Journal of Family Nursing (J FAM NURS)

Publisher SAGE Publications

Description

Journal of Family Nursing establishes a forum for lively debate and critical dialogue about the nursing of families in health and illness. Representing both "family as context" and "family as unit", the journal publishes scholarly work on nursing research, practice, education and policy issues.

Impact factor
1.25
Website
Other titles
Journal of family nursing, JFN
ISSN
1074-8407
OCLC
29859620
Material type
Periodical, Internet resource
Document type
Journal / Magazine / Newspaper, Internet Resource

Publisher details

SAGE Publications

Pre-print:
Author can archive a pre-print version
Post-print
Subject to restrictions below; author can archive a post-print version
Restrictions
  • 12 months embargo
Conditions
  • On author or institutional server and PubMed Central
  • On author's personal web site
  • Publisher copyright and source must be acknowledged
  • Publisher's version/PDF cannot be used
  • Post-print version with changes from referees comments can be used
  • "as published" final version with layout and copy-editing changes cannot be archived but can be used on secure institutional intranet
  • If funding agency rules apply, authors may use SAGE open to comply
Classification
yellow

Publications in this journal

  • Implementing Family Nursing: How Do We Translate Knowledge Into Clinical Practice?

    Authors: Maureen Leahey, Erla Kolbrun Svavarsdottir

    Journal of family nursing.

    Health care systems worldwide are faced with the challenge of improving the quality of care, closing the knowledge-to-practice gap, and identifying the facilitators in these processes. Knowledge
  • Diabetes: a family matter.

    Authors: Sharon A Denham

    Journal of family nursing. 15(3):400-1.

  • Family Cancer Caregiving and Negative Outcomes: The Direct and Mediational Effects of Psychosocial Resources.

    Authors: Joseph E Gaugler, Jeanette Linder, Charles W Given, Ritesh Kataria, Galina Tucker, William F Regine

    Journal of family nursing.

    This study tested the hypothesis that various components of the stress process model were related to negative outcomes (depression, guilt, negative health) in cancer caregivers. This study also
  • Patterns of Parenting in Korean Mothers of Children With ADHD: A Q-Methodology Study.

    Authors: Won-Oak Oh, Judith Kendall

    Journal of family nursing.

    The purpose of this study was to investigate patterns of parenting in Korean mothers of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and identify major threads that structured
  • Policy Aspects and Nursing Care of Families With Parents Who Are Sexual Minorities.

    Authors: Scott Weber

    Journal of family nursing.

    Families in which parents are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender are more diverse than they are similar. This article reviews current literature to identify fundamental issues facing families
  • Measuring Parents' Perceptions of Care: Psychometric Development of a Research Instrument.

    Authors: Hanna Maijala, Tiina Luukkaala, Päivi Astedt-Kurki

    Journal of family nursing.

    This article describes the development and testing of a research instrument called Parents' Perceptions of Care (PPC). It is designed to measure the interaction between health care professionals and
  • Supporting Relationships Between Family and Staff in Continuing Care Settings.

    Authors: Wendy Austin, Vicki Strang, Erika Goble, Agnes Mitchell, Elizabeth Thompson, Helen Lantz, Linda Balt, Gillian Lemermeyer, Kelly Vass

    Journal of family nursing.

    In this Canadian study, a participatory action research approach was used to examine the relationships between families of residents of traditional continuing care facilities and the health care
  • "You Don't Want to Burden Them": Older Adults' Views on Family Involvement in Care.

    Authors: Eileen Cahill, Lisa M. Lewis, Frances K Barg, Hillary R Bogner

    Journal of family nursing.

    Burden emerged as an important concept among older adults in a study of how older adults interact with their families around care. The authors conducted 50 semistructured interviews with adults older
  • Family Systems Nursing: Re-examined.

    Authors: Janice M Bell

    Journal of family nursing. 15(2):123-9.

  • Perception of Marital Quality by Parents with Small Children: A Follow-up Study When the Firstborn Is 4 Years Old.

    Authors: Tone Ahlborg, Nina Misvaer, Anders Möller

    Journal of family nursing. 15(2):237-63.

    Swedish couples' perceptions of their marital quality when their firstborn was 6 months old and then 4 years later were studied in 2002 and 2006, respectively. The results show that almost half of
  • Caregiving by Teens for Family Members With Huntington Disease.

    Authors: Janet K Williams, Lioness Ayres, Janet Specht, Kathleen Sparbel, Mary Lou Klimek

    Journal of family nursing.

