89 results on '"Helen Allan"'
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2. A critical race analysis of structural and institutional racism: Rethinking overseas registered nurses' recruitment to and working conditions in the United Kingdom
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Iyore M. Ugiagbe, Liang Q. Liu, Marianne Markowski, and Helen Allan
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HT ,General Nursing ,RT - Abstract
Language tests for overseas registered nurses (ORN) working outside their home country are essential for patient safety, as communication competency needs to be established in any workforce. We argue that the current employment of existing language tests is structurally and institutionally racist and disadvantages ORNs from non‐European Union (EU) and non‐White countries seeking to work in the United Kingdom. Using Critical Race Theory (CRT), we argue that existing English language tests for ORNs seeking registration in the United Kingdom are discriminatory due to the UK's racist migration policies and a regulatory body for nursing and midwifery that fails to acknowledge and understand its own institutionally racist practices.
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- 2022
3. Drug delivery, biodistribution and anti-EGFR activity: theragnostic nanoparticles for simultaneousin vivodelivery of tyrosine kinase inhibitors and kinase activity biosensors
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Helen Allan, Matthias Glaser, Erik Årstad, Robin Bofinger, Gregory Weitsman, Daniel Hochhauser, Tammy L. Kalber, Kerstin Sander, Tony Ng, Rachel Evans, Helen C. Hailes, and Alethea B. Tabor
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Biodistribution ,Adapter molecule crk ,In vivo ,medicine.drug_class ,Chemistry ,Cancer cell ,Drug delivery ,medicine ,Cancer research ,General Materials Science ,Kinase activity ,Tyrosine kinase ,Tyrosine-kinase inhibitor - Abstract
In vivo delivery of small molecule therapeutics to cancer cells, assessment of the selectivity of administration, and measuring the efficacity of the drug in question at the molecule level, are important ongoing challenges in developing new classes of cancer chemotherapeutics. One approach that has the potential to provide targeted delivery, tracking of biodistribution and readout of efficacy, is to use multimodal theragnostic nanoparticles to deliver the small molecule therapeutic. In this paper, we report the development of targeted theragnostic lipid/peptide/DNA lipopolyplexes. These simultaneously deliver an inhibitor of the EGFR tyrosine kinase, and plasmid DNA coding for a Crk-based biosensor, Picchu-X, which when expressed in the target cells can be used to quantify the inhibition of EGFR in vivo in a mouse colorectal cancer xenograft model. Reversible bioconjugation of a known analogue of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor Mo-IPQA to a cationic peptide, and co-formulation with peptides containing both EGFR-binding and cationic sequences, allowed for good levels of inhibitor encapsulation with targeted delivery to LIM1215 colon cancer cells. Furthermore, high levels of expression of the Picchu-X biosensor in the LIM1215 cells in vivo allowed us to demonstrate, using fluorescence lifetime microscopy (FLIM)-based biosensing, that EGFR activity can be successfully suppressed by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, released from the lipopolyplexes. Finally, we measured the biodistribution of lipopolyplexes containing 125I-labelled inhibitors and were able to demonstrate that the lipopolyplexes gave significantly higher drug delivery to the tumors compared with free drug.
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- 2021
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4. Theorising in Everyday Nursing Practice: A Critical Analysis
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Helen Allan and Karen Evans
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- 2022
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5. Drug delivery, biodistribution and anti-EGFR activity: theragnostic nanoparticles for simultaneous
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Robin, Bofinger, Gregory, Weitsman, Rachel, Evans, Matthias, Glaser, Kerstin, Sander, Helen, Allan, Daniel, Hochhauser, Tammy L, Kalber, Erik, Årstad, Helen C, Hailes, Tony, Ng, and Alethea B, Tabor
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ErbB Receptors ,Mice ,Chemistry ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Animals ,Nanoparticles ,Tissue Distribution ,Biosensing Techniques ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors - Abstract
In vivo delivery of small molecule therapeutics to cancer cells, assessment of the selectivity of administration, and measuring the efficacity of the drug in question at the molecule level, are important ongoing challenges in developing new classes of cancer chemotherapeutics. One approach that has the potential to provide targeted delivery, tracking of biodistribution and readout of efficacy, is to use multimodal theragnostic nanoparticles to deliver the small molecule therapeutic. In this paper, we report the development of targeted theragnostic lipid/peptide/DNA lipopolyplexes. These simultaneously deliver an inhibitor of the EGFR tyrosine kinase, and plasmid DNA coding for a Crk-based biosensor, Picchu-X, which when expressed in the target cells can be used to quantify the inhibition of EGFR in vivo in a mouse colorectal cancer xenograft model. Reversible bioconjugation of a known analogue of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor Mo-IPQA to a cationic peptide, and co-formulation with peptides containing both EGFR-binding and cationic sequences, allowed for good levels of inhibitor encapsulation with targeted delivery to LIM1215 colon cancer cells. Furthermore, high levels of expression of the Picchu-X biosensor in the LIM1215 cells in vivo allowed us to demonstrate, using fluorescence lifetime microscopy (FLIM)-based biosensing, that EGFR activity can be successfully suppressed by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, released from the lipopolyplexes. Finally, we measured the biodistribution of lipopolyplexes containing 125I-labelled inhibitors and were able to demonstrate that the lipopolyplexes gave significantly higher drug delivery to the tumors compared with free drug., We report the development of targeted theragnostic lipid/peptide/DNA lipopolyplexes for delivery of both a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, and plasmid DNA coding for a biosensor. These are used to quantify EGFR inhibition in cancer cell lines in vivo.
- Published
- 2021
6. Design, synthesis, and evaluation of peptide-imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine bioconjugates as potential bivalent inhibitors of the VirB11 ATPase HP0525
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Gabriel Waksman, James Sayer, Tina Daviter, Helen Allan, Alethea B. Tabor, Hans Koss, Karin Walldén, and Paul J. Gane
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Pyrazine ,Protein subunit ,Peptide ,Random hexamer ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Bivalent (genetics) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bacterial Proteins ,Structural Biology ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Biology ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Adenosine Triphosphatases ,Bioconjugation ,Helicobacter pylori ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Docking (molecular) ,Pyrazines ,Click chemistry ,Molecular Medicine ,Peptides - Abstract
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infections have been implicated in the development of gastric ulcers and various cancers: however, the success of current therapies is compromised by rising antibiotic resistance. The virulence and pathogenicity of H. pylori is mediated by the type IV secretion system (T4SS), a multiprotein macromolecular nanomachine that transfers toxic bacterial factors and plasmid DNA between bacterial cells, thus contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance. A key component of the T4SS is the VirB11 ATPase HP0525, which is a hexameric protein assembly. We have previously reported the design and synthesis of a series of novel 8-amino imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine derivatives as inhibitors of HP0525. In order to improve their selectivity, and potentially develop these compounds as tools for probing the assembly of the HP0525 hexamer, we have explored the design and synthesis of potential bivalent inhibitors. We used the structural details of the subunit-subunit interactions within the HP0525 hexamer to design peptide recognition moieties of the subunit interface. Different methods (cross metathesis, click chemistry, and cysteine-malemide) for bioconjugation to selected 8-amino imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazines were explored, as well as peptides spanning larger or smaller regions of the interface. The IC50 values of the resulting linker-8-amino imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine derivatives, and the bivalent inhibitors, were related to docking studies with the HP0525 crystal structure and to molecular dynamics simulations of the peptide recognition moieties.
