![]() ![]() Meaningful experiences and end-of-life care in the intensive care unit: A qualitative study. Stokes, H*., Vanderspank-Wright, B., Fothergill-Bourbonnais, F., & Wright, DK. (2019).International Journal of Palliative Nursing, 25(8), 378-385. Thinking about strengths in end-of-life nursing practice: the case of ICU nurses. Vanderspank-Wright, B., Wright, DK., & McMillan, K.Towards a guiding framework for prison palliative care nursing ethics. Witness: The Canadian Journal of Critical Nursing Discourse, 1(2), 4-16. Palliative care & the injustice of mass incarceration: critical reflections on a harm reduction response to end of life behind bars. Moral identity and palliative sedation: A systematic review of normative nursing literature. Wright, DK., Gastmans, C., Vandyk, A., & Dierckx de Casterlé, B.Ethics of finitude: Nursing and the palliative approach in geriatric and forensic psychiatry. Skinner, E*., Jacob, JD., Vanderspank-Wright, B., & Wright, DK. (2020, in press).Research and Theory for Nursing Practice. Nurses’ moral experiences of ethically meaningful end-of-life care: Distress, resilience, responsibility, and care. Ma, K.*, Wright, DK., Vanderspank-Wright, B., Peterson, W., & Carnevale, F.A.Health Matters: Evidence, Critical Social Science and Health Care in Canada (pages 54-79), Toronto: University of Toronto Press. From “making a decision” to “decision making”: a critical reflection on a discursive shift. In: Essentials in hospice and palliative care: a practical resource for every nurse by Kath Murray, Life and Death Matters Publishing Company. ![]() (Eds.) Encyclopedia of Gerontology and Population Aging. Without adequate nursing support for families, dying at home threatens the values of a good death. ![]() Canadian Nurses Association. Available at: Nurses’ ethical considerations during a pandemic.
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