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"Tasker, Diane"
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Community-based healthcare : the search for mindful dialogues
This is a book for practitioners working in community-based healthcare as well as educators of future practitioners and researchers exploring this practice field and for people with chronic disabilities and their families and carers. The book invites readers to re-think and re-shape the way that community-based healthcare is practised by practitioners and experienced/engaged with by clients/patients and their families and other carers. Based on a PhD study of therapeutic relationships in community healthcare settings in NSW, Australia, and on real-life experiences of practitioners, clients and clients' families and care givers, this book paints a rich picture of the lived experiences of these participants in community-based healthcare. It examines the issues and challenges they face and the ways they deal with these. Key themes identified across the book are: the value and nature of relationships in this unique healthcare setting, the importance of time and using it well, the way good teamwork facilitates good community-based, patient-centred healthcare, balancing autonomy and equality with healthcare quality, practice wisdom embodied in healthcare, and ways of improving healthcare in clients' own homes -- Provided by the publisher.
Community-Based Healthcare
2017
This is a book for practitioners working in community-based healthcare as well as educators of future practitioners and researchers exploring this practice field and for people with chronic disabilities and their families and carers. The book invites readers to re-think and re-shape the way that community-based healthcare is practised by practitioners and experienced/engaged with by clients/patients and their families and other carers.
'From the Space Between Us': The Use of Poetics as a Hermeneutic Phenomenological Tool within Qualitative Physiotherapy Research
by
Tasker, Diane
,
Higgs, Joy
,
Loftus, Stephen
in
Chronic illnesses
,
Clinical medicine
,
Community
2014
People make meaning of their experiences in conversation with other people and poetic phrases within such dialogue can offer a means of coming to a deeper understanding of those personal meanings. In a hermeneutic phenomenological study of community-based physiotherapeutic relationships, generated and derived poetry was used within the research process as a means to aid reflection about the research and the primary researcher's continuing clinical practice in community-based physiotherapy. Poetics became part of the hermeneutic research process, articulating the primary practitioner-researcher's role in the research, facilitating data analysis and assisting presentation of phenomenological findings. Such pragmatic development of poetics provided intellectual momentum, assisting movement of the research findings from the local context of community-based physiotherapy towards wider issues of societal concern.
Journal Article
Health Practice Relationships
by
Higgs, Joy
2014
This book, and this chapter, explore health practice relationships. This chapter sets the scene for the book and privileges the humanity and diversity of social and practice relationships that this title evokes. In Chapter 2 we turn to the topic of professional practice, placing this book predominantly in the context of Western orthodox medicine today, and we place the clients, support people and healthcare providers at the centre of our discussion.
Book Chapter
Head, heart and hands : creating mindful dialogues in community-based physiotherapy
by
Loftus, Stephen
,
Tasker, Diane
,
Higgs, Joy
in
Community health services
,
Community medicine
,
Family medicine
2012
Summarises a qualitative research project that set out to explore the complex relationships between community physiotherapists, their clients and the families and carers of those clients. Focuses on how community based physiotherapists interpret relationship-centred care within the dynamic and ongoing therapeutic relationships they develop with clients, their families and carers; and how clients, their families and carers interpret and manage these ongoing relationships with community based physiotherapists. Source: National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa, licensed by the Department of Internal Affairs for re-use under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand Licence.
Journal Article
Health Practice Relationships
by
Patton, Narelle
,
Hummell, Jill
,
Higgs, Joy
in
Communication in medicine
,
Education
,
Education, general
2014
This book illuminates and challenges professional healthcare relationships. The authors examine the nature, context and purpose of healthcare relationships, explore models through which these relationships are enacted, developed and critiqued, and provide narratives of health practice relationships in action.
Care and Control in Ongoing Healthcare Relationships
2014
Providing ongoing healthcare on a daily basis tends to be admired as selfless, and difficult but critically important to the wellbeing of people in our society. Because we admire such caring work, we are often reluctant to consider the presence and influence of controlling relationships that can disadvantage or harm vulnerable people receiving healthcare.
Book Chapter
In their Space
by
Tasker, Diane
,
Jones, Peter
in
Client Relationship
,
Comfortable Talking
,
Healthcare Practitioner
2014
People who suffer severe injury with disability receive rehabilitation in hospital but then are likely to go home to manage their disability with the assistance of family, carers and health professionals. People with ongoing healthcare issues want to live at home in a way that will develop their wellness and comfort and facilitate their access to the community.
Book Chapter
Professionalism and Relationships
by
Tasker, Diane
,
Higgs, Joy
in
Healthcare Practitioner
,
Human Relationship
,
Mental Health Concern
2014
In a world of increasing population and complexity, modern healthcare needs to place the care of individuals at the centre of healthcare interactions if people’s rights are to be supported and protected. This is particularly important for clients with conditions which might particularly disempower them in interpersonal interactions, such as impaired communication, physical impairments, life crises, and mental health concerns.
Book Chapter