- Published
- 2021
7. Person Envy
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Angela Helen Allan
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- 2020
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8. Multi-modal imaging probe for assessing the efficiency of stem cell delivery to orthotopic breast tumours
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Tomas D. Kostelec, Helen Allan, Alethea B. Tabor, May Zaw Thin, Tammy L. Kalber, Daniel J. Stuckey, Robin Bofinger, Mark F. Lythgoe, P. Stephen Patrick, Simon Guillaume, John Connell, and Helen C. Hailes
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genetic structures ,Cell Survival ,Cell ,Antineoplastic Agents ,02 engineering and technology ,Cell fate determination ,Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation ,Multimodal Imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Drug Delivery Systems ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Bioluminescence imaging ,Animals ,Humans ,General Materials Science ,Viability assay ,Luciferases ,030304 developmental biology ,Cell Proliferation ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Indium Radioisotopes ,Breast tumours ,Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Chemistry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Cell Tracking ,Cancer research ,Female ,Magnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles ,Stem cell ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Iron oxide nanoparticles ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Illustration of adipose-derived stem cells with tri-modal imaging capabilities for evaluating the efficiency of cell delivery to tumours., Stem cells have been utilised as anti-cancer agents due to their ability to home to and integrate within tumours. Methods to augment stem cell homing to tumours are being investigated with the goal of enhancing treatment efficacy. However, it is currently not possible to evaluate both cell localisation and cell viability after engraftment, hindering optimisation of therapy. In this study, luciferase-expressing human adipocyte-derived stem cells (ADSCs) were incubated with Indium-111 radiolabelled iron oxide nanoparticles to produce cells with tri-modal imaging capabilities. ADSCs were administered intravenously (IV) or intracardially (IC) to mice bearing orthotopic breast tumours. Cell fate was monitored using bioluminescence imaging (BLI) as a measure of cell viability, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for cell localisation and single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT) for cell quantification. Serial monitoring with multi-modal imaging showed the presence of viable ADSCs within tumours as early as 1-hour post IC injection and the percentage of ADSCs within tumours to be 2-fold higher after IC than IV. Finally, histological analysis was used to validate engraftment of ADSC within tumour tissue. These findings demonstrate that multi-modal imaging can be used to evaluate the efficiency of stem cell delivery to tumours and that IC cell administration is more effective for tumour targeting.
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- 2020
9. Research in and 'of' nursing practice
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Helen Allan
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Nursing practice ,Nursing ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2019
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10. Reintegrating theory and practice in nursing
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Helen Allan and Karen Evans
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Practice learning ,Clinical placement ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Learning environment ,Feature (machine learning) ,Hidden curriculum ,Nursing knowledge ,Psychology ,Epistemology - Abstract
This chapter argues that populist thinking tends to criticise the gap, rather than consider it a potentially productive relationship. The theory–practice gap manifests itself in many different ways in nursing. It has been described as a mismatch between nursing as taught and nursing as practised. The recognition of different forms of theory and knowledge in nursing has been possible because of a rejection of the technical-rational approach to knowledge and the assumption that theory informs practice rather than there being a symbiotic relationship. A feature of the British learning environment or clinical placement for nursing students is that it is also a workplace. The hidden curriculum can also be an area where conflict arises between different approaches to learning. The theory–practice relationships depend in part upon the ways in which knowledge has been “codified” in accordance with the rules and procedures of the disciplines and schools of thought that inform the field of practice.
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- 2019
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11. The impact of irritable bowel syndrome on health-related quality of life in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
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Seyed Abdolvahab Taghavi, Zatollah Asemi, Fatemeh Bazarganipour, Helen Allan, Zahra Khashavi, Tahereh Safarzadeh, Shamsi Pourchangiz, Fatemeh Zare, Samaneh Ghasemi, and Zivar Karimi
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endocrine system diseases ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications - Abstract
The objectives of this study were to compare the prevalence and quality of life (QOL) of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) compared with healthy women.Methods This was a case-control study of 201 women recruited at an infertility clinic in Iran. The control group were healthy women (n=100) and the comparison group, women with PCOS (n=101). Data were collected by clinical Rome III criteria to determine the IBS, Bristol scale for stool consistency and IBS QOL.Results The reporting of IBS symptoms was higher in PCOS (20.7%) than control group (11%) (P=0.05). Predictive factors of IBS included having diagnosed PCOS (OR: 1.61; CI: 0.71–2.11) and an increase of LH/FSH (OR: 1.09; 0.95 CI: (0.83-1.45). The IBS QOL score in the IBS+PCOS group was lower than other groups (IBS+ non PCOS, non IBS+PCOS, non IBS+ non PCOS; scores in food avoidance and worries about health domains were significant (P
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- 2019
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12. Near-infrared dual bioluminescence imaging in mouse models of cancer using infraluciferin
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Gabriela Kramer-Marek, Helen Allan, Alastair Hotblack, Tara L. Southworth, James C. Anderson, Giulia Agliardi, Bruce R. Branchini, Thomas A Burley, Cassandra L Stowe, Gary N. Parkinson, Mark F. Lythgoe, Martin Pule, Maria Vinci, Daniela M. Ciobota, and Tammy L. Kalber
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Mouse ,Protein Conformation ,Structural Biology and Molecular Biophysics ,near infrared ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,01 natural sciences ,Mice ,Neoplasms ,Biology (General) ,CAR T cells ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Optical Imaging ,General Medicine ,bioluminescence ,Luciferin ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,dual imaging ,Medicine ,Research Article ,Cell type ,QH301-705.5 ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Science ,010402 general chemistry ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Biochemistry and Chemical Biology ,medicine ,Animals ,Bioluminescence ,Bioluminescence imaging ,Luciferase ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,0104 chemical sciences ,luciferase crystal structure ,Disease Models, Animal ,Luminescent Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,Luminescent Measurements ,Cancer cell ,infraluciferin ,Neoplasm Transplantation - Abstract
Bioluminescence imaging (BLI) is ubiquitous in scientific research for the sensitive tracking of biological processes in small animal models. However, due to the attenuation of visible light by tissue, and the limited set of near-infrared bioluminescent enzymes, BLI is largely restricted to monitoring single processes in vivo. Here we show, that by combining stabilised colour mutants of firefly luciferase (FLuc) with the luciferin (LH2) analogue infraluciferin (iLH2), near-infrared dual BLI can be achieved in vivo. The X-ray crystal structure of FLuc with a high-energy intermediate analogue, 5’-O-[N-(dehydroinfraluciferyl)sulfamoyl] adenosine (iDLSA) provides insight into the FLuc-iLH2 reaction leading to near-infrared light emission. The spectral characterisation and unmixing validation studies reported here established that iLH2 is superior to LH2 for the spectral unmixing of bioluminescent signals in vivo; which led to this novel near-infrared dual BLI system being applied to monitor both tumour burden and CAR T cell therapy within a systemically induced mouse tumour model., eLife digest Fireflies and some other insects glow to attract mates or prey. This so-called bioluminescence occurs when an enzyme called luciferase modifies the molecule luciferin, which can then emit bright yellow-green light. The gene that encodes the luciferase enzyme has been introduced into cells from mammals, including cancer cells. In the presence of luciferin, these cells begin to glow. The brightness of the bioluminescence depends on how many cancer cells are growing and dividing. The light is bright enough for the cancer cells making luciferase to be transplanted into mice so their behaviour can be examined. However, blood and other tissues absorb the yellow-green light, making it hard to see the cancer cells deep within a mouse. To circumvent this problem, researchers designed a new type of luciferin, called infraluciferin, which emits red light that shines through blood and tissues. There are now also different variants of the luciferase enzyme, which act on infraluciferin to make different shades of red light. Stowe et al. wanted to test if two different biological events happening at the same time could be observed using two shades of bioluminescent red in a single live mouse. First, a mixture of cancer cells containing two versions of luciferase were transplanted into mice. When the mice were then given infraluciferin, the two types of cancer cells could be distinguished based on the different shades of red bioluminescence. In a second experiment, Stowe et al. tracked the treatment of cancer cells with immune cells, by introducing a different version of luciferase into each of the two groups of cells. Over time, the red light produced by the immune cells grew stronger than that of the cancer cells, indicating that the number of cancer cells had decreased and that the treatment was effective. Together, this work shows that it can be simple, cheap and efficient to observe more than one cell type, or even disease, in a living system. This technique may be used by scientists to study different diseases and treatment options in mice. Importantly, it will also reduce the number of animals used to do this research.
