Academic literature on the topic 'Forensic nursing'

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Journal articles on the topic "Forensic nursing"

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Gorea, R. K. "Forensic Nursing in Humanitarian Forensics." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ETHICS, TRAUMA & VICTIMOLOGY 6, no. 02 (December 30, 2020): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.18099/ijetv.v6i02.1.

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Humanitarian forensics has been established as a new entity, and it is bound to develop as a robust branch of science. It is a multidisciplinary subject with the involvement of experts from different fields of science. Forensic nursing too is an upcoming branch of nursing science and is a relatively new discipline of science. Forensic nursing science is expanding in various countries. This paper will describe and discuss the various important aspects of Humanitarian forensics and forensic nurses' utility in humanitarian forensics and discuss the future role of forensic nurses in humanitarian forensics.
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Santos, Clara Lis Mendes dos, and Maria Angela Reppetto. "Assistência da enfermagem forense na coleta e preservação de vestígios periciais." Revista Recien - Revista Científica de Enfermagem 13, no. 41 (September 15, 2023): 732–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.24276/rrecien2023.13.41.732-737.

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A Resolução COFEN nº 556/2017 explana sobre as funções do enfermeiro forense no contexto da violência e do abuso para a saúde. Suas ações incluem a prevenção, identificação e cuidados, podendo contribuir com melhorias para a prática de cuidados de saúde, educação e políticas públicas. Esse estudo descreve a assistência da enfermagem forense na coleta e preservação de vestígios periciais. Foi uma pesquisa bibliográfica, descritiva e de abordagem quantitativa. O material foi constituído por dois artigos de periódicos e uma dissertação resultantes da busca realizada na LILACS com o descritor enfermagem forense. Destacamos que a base holística da enfermagem favorece a formação do vínculo com as vítimas e estabelece relações de confiança, facilitando a cooperação com o exame forense e o reconhecimento da perícia pelos pares/equipe multiprofissional é alcançado pela prestação de cuidados de excelência. A assistência de enfermagem forense na coleta e preservação de vestígios periciais é fundamental e primordial para o atendimento e acolhimento da mulher vítimas de violência doméstica. Descritores: Enfermagem, Enfermagem Forense, Prova Pericial. Forensic nursing assistance in the collection and preservation of forensic traces Abstract: The COFEN Resolution nº. 556/2017 explains the functions of the forensic nurse in the context of violence and abuse for health. Their actions include prevention, identification and care, and may contribute to improvements to the practice of health care, education and public policies. This study describes the assistance of forensic nursing in the collection and preservation of forensic traces.It was a bibliographic, descriptive research with a quantitative approach. The material consisted of two journal articles and a dissertation resulting from the search conducted in LILACS with the descriptor forensic nursing. We highlight that the holistic basis of nursing favors the formation of the bond with the victims and establishes relationships of trust, facilitating cooperation with the forensic examination and the recognition of expertise by the peers/multiprofessional team is achieved by providing excellent care. Forensic nursing assistance in the collection and preservation of forensic traces is fundamental and primordial to the care and reception of women victims of domestic violence. Descriptors: Nursing, Forensic Nursing, Expert Testimony. Asistencia de enfermería forense en la recogida y conservación de huellas forenses Resumen: La Resolución COFEN nº 556/2017 explora las funciones de la enfermera forense en el contexto de la violencia y el abuso para la salud. Sus acciones incluyen la prevención, identificación y atención, siendo capaz de contribuir con mejoras en la práctica de la atención de la salud, la educación y las políticas públicas. Este estudio describe la asistencia de enfermería forense en la recogida y preservación de rastros forenses. Fue una investigación bibliográfica, descriptiva con un enfoque cuantitativo. El material consistió en dos artículos de revistas y una disertación resultante de la búsqueda realizada en LILACS con el descriptor enfermería forense. Destacamos que la base holística de la enfermería favorece la formación del vínculo con las víctimas y establece relaciones de confianza, facilitando la cooperación con el examen forense y el reconocimiento de la pericia por los pares/equipo multiprofesional es alcanzada por la prestación de cuidados de excelencia. La asistencia de la enfermería forense en la colecta y preservación de los rastros forenses es fundamental y primordial para el cuidado y acogida de las mujeres víctimas de violencia doméstica. Descriptores: Enfermeria, Enfermería Forense, Testimonio de Experto.
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Macedo, Adriana Amorim Soares, and Inês Leoneza de Souza. "Contribuições do enfermeiro junto segurança pública: enfermagem na abordagem forense." Revista Recien - Revista Científica de Enfermagem 11, no. 35 (September 23, 2021): 355–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.24276/rrecien2021.11.35.355-364.

