Go to Main Page Antithesis Artifact Utility Technique Agency Network Power Go Back to Previous Page Go to Next Page Introduction
NI_inner_side.jpg References
American Nurses Association. (1994). The scope of practice for nursing informatics. Washington, DC: American Nurses Publishing, NP-90 7.5M 5/94.

Ball, M. (2005). Nursing Informatics of tomorrow. Healthcare Informatics Online, 2 (5), Feb. http://www.healthcare-informatics.com/issues/2005/02/ball.htm

Bandura, A. (2002). Growing primacy of human agency in adaptation and change in the electronic era. European Psychologist, 7(1), 2-16.

Bannon, L. & Bodker, S. (1991). Beyond the interface: encountering artefacts in use. In Carroll, J. (ed). Designing interaction. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, p. 227 – 253.

Barnard, A. (2000). Alteration to will as an experience of technology and nursing. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 31(5), 1136-1144.

Barnard, A. & Sandelowski, M. (2001). Technology and humane nursing care: (ir)reconcilable or invented differences? Journal of Advanced Nursing, 34(3), 367-375.

Bartholomew, K. & Curtis, K. (2004). High-tech, high-touch: Why wait? Nursing Management, 35 (9), 48 – 54.

Barton, A. (2005). Cultivating informatics competencies in a community of practice. Nursing Admistration Quarterly, 29(4), 323-328.

Buckeridge, D. (1999). Health informatics in Canada: Definitions, education, and the path ahead. HealNet. http://healnet.mcmaster.ca/nce/about/workshop/HIiC.PDF

Canada Health Infoway. (1999). Paths to better health: Final Report. Advisory Council on Health Infostructure. Toronto: Author.

Canadian Nurses Association. (2001). What is nursing informatics and why is it important? Nursing Now: Issues and trends in Canadian nursing, Number 11. Ottawa: Author.

Canadian Nurses Association and Office of Health and the Information Highway. (2000). Vision 2020 Workshop on information and communications technologies in health care from the perspective of the nursing profession. Ottawa: Authors.

Capurro, R. (1992). Informatics and Hermeneutics. Software development and reality construction Conference, Berlin, Germany. http://www.capurro.de/floyd.htm

Chalupsky, H., Gil, Y., Knoblock, C., Lerman, K., Oh, J., Pynadath, D., Russ, T. & Tambe, M. (2001). Electric elves: Applying agent technology to support human organizations. American Association for Artificial Intelligence. Retrieved June 27, 2006 from http://www.aaai.org

Chambers, M. (2002). Nursing informatics and practice development. NT Research, 7(2), 101-115.

Conte, C. (1999). Networking for better care: Health care in the information age. Benton Foundation. Retrieved May 21, 2006 from http://www.benton.org/publibrary/health/healthreport.pdf

Cowley, C., Daws, L. & Ellis, B. (2003). Health informatics and modernisation: Bridging the gap. Informatics in Primary Care, 11, 207-214.

CRNBC. (2005). Telehealth. . Practice Standard for Registered Nurses and Nurse Practitioners. Vancouver: Author.

Dreyfus, Phillipe. (1962). L’informatique. Gestion, Paris, June, pp. 240–41 Fairman, J. & D'Antonio, P. (1999). Virtual power: Gendering the nurse-technology relationship. Nursing Inquiry, 6, 178-186.

Georgiou, A. (2002). Data, information and knowledge: The health informatics model and its role in evidenced-based medicine. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 8(2), 127-130.

Giddens, A. (1984). The constitution of society. Cambridge, MA: Polity Press.

Graves, J. R., & Corcoran, S. (1989). The study of nursing informatics. Image: The Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 21 (4), 227 - 231.

Hannah, K. (1985). Current trends in nursing informatics: Implications for curriculum planning. In K. J. Hannah, E. J. Guillemin & D. K. Conklin (Eds.). Nursing uses of computers and information science: Proceedings of the IFIP-IMIA international symposium on nursing uses of computers and information science, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, May 1-3, 1985. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier. 181 - 187.