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- 2019
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13. Author response: Near-infrared dual bioluminescence imaging in mouse models of cancer using infraluciferin
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Tammy L. Kalber, Gabriela Kramer-Marek, Alastair Hotblack, Gary N. Parkinson, Martin Pule, Cassandra L Stowe, Giulia Agliardi, Bruce R. Branchini, Maria Vinci, Daniela M. Ciobota, Helen Allan, Mark F. Lythgoe, Thomas A Burley, Tara L. Southworth, and James C. Anderson
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Physics ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Near-infrared spectroscopy ,medicine ,Cancer ,Bioluminescence imaging ,DUAL (cognitive architecture) ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2019
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14. Multi-modal Cell Labelling for Quantification and Optimization of Stem Cell Delivery to Orthotopic Breast Tumors
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Alethea B. Tabor, Mark F. Lythgoe, Helen Allan, Helen C. Hailes, Tomas D. Kostelec, P. Stephen Patrick, Robin Bofinger, May Zaw Thin, Daniel J. Stuckey, John Connell, and Tammy L. Kalber
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Stem-cell therapy ,Cell fate determination ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spect imaging ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Bioluminescence imaging ,Viability assay ,Stem cell ,business - Abstract
Stem cells have been utilized as anti-cancer agents due to their ability to home to and integrate within tumors. Methods to augment stem cell homing to tumors are being investigated with the goal of enhancing treatment efficacy. However, it is currently not possible to evaluate both cell localization and cell viability after engraftment, hindering optimization of therapy. In this study, luciferase expressing human adipocyte derived stem cells (ADSCs) were labelled with superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) conjugated to Indium-111 to produce cells with tri-modal imaging capabilities. ADSCs were administered intravenously (IV) or intracardially (IC) to mice bearing 4T1 orthotopic breast tumors. Cell fate was monitored serially using bioluminescence imaging (BLI) as a measure of cell viability, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for cell localization and single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT) for cell quantification. BLI/MRI/SPECT imaging revealed differences in whole body cell distribution between injection routes. BLI showed the presence of viable ADSCs within tumors as early as 1-hour post IC injection compared to 3 days post IV injection. SPECT data showed the percentage of ADSCs within tumors to be 2-fold higher after IC than IV at 5-hour post injection. Whereas, MRI confirmed the localization of SPION labelled cells in tumors after IC injection but not IV. Finally, histological analysis was used to validate engraftment of ADSC within tumor tissue. These findings demonstrate that multi-modal imaging can be used to evaluate the efficiency of stem cell delivery to tumors and that IC cell administration is more effective for tumor targeting.
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- 2019
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15. Corrigendum to ‘Design and synthesis of Coenzyme A analogues as Aurora kinase A inhibitors: An exploration of the roles of the pyrophosphate and pantetheine moieties’. [Bioorg. Med. Chem. 28 (2020) 115740]
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Alethea B. Tabor, Fiona Bellany, Trang M. Tran, Helen Allan, Ivan Gout, A. W. Edith Chan, and Yugo Tsuchiya
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Pantetheine ,Stereochemistry ,Coenzyme A ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Biochemistry ,Pyrophosphate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine ,Aurora Kinase A ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 2021
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16. Design and synthesis of Coenzyme A analogues as Aurora kinase A inhibitors: An exploration of the roles of the pyrophosphate and pantetheine moieties
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Trang M. Tran, A. W. Edith Chan, Alethea B. Tabor, Ivan Gout, Helen Allan, Yugo Tsuchiya, and Fiona Bellany
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Models, Molecular ,Pantetheine ,Stereochemistry ,Coenzyme A ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Aurora A kinase ,Pharmaceutical Science ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Pyrophosphate ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Humans ,Mode of action ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Aurora Kinase A ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Adenosine ,0104 chemical sciences ,Diphosphates ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,chemistry ,Covalent bond ,Drug Design ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,Molecular Medicine ,Corrigendum ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Coenzyme A (CoA) is a highly selective inhibitor of the mitotic regulatory enzyme Aurora A kinase, with a novel mode of action. Herein we report the design and synthesis of analogues of CoA as inhibitors of Aurora A kinase. We have designed and synthesised modified CoA structures as potential inhibitors, combining dicarbonyl mimics of the pyrophosphate group with a conserved adenosine headgroup and different length pantetheine-based tail groups. An analogue with a -SH group at the end of the pantotheinate tail showed the best IC50, probably due to the formation of a covalent bond with Aurora A kinase Cys290.
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- 2020
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17. Facilitating and inhibiting factors related to treatment adherence in women with polycystic ovary syndrome: A qualitative study
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Fatemeh, Bazarganipour, Seyed Abdolvahab, Taghavi, Helen, Allan, and Nazafarin, Hosseini
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Polycystic ovarian syndrome ,Adherence ,Qualitative research ,Original Article - Abstract
Background: Adherence issues in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) patients have not been examined thoroughly. Patients report prolonged periods of treatment and side effects of the drug as the most common reason for withdrawal from treatment. To improve the effective management of PCOS patients, it is fundamental to understand facilitating and inhibiting factors to treatment adherence. Objective: To explore facilitating/inhibiting factors related to treatment adherence among PCOS patients. Materials and Methods: This was a qualitative study with a purposive sample of women with confirmed diagnosis of PCOS. The data were collected via 20 in-depth semi-structured interviews with women aged between 21-34 yr. A qualitative content analysis was used to analyze the data. Results: Five themes were identified which described different types of facilitating/ inhibiting factors to treatment adherence. Inhibiting factors included financial issues, patient-related, disease-related, and health care provider-related factors; while social factors were found to be both facilitating and inhibiting. Conclusion: The findings suggest that successful adherence to PCOS treatment is highly dependent on patients recognizing and adapting to financial, social, and health care related inhibiting factors. It is also crucial for clinicians and policy makers to recognize these key inhibiting factors in order to improve treatment outcomes.
