Why Is Madeleine Leininger Influential?
According to Wikipedia , Madeleine Leininger was a nursing theorist, nursing professor and developer of the concept of transcultural nursing. First published in 1961, her contributions to nursing theory involve the discussion of what it is to care.
Madeleine Leininger's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 0 125 250 375 500 625 750 875 1000 1125 Published Papers Transcultural Nursing : Concepts, Theories, Research and Practice (565) Qualitative research methods in Nursing (541) Transcultural nursing: Concepts, theories, and practices (516) Leininger's Theory of Nursing: Cultural Care Diversity and Universality (497) Culture care diversity and universality : a worldwide nursing theory (465) Culture Care Theory: A Major Contribution to Advance Transcultural Nursing Knowledge and Practices (431) Culture Care Diversity and Universality: A Theory of Nursing (381) Transcultural care diversity and universality: a theory of nursing. (273) Care, the essence of nursing and health (268) Transcultural nursing : concepts, theories, research and practices (212) Overview of the Theory of Culture Care with the Ethnonursing Research Method (197) CARING: AN ESSENTIAL HUMAN NEED (163) Culture Care Theory, Research, and Practice (124) Ethnomethods: The Philosophic and Epistemic Bases to Explicate Transcultural Nursing Knowledge (116) Transcultural nursing research to transform nursing education and practice: 40 years. (97) Current Issues, Problems, and Trends to Advance Qualitative Paradigmatic Research Methods for the Future (92) Nursing and anthropology;: Two worlds to blend (83) Caring: a central focus of nursing and health care services. (73) Theoretical Questions and Concerns: Response From the Theory of Culture Care Diversity and Universality Perspective (67) The Caring imperative in education (63) Madeleine Leininger: Cultural Care Diversity and Universality Theory (50) Ethical and moral dimensions of care (48) Caring: the compassionate healer. (45) Care facilitation and resistance factors in the culture of nursing. (45) Becoming Aware of Types of Health Practitioners and Cultural Imposition (44) Quality of Life from a Transcultural Nursing Perspective (43) The culture concept and its relevance to nursing. (42) Caring, an essential human need : proceedings of the three National Caring Conferences (41) Transcultural nursing education: a worldwide imperative. (40) Teaching Transcultural Nursing in Undergraduate and Graduate Programs (38) Future directions in transcultural nursing in the 21st century. (37) The Significance of Cultural Concepts in Nursing (37) Special Research Report: Dominant Culture Care (EMIC) Meanings and Practice Findings from Leininger's Theory (36) Care, discovery and uses in clinical and community nursing (36) Towards Conceptualization of Transcultural Health Care Systems: Concepts and a Model (36) Cultural diversities of health and nursing care. (36) Transcultural nursing: an essential knowledge and practice field for today. (32) Basic Psychiatric Concepts in Nursing (28) Transcultural Nurse Specialists and Generalists: New Practitioners in Nursing (26) Transcultural nursing: the study and practice field. (24) Transcultural Nursing Society Position Statement on Human Rights (23) Transcultural nursing: an overview. (23) Conflict and Conflict Resolution (22) This I believe...about interdisciplinary health education for the future. (21) The leadership crisis in nursing: a critical problem and challenge. (21) The Tribes of Nursing in the USA Culture of Nursing (19) Transcultural nursing: its progress and its future. (18) A mini journey into transcultural nursing with its founder. (15) Witchcraft Practices and Psychocultural Therapy with Urban U. S. Families (15) Nursing And Anthropology (14) Leininger's transcultural nursing : concepts, theories, research & practice (14) Changing foci in American nursing education: primary and transcultural nursing care. (13) Transcultural Nursing: Quo Vadis: (Where Goeth the Field?) (13) The transcultural nurse specialist: imperative in today's world. (13) Transcultural Health Care Issues and Conditions (12) Leininger's acculturation health care assessment tool for cultural patterns in traditional and non-traditional lifeways. (12) Self-Care Ideology and Cultural Incongruities: Some Critical Issues (11) Caring: some reflections on the impact of the culture care theory by McFarland & Andrews and a conversation with Leininger. (11) Convergence