Parr Vijinski, Sandra P. Hirst & Suzanne Goopy - 2018 - Nursing Philosophy 19 (4):e12223.
    A philosophy of nursing is to express our considered opinion on what we believe to be true about the nature of the profession of nursing and provide a basis for nursing activities. It affirms the ethical values that we hold as fundamental to our practice. For many of us in nursing, our philosophy derives from Nightingale and phenomenology. We believe Nightingale and phenomenology are uniquely placed within nursing philosophies, to assist the nurse to understand the use of music within a (...)
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