- Published
- 2018
18. A Qualitative Inquiry into the Mediating Role of Religion and Spirituality in Adjusting Marital Relationships of Infertile Women
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Robab Latifnejad Roudsari, Helen Allan, and Pam Smith
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Infertility ,religion ,Key words: Feminist grounded theory ,Perception ,Spirituality ,lcsh:Gynecology and obstetrics ,lcsh:RG1-991 - Abstract
Background and Aim: Despite growing body of literature regarding marital adjustment of infertile women, to our knowledge, there is no study to address the role of religious and spiritual beliefs in adjusting marital relationships in infertile women. Considering the significance of marital cohesiveness and commitment in the long and stressful journey of infertile women, this study was designed to explore how marital relationships are experienced by infertile women who affiliated to different religious faiths.Methods: A group of 30 infertile women affiliated to different denominations of Christianity (Protestantism, Catholicism, Orthodoxies) and Islam (Shiite and Sunni) were interviewed. The design was a grounded theory study including semi structured in-depth interviews. Data were collected in one Iranian and two UK fertility clinics through theoretical sampling and analyzed using Strauss and Corbin’s mode of grounded theory. Results: Religious infertile women using a religious/spiritual meaning-making framework tried adjust their marital relationships through going the following phases: being optimistic and positive, having supportive relationships, being grateful and appreciated for their marital life, offering spiritual sympathy and adopting religious role models. These strategies aided infertile women to be more understanding, sympathetic and gentle towards maintaining the family cohesion.Conclusion: I argue that awareness of health professionals of the potential ways in which religion and spirituality assist infertile women to deal with their marital issues could be important. This knowledge will help them to support emotional wholeness and integrity of infertile women, offering religious and spiritual coping strategies which can help adjusting their marital relationships.
- Published
- 2013
19. Buddies help find the way
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Helen, Allan
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'We were given a map of the hospital and told to find our own way,' is one comment from a third-year student nurse recalling her experience of a first-year placement.
- Published
- 2017
20. Perceptions of changing practice in the examination of the newborn, from holistic to opportunistic
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A Brown, Sharon McDonald, and Helen Allan
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business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Perspective (graphical) ,Key issues ,Grounded theory ,Nursing ,Continuing professional development ,Perception ,Maternity and Midwifery ,Medicine ,business ,Set (psychology) ,media_common - Abstract
This paper presents selective findings from a larger grounded theory study of midwifery and continuing professional development. A grounded theory approach was used to analyse data concerning what motivates midwives to undertake the examination of the newborn post-registration midwifery course and then to utilise their skills or not. Key issues identified in the study related to the midwives'views and perceptions. They found that practice is changing and they are moving away from the holistic perspective of examination of the newborn baby to opportunistic examinations. The midwives' perceptions are that there is a difference in the knowledge and training for midwives compared to paediatricians and although the National Screening Committee has set standards and competencies adhered to by Universities across the UK, from the data in this study midwives do not observe paediatricians using them in practice. The study findings suggest a change of culture and practice may be required by all practitioners who carry out the examination of the newborn.
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- 2012
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21. Supporting deployed operations: are military nurses gaining the relevant experience from MDHUs to be competent in deployed operations?
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Helen Allan and Steven P Beaumont
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Peacetime ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Military nursing ,General Medicine ,Nurse's Role ,United Kingdom ,Grounded theory ,Nursing ,Feeling ,Software deployment ,Military Nursing ,Preparedness ,Medicine ,Military medical ethics ,Clinical Competence ,business ,Competence (human resources) ,General Nursing ,media_common - Abstract
Aims and objectives To explore how peacetime employment of military nurses in the UK National Health Service Medical Defence Hospital Units prepares them to be competent to practise in their role on deployment. Background Military secondary care nurses are employed within UK National Health Service Trusts to gain clinical experience that will be relevant to their military nursing role. Design A two-stage grounded theory study using mixed methods: postal questionnaire survey and in-depth interviews. Methods In stage one a postal questionnaire was distributed to all serving military nurses. Stage two involved 12 semi-structured interviews. The data from both parts of the study were analysed using grounded theory. Results Four categories and one core category were identified, which suggested that participants did not feel fully prepared for deployment. Their feelings of preparedness increased with deployment experience and decreased when the nature of injuries seen on deployment changed. Respondents argued that even when unprepared, they did not feel incompetent. The findings suggest that the peacetime clinical experience gained in the National Health Service did not always develop the necessary competencies to carry out roles as military nurses on deployment. This study highlights the unique role of military nurses. We discuss these findings in the light of the literature on competency and expertise. Conclusion The military nurses in this study did not feel fully prepared for deployed operations. We propose a new model for how military nurses could gain relevant experience from their National Health Service placements. Relevance to clinical practice National Health Service clinical placements need to be reassessed regularly to ensure that they are meeting military nurses' clinical requirements. Experiences of nurses returning from deployment could be shared and used as a basis for reflection and learning within National Health Service Trusts and also inform decisions regarding the appropriateness of clinical placements for qualified military nurses.
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- 2012
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22. Assessment of treatment-induced female sexual morbidity in oncology: is this a part of routine medical follow-up after radical pelvic radiotherapy?
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Isabel White White, Helen Allan, and Sara Faithfull
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genital Neoplasms, Female ,assessment ,Sexual Behavior ,medicine.medical_treatment ,pelvic radiotherapy toxicity ,Risk Assessment ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pelvic Neoplasms ,Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological ,Radiation Injuries ,Adverse effect ,Disease surveillance ,Radiotherapy ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Clinical trial ,Radiation therapy ,Clinical Study ,Quality of Life ,sexual morbidity ,Female ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Risk assessment ,Psychosocial ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background: Oncology follow-up has traditionally prioritised disease surveillance and the assessment and management of symptoms associated with cancer and its treatment. Over the past decade, the focus on late effects of treatment has increased, particularly those that have an adverse effect on long-term function and quality of life. The aim of this research was to explore factors that influence the identification of treatment-induced female sexual difficulties in routine oncology follow-up after radical pelvic radiotherapy. Methods: A structured observation schedule was used to systematically record topics discussed in 69 radiotherapy follow-up consultations observed over a 5-month period. Results: Analysis suggests that physical toxicity assessment focused on bowel (81%) and bladder (70%) symptoms. Vaginal toxicity was discussed less frequently (42%) and sexual issues were explored in only 25% of consultations. Formal recording of radiation toxicity through assessment questionnaires was limited to patients participating in clinical trials. Surveillance activity and the management of active physical symptoms predominated and psychosocial issues were addressed in only 42% of consultations. Interpretation: Female sexual morbidity after pelvic radiotherapy remains a neglected aspect of routine follow-up and cancer survivorship. Developments in both individual practice and service provision are necessary if the identification and management of treatment-induced female sexual difficulties is to be improved.
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- 2011
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23. Using psychodynamic small group work in nurse education: Closing the theory–practice gap?