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A Enfermagem forense ajuda as vítimas coletando informações, evidências relacionadas com crime, podendo ser a chave para resolvê-lo. Objetivos: Conhecer e divulgar a importância do enfermeiro nessa modalidade. Metodologia: revisão integrativa vinculada ao Trabalho de possibilidades de atuação da enfermagem forense brasileira, na base de dados Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO), Biblioteca Virtual de Saúde (BVS), descritores: Maus Tratos, Abuso Sexual e Outras Formas de Violência. Iniciada no Brasil com Associação Brasileira de Enfermagem Forense - Abeforense, Sociedade Brasileira de Enfermagem Forense - SOBEF; Consultadas Fontes: ANA (American Nurses Association) e IAFN (International Association of Forensic Nurses). Resultados: encontrados sete artigos no período 2010-2019. Destaque para pouco conhecimento do enfermeiro na área forense e seu papel como profissional aqui no Brasil. Considerações finais: Poucos estudos de referências no Brasil reforçando a necessidade deste trabalho como proposta de TCC ainda na graduação de enfermagem; sendo, portanto, necessários mais estudos e aprofundamento desta temática.Descritores: Enfermagem Forense, Enfermeiro, Violência. Nurses' contributions to public safety: nursing in the forensic approachAbstract: Forensic nursing helps victims of violence by collecting information and evidence related to a crime, which can be the key to solving it. Objectives: To know Forensic Nursing and disclose the importance of nurses in this modality. Methodology: integrative review linked to the Work of the possibilities of performance of Brazilian forensic nursing, in the Scientific Electronic Library Online database (SciELO) and the Virtual Health Library (VHL), using the descriptors: Maltreatment, Sexual Abuse and Other Forms of Violence. Started in Brazil with the Brazilian Association of Forensic Nursing - Abeforense, the Brazilian Association of Forensic Nursing - SOBEF; Sources consulted: ANA (American Nurses Association) and IAFN (International Association of Forensic Nurses). Results: seven articles were found in the period 2010-2019. With emphasis on the little knowledge of nurses in the forensic area and their role as a professional here in Brazil. Final considerations: Few reference studies in Brazil reinforcing the need for this work as a proposal for CBT even in nursing undergraduate courses; therefore, further studies and further research on this topic are needed.Descriptors: Forensic Nursing, Nurse, Violence. Contribuciones de las enfermeras a la seguridad pública: la enfermería en el enfoque forenseResumen: La enfermería forense ayuda a las víctimas mediante la recopilación de información y pruebas relacionadas con un delito, que puede ser la clave para resolverlo. Objetivos: Conocer y revelar la importancia de las enfermeras en esta modalidad. Metodología: revisión integradora vinculada al trabajo de las posibilidades de desempeño de la enfermería forense brasileña, en la base de datos Biblioteca Electrónica Científica (SciELO) y la Biblioteca Virtual en Salud (BVS), utilizando los descriptores: Maltrato, Abuso Sexual y Otras Formas de Violencia. Comenzó en Brasil con la Asociación Brasileña de Enfermería Forense - Abeforense, la Asociación Brasileña de Enfermería Forense - SOBEF; Fuentes consultadas: ANA (Asociación Americana de Enfermeras) e IAFN (Asociación Internacional de Enfermeras Forenses). Resultados: se encontraron siete artículos en el período 2010-2019. Con énfasis en el poco conocimiento de las enfermeras en el área forense y su papel como profesionales aquí en Brasil. Consideraciones finales: Pocos estudios de referencias en Brasil refuerzan la necesidad de este trabajo como una propuesta para la TCC, incluso en la graduación de enfermería; por lo tanto, se necesitan más estudios e investigaciones adicionales sobre este tema.Descriptores: Enfermería Forense, Enfermero, Violência.
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Sriwijitalai, Won, and Viroj Wiwanitkit. "Forensic nursing." Journal of Medical Society 32, no. 1 (2018): 78. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jms.jms_72_17.