Hannah, K. J., Ball, M. J., & Edwards, M. J. A. (1994). Introduction to Nursing Informatics. New York: Springer Verlag.

Harrison, J. & Booth, N. (2003). Applying new thinking from the linked and emerging fields of digital identity and privacy to information governance in health informatics. Informatics in Primary Care, 11, 223-228.

Hebert, M. (1999). National Nursing Informatics Project: Discussion paper. Ottawa: Canadian Nurses Association.

Henwood, F., Wyatt, S., Hart, A. & Smith, J. (2003). 'Ignorance is bliss sometimes': Constraints on the emergence of the 'informed patient' in the changing landscape of health information. Sociology of Health and Illness, 25(6), 589-607.

Jiang, W., Chen, W. & Chen, Y. (2004). Important computer competencies for the nursing profession. Journal of Nursing Research, 12(3), 213-225.

Johnson, T. (2004). Value of the Internet in achieving and sustaining quality. Journal of Nursing Care Quality, 19(1), 14-17.

Johnson, T., & Ventura, R. (2004). Applied informatics for quality assessment and improvement. Journal of Nursing Care Quality, 19(2), 100-104.

Jones, P. (1996). Humans, information and science. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 24, 591-596.

Kaplan, B. (2001). Evaluating informatics applications – some alternative approaches: Theory, social interactionism, and call for methodological pluralism. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 64, 39-56.

Kaplan, B. & Flatley Brennan, P. (2001). Consumer informatics supporting patients as co-producers of quality. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 8(4), 309-316.

Kaplan, B., Flatley Brennan, P., Dowling, A., Friedman, C. & Peel, V. (2001). Towards an informatics research agenda: Key people and organizational issues. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 8(3), 235-241.

Kirkley, D., Johnson, A. & Anderson, M. (2004). Technology support of nursing excellence: The magnet connection. Nursing Economic$, 22(2), 94-98.

Kling, R. (2000a). Social informatics: A new perspective on social research about information and communication technologies. Prometheus, 18(3), 245-264.

Kling, R. (2000b). Learning about information technologies and social change: The contribution of social informatics. The Information Society, 16, 217-232.

Kling, R. (1998). Technological and social access to computing, information and communication technologies. White Paper for the Presidential Advisory Committee on High-Performance Computing and Communications, Information Technology, and the Next Generation Internet. Retrieved from http://rkcsi.indiana.edu/archive/kling/pubs/NGI.htm

Lamb, R. & Kling, R. (2002). From Users to Social Actors: Reconceptualizing socially rich interaction through information and communication technology. CSI Working Paper, No. WP-02-11, http://rkcsi.indiana.edu/archive/CSI/WP/WP02-11B.html

Latour, B. (1987). Science in action: how to follow scientists and engineers through society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Latour, B. (1991). Technology is society made durable. In Law, J. (Ed.). A sociology of monsters: Essays on power, technology and domination. London, UK: Routledge.

Leontiev, A. (1978). Activity, consciousness and personality. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Locsin, R. (2001). The culture of technology: Defining transformation in nursing, from “The Lady with a Lamp” to “Robonurse”? Holistic Nursing Practice, 16 (1), 1 – 4.

Locsin, R. (1999). Development of an instrument to measure technological caring in nursing. Holistic Nursing Practice, 1 (1), 27 – 34.

Luck, M., McBurney, P. & Preist, C. (2003). Agent technology: Enabling Next Generation computing – A Roadmap for Agent Based Computing. Southampton: UK: AgentLink Community: the European Network of Excellence for Agent-Based Computing. Retrieved June 1, 2006 from http://www.agentlink.org/admin/docs/2003/2003-48.pdf

Marck, P. (2000). Nursing in a technological world:: Searching for healing communities. Advanced Nursing Science, 23(2), 62-81.