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Helen Allan
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Interprofessional Relations ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Education ,Nursing ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Humans ,Learning ,Medicine ,Nurse education ,Group work ,Education, Nursing ,TUTOR ,General Nursing ,computer.programming_language ,media_common ,Psychodynamic psychotherapy ,Medical education ,business.industry ,Psychodynamics ,United Kingdom ,Nursing Theory ,Feeling ,Nursing theory ,Position paper ,Students, Nursing ,business ,computer - Abstract
This paper illustrates the role of psychodynamic small group work in integrating theory and practice for nursing students. Psychodynamic work with individual patients and small staff groups is established in some areas of medical and nursing practice although not widely used in general nursing. Clinical material which was brought to two group supervision sessions by student nurses on clinical placement is presented in this paper and discussed using a psychodynamic perspective. A critical review of psychodynamic small group work and a position paper is presented in this paper to argue that using a psychodynamic approach in nurse education may address the theory–practice gap for student nurses by allowing them to reflect on the emotional issues arising in clinical placements. The paper illustrates how supervision can assist students to integrate theory and practice. It is suggested that reflecting on feelings in small group work with student nurses with a tutor or supervisor who works psychodynamically may help students integrate their theoretical and practical learning. Understanding the theory–practice gap from a psychodynamic perspective may help nurse tutors in their personal tutor work to integrate theoretical and practical learning for students and thereby support students in providing good quality care for their patients.
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- 2011
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24. Experiences of supernumerary status and the hidden curriculum in nursing: a new twist in the theory-practice gap?
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Pam Smith, Helen Allan, and Mike O'Driscoll
- Subjects
Medical education ,business.industry ,education ,General Medicine ,Clinical Practice ,InformationSystems_GENERAL ,Nursing ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Medicine ,Hidden curriculum ,Supernumerary ,business ,Curriculum ,General Nursing ,Clinical learning ,Theory practice - Abstract
This paper aims to increase our understanding about how student nurses' experiences of supernumerary status are embedded in the hidden curriculum in clinical practice and contribute to the theory-practice gap in nursing.
- Published
- 2011
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25. Laparoscopic surgery for endometrial cancer: a phenomenological study
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Wendy Knibb, Helen Allan, and Cathy Hughes
- Subjects
Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endometrial cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Laparoscopic hysterectomy ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Laparoscopy ,business ,General Nursing ,Surgery - Abstract
This paper is a report of a study of women's perspectives on the experience of laparoscopic surgery for endometrial cancer.
- Published
- 2010
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26. Are pedagogies used in nurse education research evident in practice?
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Pam Smith and Helen Allan
- Subjects
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Teaching method ,Context (language use) ,Education ,Translational Research, Biomedical ,Education, Nursing, Continuing ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Humans ,Learning ,Medicine ,Staff Development ,Nurse education ,Education, Nursing ,Workplace ,General Nursing ,business.industry ,Teaching ,Professional development ,Evidence-Based Nursing ,Social constructionism ,Educational research ,Nursing Education Research ,Faculty, Nursing ,Clinical Competence ,business ,Knowledge transfer ,Discipline - Abstract
This paper considers two questions: what pedagogies for teaching nursing are used in nurse education research? Are these pedagogies transferred to learning in the workplace? We argue that there are underpinning pedagogies identified in nurse education research in the area of workplace and work based learning which are broadly qualitative, action orientated and focused on knowledge generation. Such pedagogies are rooted in a philosophy of teaching and learning where learning is seen as active, reflective and socially constructed. We consider possible answers to these questions through an exploration of empirical work by Evans et al. (2009) which has focused on knowledge transfer in the workplace. Their work offers insights into how pedagogies can be applied to nurse education research which in turn may be transferred into the workplace. In particular, they argue that the concept of knowledge transfer is outdated and we should focus instead on how knowledge learnt in one context (the academy) is re-contextualised in another (the workplace). We also draw on Aranda and Law's (2007) paper on the debates concerning the use of sociology in nurse education to explore competing narratives. We conclude that the pedagogies identified in educational research are not transferred to nurse education and practice yet offer an alternative view of knowledge transfer as illustrated by Evans et al.'s work which explores how learning in the workplace may be facilitated more effectively. We conclude that the lack of transfer of nurse education research pedagogies to practice learning undermines the position of nurse teachers within the academy as nurse education becomes a practice or professional discipline without a discrete disciplinary base.
- Published
- 2010
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27. 'We should be able to bear our patients in our teaching in some way': Theoretical perspectives on how nurse teachers manage their emotions to negotiate the split between education and caring practice
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Pam Smith and T. Helen Allan
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Emotions ,education ,Anxiety ,Psychoanalysis ,Education ,Interpersonal relationship ,Professional Role ,Nursing ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Learning ,Interpersonal Relations ,Models, Nursing ,Nurse education ,Education, Nursing ,General Nursing ,business.industry ,Teaching ,Nursing research ,Learning environment ,Nursing Research ,Emotional labor ,Nursing Theory ,Faculty, Nursing ,Nursing theory ,medicine.symptom ,business ,University system - Abstract
In a classic paper, Menzies (1960) argued that nurses distanced themselves from patients in order to avoid direct engagement with them and as a means of managing their anxiety. Reflecting on the work 40years later Fabricius argued that in the move from hospital-based nurse education to universities, nurse educators had further entrenched this defence. It is from both these perspectives that we locate this paper to explore the position of nurse teachers today drawing on empirical data from a study set up to investigate who currently leads student nurse learning in the clinical areas and as a follow up to original research on the emotional labour of nursing (Smith, 1992). This paper presents findings from interviews with nurse teachers which are complemented by student nurse responses to a ward learning environment questionnaire, interviews with ward based nurses and documentary analysis. A major theme to emerge from the study was that there has been an uncoupling of education and practice as a consequence of the changes taking place in nurse education over the last two decades. This paper describes the range of emotions expressed as a consequence of this uncoupling such as increasing feelings of uncertainty over the nurse teacher's role in clinical practice and anxiety generated from working in a university system which appeared to devalue caring. The apparent impact of these feelings on nurse teachers was to reinforce the education/practice split and the projection of their anxiety onto students and practitioners. We suggest that nurse teachers and in particular the system in which they work need to recognise both split and projection so that they are able to bear their anxiety and manage it in their teaching.
- Published
- 2010
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28. Still looking for leadership – Who is responsible for student nurses’ learning in practice?
- Author
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Mike O'Driscoll, Pam Smith, and Helen Allan
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Higher education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,State Medicine ,Education ,Mentorship ,Nursing ,Health care ,Humans ,Learning ,Medicine ,Quality (business) ,Nurse education ,Education, Nursing ,General Nursing ,media_common ,business.industry ,Focus Groups ,United Kingdom ,Leadership ,Workforce ,Students, Nursing ,Student nurse ,Curriculum ,Day to day ,business - Abstract
Summary The study on which this paper reports examined how the widespread changes in the NHS workforce and in higher education which have transformed nurse education in recent decades have impacted on responsibility for the leadership of student nurse learning in clinical practice. Findings from this mixed methods case study carried out at four English higher education institutions between 2006 and 2007 suggest that link lecturers' presence in clinical areas is diminishing, and that practice nurses' involvement with pre-registration students' learning may be limited. Ward managers lead learning at ward level but changes to their role limit their presence on the wards, so that mentors lead student learning on a day to day basis, which they must balance with caring for patients. Changes to the nurse's role mean that modelling bedside care often falls to health care assistants. This deficit of leadership for learning may be understood as a manifestation of the ‘uncoupling' of education and practice following the move of nurse education into higher education and subsequent changes to nursing roles. Strengthening leadership for learning is likely to be associated with recoupling practice and education and indicators to assess the quality of leadership for learning in clinical practice are suggested.
- Published
- 2010
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29. Overseas nurses’ experiences of discrimination: a case of racist bullying?