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Hemenway, Dennis. "Forensic Nursing." Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services 32, no. 11 (November 1994): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/0279-3695-19941101-04.

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Burgess, Ann Wolbert, Anne Dunn Berger, and Rachel R. Boersma. "Forensic Nursing." AJN, American Journal of Nursing 104, no. 3 (March 2004): 58–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000446-200403000-00024.

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KENT-WILKINSON, ARLENE. "Forensic Nursing." Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing 13, no. 3 (June 2006): 381–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2850.2006.00963.x.

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Lawson, Louanne. "Forensic nursing." Journal of Forensic Nursing 4, no. 4 (December 2008): 147–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01263942-200812000-00001.

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Wick, Jane M. "Forensic Nursing." AORN Journal 79, no. 3 (March 2004): 585. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0001-2092(06)60904-6.

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Pozzi, Cheryl L. "Forensic Nursing." AAOHN Journal 44, no. 11 (November 1996): 550–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/216507999604401105.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Forensic nursing"

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Hammarström, Lars. "Encounters with patients in forensic inpatient care : Nurses lived experiences of patient encounters and compassion in forensic inpatient care." Licentiate thesis, Mittuniversitetet, Institutionen för omvårdnad, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:miun:diva-39955.

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Background: Forensic psychiatry is characterised by compulsory care and long hospital stays, where nurses care for patients with severe mental illness, who often have committed crimes. The main objective is to rehabilitate the patient to once again become a part of society by improving mental health and decreasing the risk of criminal relapse. This is mainly achieved through encounters with the patients. Encountering patients in forensic psychiatry means coming face to face with suffering and the duality of caring, doing what is best for the patient and protecting society. Aim: The purpose of the study was to obtain a deeper understanding of encounters with patients with mental illness in forensic inpatient care as experienced by nurses. Method: This licentiate thesis consists of two studies (I, II), both conducted with a qualitative design. A total of 13 nurses working at a forensic psychiatric hospital in Sweden were recruited through a purposive sample to participate in the studies through narrative interviews. Study I was analysed with phenomenological hermeneutics in line with Lindseth and Norbergh (2004) in order to illuminate the lived experience of nurses’ encounters. Study II was a secondary supplementary analysis, which applied hermeneutics in line with Fleming, Gaidys, and Robb (2003) to gain a deeper understanding of nurses’ compassion in forensic psychiatry. The two studies were merged to provide a comprehensive understanding in this licentiate thesis. Findings: Study I illuminated the meaning of nurses’ lived experiences of encounters with patients with mental illnesses in forensic inpatient care, that is the nurses’ desire to do good despite being confronted with their own emotions as fear, humiliation, and disappointment. Encounters were also occasionally perceived as positive, awakening emotions of compassion, competence, pride, trust, satisfaction, and gratification regarding the patient’s recovery. However, a source of conflict was the struggle between doing what was best for the patient and protecting society. The study comprised of four themes: being frustrated, protecting oneself, being open-minded, and striving for control. Study II aimed to gain a deeper understanding of nurses’ compassion in providing forensic psychiatric inpatient care with three themes: recognising suffering and need for support, responding to patient suffering, and reacting to one’s own vulnerability. Abstracting to a main theme of being compassionate in forensic psychiatry which is described as an emotional journey, an ongoing inner negotiation between own vulnerability and expressions of suffering. This inner negotiation of making sense of patients’ plea and how they were perceived was crucial for determining the development of compassion rather than turning to control and rules as a means to protect oneself. Discussion: A interpretation of the studies (I, II) revealed two topics, being sensitive and responsive and keeping distance, which were reflected upon against the theoretical framework of Kari Martinsen. The studies showed that nurses faced a variety of encounters that forced them to face their own vulnerability and that trust could reduce power imbalances as well as help deal with societal, man-made constructs. The nurses’ encounters with incomprehensible expressions of suffering also show that nurses need to find a way to make room for “expressions of life”– taking a step back and turning their gaze inwards – in order to regulate their own emotions. This may better equip nurses to encounter patients with compassion and kindness rather than turning to norms and rules to protect themselves and guard their own vulnerability. Rather than distancing themselves from the patients, nurses can instead take a step back to come closer to their patients.
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Fallon, Ashley-Christopher. "Forensic inpatient sexuality : a qualitative investigation of the nursing perspective." Thesis, Lancaster University, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.442053.