Mazzela-Ebstein, A. & Saddul, R. (2004). Web-based Nurse executive dashboard. Journal of Nursing Care Quality, 19(4), 307-315.

Moehr, J. & Grant, A. (2000). Medical informatics and medical education in Canada in the 21st century. Clinical Investigative Medicine, 23(4), 275-280.

Moody, L. (2005). E-health web portals: Delivering holistic healthcare and making home the point of care. Holistic Nursing Practice, 19(4), 156-160.

Page, M. & Scott, A. (2001). Change agency and women's learning: New practices in community informatics. Information, Communication & Society, 4(4), 528-559.

Parker, P. (2004). Quantify technology's benefits. Nursing Management, 35(2), 41-44.

Purkis, M. (1999). Embracing technology: An exploration of the effects of writing nursing. Nursing Inquiry, 6, 147-156.

Ramduny-Ellis, D., Dix, A., Rayson, P., Onditi, V., Sommerville, I. & Ransom, J. (2005). Artefacts as designed, artefacts as used: Resources for uncovering activity dynamics. Cognition, Technology and Work, 7(2), 76 - 87.

Richards, J. A. (2001). Nursing in a digital age. Nursing Economic$, 19 (1), Jan/Feb, 6 – 12.

Rose, J. & Jones, M. (2005). The double dance of agency: A socio-theoretic account of how manchines and humans interact. Systems, Signs and Actions: An International Journal on Communication, Information Technology and Work, 1(1), 19-37.

Sandelowski, M. (2002). Visible Humans, vanishing bodies, and virtual nursing: Complications of life, presence, place, and identity. Advanced Nursing Science, 24(3), 58-70.

Sandelowski, M. (2000). Devices and Desires: Gender, Technology, and American Nursing. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.

Sandelowski, M. (1999). Troubling distinctions: A semiotics of the nursing/technology relationship. Nursing Inquiry, 6, 198-207.

Sawhney, H. & Lee, S. (2000). Arenas of innovation: Fringe groups and discovery of new liberties of action. Center for Social Informatics, Indiana University. http://rkcsi.indiana.edu/archive/CSI/WP/wp00-03B.html

Scholes, M. & Barber, B. (1980). Towards nursing informatics. In D. A. D. Lindberg & S. Kaihara (Eds.) MEDINFO: 1980. Amsterdam, Netherlands: North-Holland, 7-73.

Simpson, R. L. (2004). The softer side of technology: How IT helps nursing care. Nursing Adminstration Quarterly, 28 (4), Oct-Dec, 302 – 305.

Skiba, D. (2005). Preparing for evidenced-based practice: Revisiting information literacy. Nursing Education Perspectives, 26(5), 310-311.

Smith, C. (2004). New technology continues to invade healthcare: What are the strategic implications/outcomes? Nursing Administration Quarterly, 28 (2), 92 – 98.

Staggers, N., & Bagley-Thompson, C. (2001). The evolution of definitions for nursing informatics: A critical analysis and revised definition. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. 9 (3), 255 – 261.

Timmons, S. (2003). Nurses resisting information technology. Nursing Inquiry, 10(4), 257-269.

Vygotsky, L. S. (1981). The instrumental method in psychology. In J. V. Wertsch (ed.)..The concept of activity in Soviet psychology. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe.

Vygotsky, L., Cole, M., John-Steiner, V. & Scribner, S. (1978). Mind in society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Wenger, E., McDermott, R., Snyder, W. (2002). Cultivating communities of practice. Boston: Harvard Business School Press.

West, E. (2003). Computers: Do they help or hinder patient care? Nursing Forum, 38(1), 29-31.




| Home | Introduction | Antithesis | Artifact | Utility | Technique | Agency | Network | Power | References | Contact |

© June Kaminski, RN MSN PhD Candidate - Contact 2006 - 2023
Site prepared as part of my PhD #2 Comprehensive Exam work
University of British Columbia, Department of Education, Faculty of Curriculum & Pedagogy Studies