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Helen Allan, Helen Cowie, and Peter Smith
- Subjects
Adult ,Workplace bullying ,Internationality ,Leadership and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Poison control ,Social Environment ,Racism ,Occupational safety and health ,Interpersonal relationship ,Social Justice ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Humans ,Medicine ,Interpersonal Relations ,Workplace ,Qualitative Research ,media_common ,business.industry ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Middle Aged ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,Prejudice ,business ,Social psychology ,Agonistic Behavior ,Stress, Psychological ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Aim We present three case studies of discrimination to illustrate how racist bullying as discriminatory practices operates in the workplace. Background Workplace bullying in the British health care sector is reported along with evidence of discrimination towards overseas-trained nurses recruited to work in the United Kingdom (UK). Methods The three interviews, which form the basis of the discussion in this paper, were selected purposively from a national study of overseas nurses because they present strong examples of the phenomenon of workplace bullying. The data on which this paper draws were collected through semi-structured, audio-recorded interviews and thematically re-analysed using nvivo V2. Results The national study showed how racism is entrenched in health workplaces. Our findings in this paper suggest that racism can be understood by the concept of racist bullying. There are four key findings which illustrate racist bullying in the workplace: abusive power relationships, communication difficulties, emotional reactions to racist bullying and responses to bullying. Conclusions We argue that the literature on workplace bullying adds a layer of analysis of discrimination at the individual and organizational levels which enables us to further delineate racist bullying. We conclude that racist bullying can be specifically identified as a form of bullying. Implications for nursing managers Our data may assist managers to challenge current workplace working practices and support bullied employees. The three interviews show different responses to racist bullying which allow us to explore some implications for management practice.
- Published
- 2009
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30. The shaping of organisational routines and the distal patient in assisted reproductive technologies
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Sheryl de Lacey, Helen Allan, and Deborah Payne
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Infertility ,Travel ,Reproductive Techniques, Assisted ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Australia ,Fertility ,Reproductive technology ,medicine.disease ,Nurse's Role ,Health Services Accessibility ,United Kingdom ,Patient care ,Position (obstetrics) ,Nursing ,Family Planning Services ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,Fertility care ,General Nursing ,New Zealand ,media_common - Abstract
In this paper we comment on the changes in the provision of fertility care in Australia, New Zealand and the UK to illustrate how different funding arrangements of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) shape the delivery of patient care and the position of fertility nursing. We suggest that the routinisation of in vitro fertilisation technology has introduced a new way of managing the fertility patient at a distance, the distal fertility patient. This has resulted in new forms of organisational routines in ART which challenge both traditional forms of nursing and advanced nursing roles. We discuss the consequences of this increasingly globalised approach to infertility through the lens of three national contexts, Australia, New Zealand and the UK to unpack the position of nursing within the new forms of organisational routines.
- Published
- 2009
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31. The Devaluation of Nursing: a Position Statement
- Author
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Helen Allan, Khim Horton, and Verena Tschudin
- Subjects
Self-Assessment ,Social Values ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Organizational culture ,Foreign Professional Personnel ,Nursing Methodology Research ,Global Health ,State Medicine ,Professional Competence ,Nursing ,Social Justice ,Health care ,Global health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Nurse education ,Personnel Selection ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Motivation ,business.industry ,Nursing research ,Organizational Culture ,United Kingdom ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Team nursing ,Social Perception ,Public Opinion ,Occupational health nursing ,Workforce ,Nursing Staff ,Empathy ,Power, Psychological ,business ,Attitude to Health - Abstract
How nursing as a profession is valued may be changing and needs to be explored and understood in a global context. We draw on data from two empirical studies to illustrate our argument. The first study explored the value of nursing globally, the second investigated the experiences of overseas trained nurses recruited to work in a migrant capacity in the UK health care workforce. The indications are that nurses perceive themselves as devalued socially, and that other health care professionals do not give nursing the same status as other, socially more prestigious professions, such as medicine. Organizational and management structures within the NHS and the independent care home sector devalue overseas nurses and the contribution they make to health care. Our conclusions lead us to question the accepted sociocultural value of the global nursing workforce and its perceived contribution to global health care, and to consider two ethical frameworks from which these issues could be discussed further.
- Published
- 2008
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32. Leadership for learning: a literature study of leadership for learning in clinical practice
- Author
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Maria Lorentzon, Helen Allan, and Pam Smith
- Subjects
Higher education ,Leadership and Management ,education ,Sister ,Nurse's Role ,Experiential learning ,Clinical Nursing Research ,Education, Nursing, Continuing ,Nursing ,Professional learning community ,Humans ,Learning ,Medicine ,Curriculum ,Qualitative Research ,Medical education ,business.industry ,Learning environment ,United States ,Clinical Practice ,Leadership ,Nursing, Supervisory ,Clinical Competence ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
To report a literature study of leadership for learning in clinical practice in the United Kingdom. Background Previous research in the United Kingdom showed that the ward sister was central to creating a positive learning environment for student nurses. Since the 1990s, the ward mentor has emerged as the key to student nurses' learning in the United Kingdom.A literature study of new leadership roles and their influence on student nurse learning (restricted to the United Kingdom) which includes an analysis of ten qualitative interviews with stakeholders in higher education in the United Kingdom undertaken as part of the literature study.Learning in clinical placements is led by practice teaching roles such as mentors, clinical practice facilitators and practice educators rather than new leadership roles. However, workforce changes in clinical placements has restricted the opportunities for trained nurses to role model caring activities for student nurses and university based lecturers are increasingly distant from clinical practice.Leadership for learning in clinical practice poses three unresolved questions for nurse managers, practitioners and educators - what is nursing, what should student nurses learn and from whom?Leadership for student nurse learning has passed to new learning and teaching roles with Trusts and away from nursing managers. This has implications for workforce planning and role modelling within the profession.
- Published
- 2008
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33. Nursing the body
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Subjects
Nursing ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2016
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34. Understanding Sociology in Nursing
- Author
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Helen Allan, Michael Traynor, Daniel Kelly, and Pam Smith
- Published
- 2016
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35. Becoming a patient
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Published
- 2016
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36. Who is the patient?