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Dickens, Geoff. "Nursing in secure and forensic psychiatry : contexts, contributions and concepts." Thesis, University of Northampton, 2011. http://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/8854/.

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Robinson, David Keith. "Developing clinical quality indicators in psychiatric nursing." Thesis, Anglia Ruskin University, 1994. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.259517.

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Inglis, Pamela. "Discourse and forensic learning disability nursing practice : ideology, paradox and truth." Thesis, Northumbria University, 2009. http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/136/.

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Central to successful therapeutic relationships in working with people with a learning disability is the language used by nurses; the discourses which they create and perpetuate; and resultant implications for practice. These are key issues in the current investigation. Employing retrospective data obtained during an action research programme carried out in a medium security forensic unit (MSU), it analyse types of discourse employed by the men who reside there and the staff. Part of the analysis shows having a learning disability as viewed through the eyes of the men themselves in a study extending over twenty months. Literary analyses on method, representations of learning disabilities, security and discipline, and forensic practice were carried out concurrently. Aims These are to (1) develop a critical and a post-modern approach to investigating given 'truths' about; the positives of learning disability; men with learning disability who offend; and the nature of forensic nursing: (2) develop a socio-political overview by applying critical discourse analysis to examine micro discourses and macro models associated with learning disabilities, related national and local policies, and models of nursing and disability: (3) combine the products of (1) and (2) to illustrate discourse, repertoires, paradoxes and practical ideologies justifying treatment in the MSU, revealing ideologies and beliefs regarding learning disabilities in this setting. Theory and method Foucault shows how linguistic constructions, written protocols and customary oral dialogue are used to create and sustain dominant views of 'reality' — and may also be used to challenge these. Retrospective data regarding six men living in the MSU and their staff [total N=17] were obtained using diaries, observational notes, semi-structured interviews, focus groups and evaluations originally collected as part of an action research project. National and local policies were also interrogated. Data were then reanalysed using critical discourse-analytic techniques. Outcomes Findings suggest that the men are viewed paradoxically. On one hand, they are seen negatively as different, dangerous, lacking ability: and staff as custodians restricting their rights. Paradoxically, affirmative discourse is also abundant — the men are talented and pleasant companions. Repertoires illustrate warm therapeutic relationships existing between the men and staff, demonstrating 'good nurse' characteristics expressed within a complex and restrictive environment, with humour playing an important part. These paradoxical repertoires reveal practical ideologies which defend forensic practice and justify treatment. Results have implications for the men (their views are acknowledged and disseminated); for practice through enhancing the evidence base; for nurse education through reflection on ideologies and justifications on which forensic practice is based.
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Finn, Christine Kay. "Forensic nurses' experience of receiving child abuse disclosures /." Connect to full text via ProQuest. Limited to UCD Anschutz Medical Campus, 2008.

