pt. I. The rural nursing theory base -- Rural nursing: developing the theory base -- Updating the rural nursing theory base -- Exploring rural nursing theory across borders -- pt. II. Perspectives of rural persons -- Health needs and perceptions of rural persons -- Strategizing safety: perinatal experiences of rural women -- Health perceptions, needs, and behaviors of remote rural women of childbearing and childrearing age -- Rural and remote women and resilience: grounded theory and photovoice variations on a theme -- Rural family health: enduring acts of balancing -- pt. III. The rural deweller and response to illness -- Patterns of responses to symptoms in rural residents: the symptom-action-time-line process -- Updating the symptom-action-time-line process -- The chronic illness experience of isolated rural women: use of an online support group intervention -- Negotiation of constructed gender among rural male caregivers -- Complementary therapy and health literacy in rural dwellers -- Acceptability: one component in choice of health care provider -- pt. IV. Rural nursing practice -- The distinctive nature and scope of rural nursing practice: philosophical bases -- The rural nursing generalist in teh acute care setting: flowing like a river -- The rural nursing generalist in community health -- Men working as rural nurses: land of opportunity -- Continuing education and rural nurses -- Rural nurses' attitudes and beliefs toward evidence-based practice -- pt. V. Rural public health -- Public health emergency preparedness in rural or frontier areas -- Environmental risk reduction for rural children -- The culture of rural communities: an examination of rural nursing concepts at the community level -- Community resiliency and rural nursing: Canadian and Australian perspectives -- The influence of the rural environment on children's physical activity and eating behaviors -- Negotiating three worlds: academia, nursing science, and tribal communities -- pt. VI. Looking ahead -- Implications for education, practice, and policy -- An analysis of key concepts for rural nursing.
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Text of Note
"Bona Drag, a rich, brilliantly inventive collection of poems covering every detail of the poet's obsessive life, from the colour of Posh Spice's heels, to London street encounters, underworld friends, urban survival tactics, neuroscientific concepts and extraterrestrials, more than confirms J.G. Ballard's assessment of Reed, as "the most gifted poet working today, an extraordinary talent.""--Jacket.