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Published
- 2016
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37. Using a sociological framework to understand nursing
- Author
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Pam Smith, Michael Traynor, Helen Allan, and Daniel Kelly
- Subjects
Pedagogy ,Sociology - Published
- 2016
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38. Nursing as women’s work
- Author
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Pam Smith and Helen Allan
- Subjects
Nursing ,Women's work ,Psychology - Published
- 2016
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39. The rhetoric of caring and the recruitment of overseas nurses: the social production of a care gap
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Subjects
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Social Values ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Foreign Professional Personnel ,Nursing Methodology Research ,Nurse Administrator ,Nurse's Role ,Nursing shortage ,Professional Competence ,Nursing ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Philosophy, Nursing ,Professional Autonomy ,Nurse Administrators ,Nurse education ,Personnel Selection ,Qualitative Research ,General Nursing ,Health policy ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Mentors ,General Medicine ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,United Kingdom ,Workforce ,Nursing Staff ,Empathy ,Nurse-Patient Relations ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: I will argue that overseas nurse recruitment is the consequence of a care gap, which arose from several policy shifts in the 1990s and in part from the rhetoric of a normative moral discourse in the UK which claims that caring is the moral essence of nursing. I will suggest that this discourse has masked the uncoupling of caring from nursing practice and that this uncoupling places the overseas nurses in a contradictory position. BACKGROUND: In an increasingly competitive global labour market, the UK is faced with a nursing shortage and has been recruiting trained nurses from abroad (NMC 1993-2002). DESIGN AND METHODS: This paper is based on two related, qualitative studies using semi-structured focus groups and individual interviews. The first explored the experiences of overseas nurses in the UK and the second investigated the equal opportunities and career progression of overseas nurses in the UK. RESULTS: The data from these studies challenge the normative UK value that caring is at the heart of nursing. These data are the lens through which we see this contradiction explicitly played out. Overseas nurses observe that caring (as undertaken by health care assistants in care homes) is not nursing yet caring is being passed down the line as a process that marginalizes the overseas nurses and at the same time devalues their skills. I do not argue that overseas nurses care at a higher standard (although this may be the case) just that they care differently, that they expected UK nurses to deliver basic care and, instead, experience UK nursing practice as less autonomous and of a lower standard than they expected. CONCLUSIONS: I argue that the overseas nurses' views help us understand the processes by which the uncoupling of caring from nursing has come about. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: This paper discusses a workforce issue which is directly relevant to clinical practice because it focuses on the meaning of care; what is caring, what are caring activities and how are these represented in the discourse on caring in the literature? This paper also reveals significant worries among nursing managers about how to staff the nursing workforce and what nurses should be doing in the clinical areas.
- Published
- 2007
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40. Experiences of infertility: liminality and the role of the fertility clinic
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Subjects
Infertility ,Reproductive Techniques, Assisted ,Social Values ,Human Development ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Friends ,Nursing Methodology Research ,Social value orientations ,Conflict, Psychological ,Life Change Events ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Family ,Social isolation ,Anthropology, Cultural ,Internal-External Control ,General Nursing ,media_common ,Stereotyping ,business.industry ,Socialization ,Taboo ,Social Support ,Gender studies ,Peer group ,medicine.disease ,Self Concept ,United Kingdom ,Fertility clinic ,Self-Help Groups ,Social Isolation ,Female ,Grief ,medicine.symptom ,Liminality ,business ,Attitude to Health ,Infertility, Female - Abstract
This paper explores the experiences of infertile women who occupy a liminal space in society, and argues that the fertility clinic served as a space to tolerate women's experiences of liminality. It provided not only rituals aimed at transition to pregnancy, but also a space where women's liminal experiences, which are caused by the existential chaos of infertility, could be tolerated. The British experience seemed to differ from the American one identified in the literature, where self-management and peer group support are described as strategies used by infertile women to manage infertility. The British women in this study did not appear to draw so much on self-management or peer group support to deal with their experiences of infertility. They appeared to be isolated in their experience. The clinic thus provided a space in which recognition was given to their intensely private experiences of difference from those in the outside fertile world and allowed them to manage these socially unacceptable, culturally taboo and invisible experiences. However, because of its very limited success rate in enabling women to become pregnant, rather than facilitating the transition of status from infertile to fertile woman, the clinic also served to reinforce the liminal experiences of those women who remained infertile. Inadvertently, the clinic offered a way of being in limbo while at the same time reinforcing the liminal experiences of women.
- Published
- 2007
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41. An evaluation of dependency assessment: experiences of staff, patients and carers in a UK hospice
- Author
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Helen Allan, Karen Bryan, and Helen Quinn
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Isolation (health care) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Dependency, Psychological ,Staffing ,Sample (statistics) ,Nursing ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Medicine ,health care economics and organizations ,Aged ,media_common ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Data collection ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Hospices ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,United Kingdom ,Caregivers ,Feeling ,Family medicine ,Female ,business ,Needs Assessment ,Dependency (project management) - Abstract
Aim To evaluate the experiences of health-care professionals, service users and carers of service users from a UK hospice in relation to dependency assessment. Design Qualitative evaluation. Sample Purposive, convenience sample of hospice staff, patients receiving hospice services and carers of patients receiving hospice services. Methods Focus group interviews with hospice staff and carers of hospice service users. Individual interviews with patients. Results Staff felt the tool used produced inaccurate results, in part because of omissions in content. They did not perceive the data produced affected working practice, e.g. staffing levels. Patients described unobtrusive assessment and stated their needs were met. Carers reported feelings of isolation. They also described differing information and support needs from the patients. Conclusion Further research is required to improve the validity of dependency data collection. Further investigation of carer assessment is also justified.
- Published
- 2004
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42. Are current strategies for pre-registration student nurse and student midwife selection ‘fit for purpose’ from a UK perspective? Introducing the multiple mini interview
- Author
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Molly Courtenay, Helen Allan, and Alison Callwood
- Subjects
Medical education ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Midwifery ,United Kingdom ,Education ,Interviews as Topic ,Nursing Education Research ,Nursing Evaluation Research ,Nursing ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Female ,School Admission Criteria ,Students, Nursing ,Student nurse ,business ,General Nursing ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,Pre-Registration ,Student midwife - Published
- 2012
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43. Iranian and English women's use of religion and spirituality as resources for coping with infertility
- Author
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Pam Smith, Helen Allan, and Robab Latifnejad Roudsari
- Subjects
Infertility ,Adult ,Coping (psychology) ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Islam ,General Medicine ,Iran ,medicine.disease ,Health outcomes ,Christianity ,Grounded theory ,Fertility clinic ,Religion ,Reproductive Medicine ,England ,Spirituality ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Interview, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Infertility, Female - Abstract
The study reported in this paper explores how infertile women cope with infertility using their religious and spiritual beliefs. In total, 30 infertile women affiliated to different denominations of Christianity and Islam were interviewed in the UK and Iranian fertility clinics using grounded theory. The categories which emerged included governing ones’ ‘Self’ through gaining control of emotions, adopting religious coping strategies, and handling the burden of infertility peacefully, which all related to the core category of ‘relying on a higher being’. We argue that infertile women employ a variety of religious and spiritual coping strategies which are associated with adaptive health outcomes. Further scientific inquiry is required to investigate how religion and spirituality promote adaptation to infertility.
- Published
- 2014
44. A 'good enough' nurse: supporting patients in a fertility unit
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Subjects
Attitude of Health Personnel ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fertility ,Nursing Methodology Research ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Unit (housing) ,Professional Competence ,Nursing ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Ethnography ,Avoidance Learning ,Humans ,Medicine ,General Nursing ,media_common ,business.industry ,Social Support ,Awareness ,Nursing Theory ,Psychological Distance ,Emotion awareness ,Female ,Empathy ,Nurse-Patient Relations ,Psychological Theory ,business ,Attitude to Health ,Hospital Units ,Infertility, Female - Abstract
A ‘good enough’ nurse: supporting patients in a fertility unit In this paper, I discuss the findings of an ethnographic study of a fertility unit. I suggest that caring as ‘emotional awareness’ and ‘non-caring’ as ‘emotional distance’ may be forms of nursing akin to Fabricius’s (1991) arguments around the ‘good enough’ nurse. This paper critiques caring theories and contributes to the debates over the nature of caring in nursing. I discuss the implications raised for nurses if patients want a practical approach to caring and do not expect an emotionally intimate relationship from nurses.