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Thesis (Ph.D. in Nursing) -- University of Colorado Denver, 2008.
Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 122-135). Free to UCD Anschutz Medical Campus. Online version available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations;
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Skinner, Elise. "Ethics of Finitude: Nursing and the Palliative Approach." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/37290.

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Purpose: Within the contemporary socio-political context of palliative care and an aging demography, there is a called-for shift to an upstream provision of palliative care in the form of a palliative approach to care as well as to frame access to palliative care within a health equity perspective. In the literature, there is a paucity of nurses’ experiences in the provision of palliative care within psychiatric settings. Moreover, little is known of the process by which nurses engage in a palliative approach to care for patients experiencing multiple marginalities, including institutionalization, mental health, and advanced age. This research explored how nurses in forensic and geriatric psychiatry engage with aging patients and mortal considerations to discern how ethical dimensions of care, aligned within the palliative approach, are enacted. An ethical lens by which to apprehend dimensions of human finitude, reflective of central elements of the palliative approach and public health palliative care, was proposed to help to delineate a process of recognition through which values can be identified in the care of patients. The purpose of this thesis was to explore the phenomenon by which nurses engaged with mortality as both an antecedent to adopting a palliative approach and as a phenomenon that captures nurses’ continued engagement with patients within this approach. Objectives: There were three objectives to the project: 1) explore nurses’ engagement with mortality within an ethics of finitude; 2) identify enablers and barriers, and related historical and socio-political discourses, to engagement of nurses with their patients within an ethics of finitude, and; 3) articulate and deepen understanding of the palliative approach, including ethical dimensions and considerations. The research was an analytical elaboration of a qualitative study at the University of Ottawa that examined the palliative approach to nursing care in forensic and geriatric psychiatry at a mental health facility in eastern Ontario. Methods: Situated within a constructivist epistemic stance, the analytical framework elaborated for this analysis drew from both interpretive description (ID) and interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA). Utilizing convenience sampling, eight Registered Nurses (7 women and 1 man) working in forensic or geriatric psychiatry completed interviews. Findings: Engagement of nurses within an ethics of finitude was revealed to surface through a process of recognition (recognition of mortality, recognition of the increased vulnerability of patients, and recognition of a corresponding increased responsibility for vulnerable patients) and through the affirmation of values including human connection, dignity, comfort, family, familiarity, and personhood. Barriers and enablers to this engagement emerged related to the care environment, the psychiatric nurse and patient construction, and factors related to family. The implications of the related discourses in the articulation of the palliative approach emerged in relation to health system considerations and to the language of the palliative approach. Conclusion: The process of recognition explored through the proposed ethical lens and revealed in the findings delineated values that underpin the palliative approach by offering an alternate conceptualization to their identification and enactment. Insights from this project underscore preliminary insights on a process to identify care practices aligned within the palliative approach as well as possibilities for critical questioning related to interconnected axes of an ethics of finitude in both the care of individual patients and in the enactment of health policy.
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Domingue, Jean-Laurent. "Exploring the Production of “Dangerous Persons” in Forensic Psychiatry: A Critical Ethnography of the Ontario Review Board (ORB)." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/42688.