    The purpose of this report is to describe caregiving by teens for family members with Huntington disease (HD). Thirty-two teens in HD families in the United States and Canada participated in focus
  • Mexican Adolescents' Alcohol Use, Family Intimacy, and Parent-Adolescent Communication.

    Authors: Kristy Kiel Martyn, Carol Loveland-Cherry, Antonia Villarruel, Esther Gallegos Cabriales, Yan Zhou, David Ronis, Brenda Eakin

    Journal of family nursing.

    Despite widespread adolescent alcohol use, research on individual and contextual factors among Mexican adolescents is limited. This study describes the relationship between adolescent risk/protective
  • Men Family Caregivers' Experience of Nonsupportive Interactions: Context and Expectations.

    Authors: Anne Neufeld, Kaysi Eastlick Kushner

    Journal of family nursing.

    Men's involvement as family caregivers has grown as the prevalence of dementia has increased. Men rely on support from others for caregiving but also experience nonsupportive interactions. The
  • Becoming the Advocate of a Parent With Dementia Admitted to a Long-Term Care Facility: An Explanation of the Process Experienced by Daughters.

    Authors: Alain Legault, Francine Ducharme

    Journal of family nursing.

    Daughter caregivers of elders with dementia become their parents' advocates over time. This role takes on even greater importance when one or both parents are placed in a long-term care facility.
  • Analysis of Cross-Sectional Univariate Measurements for Family Dyads Using Linear Mixed Modeling.

    Authors: George J Knafl, Jane K Dixon, Jean P O'Malley, Margaret Grey, Janet A Deatrick, Agatha M Gallo, Kathleen A Knafl

    Journal of family nursing.

    Outcome measurements from members of the same family are likely correlated. Such intrafamilial correlation (IFC) is an important dimension of the family as a unit but is not always accounted for in
  • Therapeutic Letters in Nursing: Examining the Character and Influence of the Written Word in Clinical Work With Families Experiencing Illness.

    Authors: Nancy J Moules

    Journal of family nursing.

    This article summarizes the first research to be completed on the Family Systems Nursing intervention of therapeutic letters. In the Family Nursing Unit (FNU) at the University of Calgary,
  • The Past and Future of Therapeutic Letters: Family Suffering and Healing Words.

    Authors: Nancy J Moules

    Journal of family nursing.

    This article explores the technological implications of the translation of therapeutic letters to therapeutic e-mail communication. The history of letters is juxtaposed with the currency with which
  • New Mothers Network: The Provision of Social Support to Single, Low-Income, African American Mothers Via E-mail Messages.

    Authors: Christie K Campbell-Grossman, Diane Brage Hudson, Rebecca Keating-Lefler, Sally Heusinkvelt

    Journal of family nursing.

    Electronic mail (e-mail) is being investigated as a health care intervention for mothers caring for their infants. The purpose of this study is to describe themes representing the content of e-mail
  • Therapeutic Letters: A Challenge to Conventional Notions of Boundary.

    Authors: Neil Rodgers

    Journal of family nursing.

    This article explores the impact of letter writing as an adjunct to psychotherapy on therapeutic boundaries. Letters challenged and extended the spatial and temporal boundaries of the therapeutic
  • Undergraduate Nursing Students Writing Therapeutic Letters to Families: An Educational Strategy.

    Authors: Christen Erlingsson

    Journal of family nursing.

    Writing therapeutic letters to families is discussed in this article as an educational strategy encouraging students to think reflectively about family nursing. At the University of Kalmar, Sweden,
  • Therapeutic Letters and the Family Nursing Unit: A Legacy of Advanced Nursing Practice.

    Authors: Janice M Bell, Nancy J Moules, Lorraine M Wright

    Journal of family nursing.

    This article focuses on the history of the use of therapeutic letters in the clinical scholarship of the Family Nursing Unit at the University of Calgary and offers examples of a variety of
  • Therapeutic letters as relationally responsive practice.

    Authors: Nathan R Pyle

    Journal of family nursing. 15(1):65-82.

    Therapeutic letters have become a practice adopted by many clinicians as an adjunct to therapeutic conversations. This article presents selected findings from a larger study that examined both the
  • Family Health Nurse Project--An Education Program of the World Health Organization: The University of Stirling Experience.

    Authors: Ian Murray

    Journal of family nursing.

    This article outlines the delivery of the Family Health Nurse Education Programme of the World Health Organization (WHO) at the University of Stirling, Scotland, from 2001 to 2005. The program was
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Keywords

care
 
child
 
daughter
 
famili
 
grandparent
 
health
 
interview
 
life
 
member
 
mother
 
nurs
 
nursing
 
parent
 
practic
 
relationship
 

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