- Published
- 2001
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45. Nursing the clinic and managing emotions in a fertility unit: Findings from an ethnographic study
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Subjects
Male ,Coping (psychology) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Nurses ,Fertility ,Participant observation ,Nursing ,Interview, Psychological ,Ethnography ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anthropology, Cultural ,media_common ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,Reproductive Medicine ,Infertility ,Emotion awareness ,Anxiety ,Female ,Empathy ,Thematic analysis ,medicine.symptom ,Nurse-Patient Relations ,business - Abstract
This paper presents the findings from an ethnographic study of a fertility unit. Data were collected using participant observation and semi-structured interviews over a period of 2 years. Fifteen patients and 23 members of staff were interviewed. Data analysis was completed using a modified thematic analysis. The findings indicated that the emotions evoked by infertility and medical treatments were powerful and frightening. Patients managed their emotions privately although they were conscious of an emotional awareness by nurses, which they described as 'caring'. Nurses were associated strongly with caring and their role was primarily to manage emotions; however, to do this, nurses used non-caring (emotional distance) rather than caring. Nurses were responsible for managing emotions in the public spaces of the clinics and moved between emotional distance and awareness according to the needs of the clinic. In this article, it is argued that non-caring was a defence against anxiety about coping with painful feelings and that the nursing role was to 'nurse the clinic and the doctor' rather than the patient.
- Published
- 2001
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46. The health environment: A definition and conceptual framework for research and practice
- Author
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Neil Brocklehurst and Helen Allan
- Subjects
030504 nursing ,Research and Theory ,business.industry ,Nursing research ,Subject (philosophy) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nursing ,Conceptual framework ,030502 gerontology ,Medicine ,Engineering ethics ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Health policy - Abstract
This paper explores the history of the concept of health environment in nursing discourse. The prompt to investigating the subject followed the national research and development (R&D) initiative set up through the Royal College of Nursing and the Centre for Policy in Nursing Research. Subsequent developments in national healthcare policy, particularly in relation to primary care-based commissioning and public health highlight the timeliness of such a debate. A conceptual framework for the health environment is suggested which is dynamic and practice-oriented. It is hoped that this will appeal both to academics and practitioners in order to build a base of research and practice around the health environment within and beyond the nursing professions.
- Published
- 1998
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47. People and teams matter in organizational change:Professionals' and managers' experiences of changing governance and incentives in primary care
- Author
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Fiona Ross, J. Clayton, Pam Smith, Sara Christian, Sally Brearley, Linnie Price, Helen Allan, Maureen Mackintosh, and Richard Byng
- Subjects
Medical Homes and Ambulatory Care ,Health Personnel ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Context (language use) ,emotions ,Interviews as Topic ,health policy/policy analysis ,Nursing ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,media_common ,Patient Care Team ,Motivation ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Corporate governance ,Health services research ,healthcare ,Technocracy ,Public relations ,Organizational Innovation ,chronic ,ComputingMilieux_MANAGEMENTOFCOMPUTINGANDINFORMATIONSYSTEMS ,Incentive ,England ,Feeling ,illness and disease ,Health Care Reform ,Health Services Research ,Health care reform ,relationships ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesTo explore the experiences of governance and incentives during organizational change for managers and clinical staff.Study SettingThree primary care settings in England in 2006–2008.Study DesignData collection involved three group interviews with 32 service users, individual interviews with 32 managers, and 56 frontline professionals in three sites. The Realistic Evaluation framework was used in analysis to examine the effects of new policies and their implementation.Principal FindingsIntegrating new interprofessional teams to work effectively is a slow process, especially if structures in place do not acknowledge the painful feelings involved in change and do not support staff during periods of uncertainty.ConclusionsEliciting multiple perspectives, often dependent on individual occupational positioning or place in new team configurations, illuminates the need to incorporate the emotional as well as technocratic and system factors when implementing change. Some suggestions are made for facilitating change in health care systems. These are discussed in the context of similar health care reform initiatives in the United States.
- Published
- 2014
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48. The anxiety of infertility: the role of the nurses in the fertility clinic
- Author
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Helen Allan
- Subjects
Infertility ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Nurses ,General Medicine ,Reproductive technology ,Anxiety ,medicine.disease ,Midwifery ,Fertility clinic ,Reproductive Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,medicine.symptom ,Psychiatry ,business ,Psychosocial ,Fertility care ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
This paper discusses the effects of anxiety and depression on infertile people as they undergo infertility investigations and treatments, and explores what nurses may do to assist them to cope with this anxiety. There is an extensive literature on the psychosocial effects of infertility on couples, women and men separately and their children, but the nursing and midwifery literature lacks an in-depth exploration of the psychological and emotional consequences of infertility for infertile people. The paper concludes by arguing that nurses and midwives need to undertake research into their practice in fertility care, that is, caring for infertile people as they undergo assisted reproductive technologies and, to this end, suggests sources of research funding.
- Published
- 2013
49. Learning from others: overseas nurses’ views of UK nursing
- Author
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John Larsen and Helen Allan
- Subjects
Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,business.industry ,Hygiene ,Physician-Nurse Relations ,Nursing ,Focus Groups ,Nurse's Role ,United Kingdom ,Education ,Patient-Centered Care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Nurse education ,Education, Nursing ,business ,General Nursing - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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50. The social construction of cancer chemotherapy toxicity: the case of Taiwan
- Author
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Hai-Chiao Chen, Zxy-Yann Jane Lu, and Helen Allan
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Taiwan ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Traditional Chinese medicine ,Nursing care ,Asian People ,Patient Education as Topic ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Medicine, Chinese Traditional ,Biomedicine ,Harmony (color) ,Cultural Characteristics ,Oncology (nursing) ,business.industry ,Social environment ,Social constructionism ,Oncology ,Covert ,Family medicine ,Toxicity ,Female ,business ,Attitude to Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND Chemotherapy toxicity hinders cancer treatment outcomes. Healthcare professionals educated in biomedical-oriented systems tend to label patients who refuse or discontinue chemotherapy as "noncompliant." How diverse discourses in public texts related to chemotherapy toxicity, which may significantly shape patients' actions, has not been formally explored. OBJECTIVE The aims of this study were to explore the 2 dominant discourses in Taiwan related to chemotherapy toxicity within their sociocultural context and to ascertain how chemotherapy toxicity is constructed in the texts of journals and newspapers. METHODS Public, medical, and nursing texts about chemotherapy from 1950 to 2010 were collected and analyzed using Foucaultian discourse analytical techniques; juxtaposing dominant and marginalized discourses, we identified cultural themes. RESULTS In traditional Chinese medicine, toxic chemotherapy drugs are believed to interfere with circulation of energy flow and blood and to disturb the harmony of yin/yang in the body. Findings indicate that biomedical and traditional Chinese medical doctors do not agree about the best management of chemotherapy toxicity. Moreover, lay knowledge and patient voices regarding chemotherapy toxicity are often ignored in medical discourses. CONCLUSIONS Cultural beliefs and covert power relations between diverse medical traditions shape patients' experiences of chemotherapy toxicity. The preferential use by patients of traditional Chinese medicine over biomedicine to manage chemotherapy toxicity sustains its pivotal role. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE The disparity of perceptions between healthcare professionals and patients regarding chemotherapy toxicity needs to be thoroughly assessed. Thus, culturally specific nursing care models may be developed.
- Published
- 2012
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