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Forensic psychiatric nursing is a specialty at the junction of two well-researched intersecting systems with two different mandates: criminal justice (public protection) and health care (public good). Nurses’ involvement at one of the systems’ points of juncture, review board (RB) hearings, has largely been left unexplored. At RB hearings, a panel of legal and health care professionals determines if persons unfit to stand trial (UST) or not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder (NCRMD) represent significant threats to the safety of the public, and orders conditions aimed at keeping the community safe. The aim of this research project was to explore how psychiatric and public safety discourses construct the identity of persons UST or NCRMD during RB hearings, and nurses’ contribution to such identity construction. Critical ethnography methodology was employed, mobilizing three data sources: interviews with forensic psychiatric nurses, observations of RB hearings, and RB documentary artifacts. A poststructuralist lens was used to discern how RB culture produces truths about persons UST or NCRMD that sustain the hegemony of public safety and psychiatric discourses. The main finding was that the forensic psychiatric structure leverages therapeutic nursing interventions and documentation as evidence of deviancy, so that persons UST or NCRMD can be objectified and produced as dangerous, prior to socially rehabilitating them. Discursive structures sustaining the forensic psychiatric system inscribe nursing care within a disciplinary scheme, rendering it coercive and punitive. Thus, a care-and-custody dichotomy is insufficient to explain the complex processes at play in forensic psychiatry. These findings have implications for research, practice, and education in forensic psychiatric nursing, nursing ethics, and other nursing specialties on the medico-legal borderland.
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Holtzinger, Pamela Susan. "Nonfatal Strangulation Continuing Education Program for Forensic Nurses." ScholarWorks, 2019. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/7301.

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Patients experiencing nonfatal strangulation during intimate partner violence (IPV) are suffering the consequences of unrecognized injuries and delayed life-threatening medical sequela. Forensic nurses offer expertise in the physical assessment and documentation to a variety of assault victims including those impacted by IPV. This project addressed whether an educational program on nonfatal strangulation increased the knowledge and assessment skills of forensic nurse examiners. The purpose of this doctoral project was to develop a continuing education program on the topic of nonfatal strangulation for forensic nurse examiners. The project design was created using Knowles's adult learning theory principles. The content outline was guided by the International Association of Forensic Nurses Nonfatal Strangulation Toolkit as well as input from content experts on nonfatal strangulation. The evaluation of the project was through pre- and posttest scores. The nonfatal strangulation continuing education training resulted in a statistically significant increase in participants' posttest scores (z-value= -3.064; p value =.002) indicating that the training material and teaching modality positively affected the participants test scores. This continuing education program on nonfatal strangulation increased knowledge of forensic nurse examiners and its application in the field might contribute to positive social change by increasing the identification of IPV and providing appropriate intervention.
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Woods, Phil. "The Behavioural Status Index (BSI) : descriptive studies within a forensic context." Thesis, Anglia Ruskin University, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.300347.

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Books on the topic "Forensic nursing"

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A, Lynch Virginia, and Duval Janet Barber, eds. Forensic nursing. St. Louis, MO: Elsevier Mosby, 2006.

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Barber, Duval Janet, ed. Forensic nursing science. 2nd ed. St. Louis: Mosby/Elsevier, 2011.

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International, Sigma Theta Tau, ed. A practical guide to forensic nursing: Incorporating forensic principles into nursing practice. Indianapolis, IN: Sigma Theta Tau International, 2016.

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RMN, Morrison Paul, and Burnard Philip, eds. Aspects of forensic psychiatric nursing. Aldershot: Avebury, 1992.

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Bader, Donna M. Garbacz. Forensic nursing: A concise manual. Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis, 2010.

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M, Hammer Rita, Moynihan Barbara, and Pagliaro Elaine M, eds. Forensic nursing: A handbook for practice. Sudbury, Mass: Jones and Bartlett, 2006.

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International Association of Forensic Nurses. Scope and standards of forensic nursing practice. Washington, DC: American Nurses Association, 1997.

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A, Crane Patricia, and Young Susan E, eds. Forensic nursing: Evidence-based principles and practice. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Co., 2013.

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Association, American Nurses, and International Association of Forensic Nurses., eds. Forensic nursing: Scope and standards of practice. Silver Spring, Md: American Nurses Association, 2009.

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Burgess, Ann Wolbert. Violence through a forensic lens. 2nd ed. King of Prussia, PA: Nursing Spectrum, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Forensic nursing"

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Jamerson, Charla M., and Brent E. Turvey. "Forensic Nursing." In Forensic Victimology, 111–42. Elsevier, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-408084-3.00005-3.

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"Forensic nursing." In Oxford Handbook of Learning and Intellectual Disability Nursing, edited by Bob Gates and Owen Barr, 399–434. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199533220.003.0011.

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Risk assessment and management 400 People who have offended in law 402 People in mainstream prison 404 Rights of victims 406 Rights of person offending 408 Rights to a solicitor 410 People with intellectual disabilities as witnesses 412 Admission for assessment 414 Admission for treatment ...
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Garbacz Bader, Donna. "Forensic Nursing." In Forensic Nursing. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420067316.ch1.

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"Forensic Nursing." In Forensic Nursing, 21–30. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420067316-8.

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Jose, Dr Neenumol K. "TRENDS IN FORENSIC NURSING." In Futuristic Trends in Pharmacy & Nursing Volume 3 Book 11, 49–67. Iterative International Publisher, Selfypage Developers Pvt Ltd, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.58532/v3bgpn11p1ch6.

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This comprehensive chapter delves into the multifaceted role of forensic nursing, positioned at the intersection of healthcare and justice, as an indispensable discipline for addressing the intricate needs of individuals affected by violence, trauma, or criminal activities. Tracing its evolution from the late 19th century to the present, the narrative explores the diversification of forensic nursing into critical areas such as domestic violence, mental health assessments, human trafficking, digital forensics, child abuse, and elder abuse. Emphasizing the dynamic nature of the field, the chapter underscores the importance of practitioners staying informed to foster trust with survivors and enhance care quality. It highlights the pivotal role of researchers in contributing to evidence-based practices and advancing the global landscape of forensic nursing. The chapter underscores the significance of specialized programs like Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANEs), advocating for interdisciplinary collaboration to ensure comprehensive patient care, evidence integrity, improved legal outcomes, and a trauma-informed approach. Furthermore, the narrative discusses the ethical considerations within the intersection of healthcare and justice, urging continued education, certification, research, and advocacy to navigate emerging trends such as technology integration and genomic forensics. In conclusion, the chapter portrays forensic nursing as a dynamic and essential component in the complex interface between healthcare and the legal system, addressing universal challenges and shaping the future of the field.
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"Forensic Psychiatric Nursing and Corrections Nursing." In Forensic Nursing, 417–58. CRC Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/ebk0849335402-15.

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Garbacz Bader, Donna. "Forensic Science." In Forensic Nursing. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420067316.ch5.

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"Forensic Science." In Forensic Nursing, 55–62. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420067316-12.

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Garbacz Bader, Donna. "Forensic Nursing Today." In Forensic Nursing. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420067316.ch2.

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"Forensic Nursing Today." In Forensic Nursing, 31–36. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420067316-9.

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Reports on the topic "Forensic nursing"

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Jarron, Matthew, Amy R. Cameron, and James Gemmill. Dundee Discoveries Past and Present. University of Dundee, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.20933/100001182.

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Abstract:
A series of self-guided walking tours through pioneering scientific research in medicine, biology, forensics, nursing and dentistry from the past to the present. Dundee is now celebrated internationally for its pioneering work in medical sciences, in particular the University of Dundee’s ground-breaking research into cancer, diabetes, drug development and surgical techniques. But the city has many more amazing stories of innovation and discovery in medicine and biology, past and present, and the three walking tours presented here will introduce you to some of the most extraordinary. Basic information about each topic is presented on this map, but you will ­find more in-depth information, images and videos on the accompanying website at uod.ac.uk/DundeeDiscoveriesMap For younger explorers, we have also included a Scavenger Hunt – look out for the cancer cell symbols on the map and see if you can ­find the various features listed along the way!
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