and divergence of human behavior : an ethnopsychological comparative study of two Gadsup villages in the Eastern Highlands of New Guinea (10) Transcultural Nursing Care Values, Beliefs, and Practices of American (USA) Gypsies (10) Some anthropological issues related to community mental health programs in the United States (10) Cultural care: an essential goal for nursing and health care. (9) Two strange health tribes: the Gnisrun and Enicidem in the United States. (8) Transcultural eating patterns and nutrition: Transcultural nursing and anthropological perspectives (7) Current Issues in Using Anthropology in Nursing Education and Services (7) Transcultural nursing presents exciting challenge. (7) Transcultural Nursing: A Scientific and Humanistic Care Discipline (7) Political nursing: essential for health service and educational systems of tomorrow. (7) An open health care system model. (7) Editorial: Are Nurses Prepared to Function Worldwide? (6) Founder’s Focus: Transcultural Nursing Care Makes a Big Outcome Difference (6) Culture Care of the Gadsup Akuna of the Eastern Highlands of New Guinea. (6) Founder’s Focus: Cultural Diffusion Trends, Uses, and Abuses in Transcultural Nursing (6) Understanding cultural pain for improved health care. 1997. (5) Conference on the nature of science in nursing. Introduction. (5) Gadsup of Papua New Guinea Revisited: A Three Decade View (5) Response and reflections on Bruni's 1988 critique of Leininger's theory. (5) Founder's Focus (5) Transcultural nursing as a global care humanizer, diversifier, and unifier. (5) Understanding Cultural Pain for Impro Ved Health Care (5) Response to Swendson and Windsor: rethinking cultural sensitivity. (4) Transcultural nursing: an imperative for nursing practice. (4) Culturally competent health care. (4) Founder’s Focus: Transcultural Nursing Legal Concerns: A Wake-Up Call (4) Culturally Competent Care: Visibleand Invisible (4) Creativity and Challenges for Nurse Researchers in This Economic Recession (4) Contemporary Issues in Mental Health Nursing (4) THE RESEARCH CRITIQUE NATURE, FUNCTION, AND ART (4) Leininger’s Father Protective Care (4) Community psychiatric nursing: trends, issues, and problems. (3) The Care Symposium: Considerations for Nursing Administrators (3) Founder’s Focus: Australia: The Global Transcultural Nursing Society’s 26th Annual Meeting Place for 2000 (3) The use of cultural concepts in patient care. (3) Founder's Focus: Some Key Last Challenges (3) Alternative to what? Generic vs. professional caring, treatments, and healing modes. (3) The Phenomenon of Caring, Part V: Caring (3) Cultural differences among staff members and the impact on patient care. (3) Leininger's Reflection on her Ongoing Father Protective Care Research (2) Towards conceptualization of transcultural health care systems: concepts and a model. 1976. (2) Psychiatric nursing and transculturalism: quo vadis? (2) DISCOVERING THE UNKNOWN PERSON WITH THE NEO TEACHER-LEARNER CULTURE CARE PARADIGM (2) Madeleine Leininger on transcultural nursing and culturally competent care. Interview by Mary Agnes Seisser. (2) The research critique: nature, function, and art. (2) Nursing's new paradigm is transcultural nursing: an interview with Madeleine Leininger. Interview by Susan Cummings. (2) NATURE OF SCIENCE IN NURSING (2) Changes in psychiatric nursing. (2) Leininger clarifies transcultural nursing. (1) [Conference on the nature of science in nursing. Introductory comments]. (1) The Papua‐New Guinea Elections 1964. David G. Bettison, Colin A. Hughes, and Paul W. van der Veur (1) SPECIAL FEATURE : Leininger ’ s Reflection on her Ongoing Father Protective Care (1) A New and Changing Decade Ahead: Are Nurses Prepared? (1) Historical Dates and Places of the Annual Transcultural Nursing Society Conferences (1974-2000) (1) Conflict and conflict resolutions: theories and processes relevant to the health professions. (1) [Changing directions in nursing education. Primary and transcultural nursing care]. (1) Nursing's Agenda of Health Care Reform: Regressive or Advanced-Discipline Status? (1) Health care delivery systems for tomorrow. (1) Founder’s Focus—Reflections on the International Council of Nurses and the Transcultural Nursing Society in London, 1999 (1) A new generation of nurses discover transcultural nursing. (0) Book Review: Transcultural Health Care: A Culturally Competent Approach by Larry D. Purmell and Betty J Paulanka (0) Critique: the young child's response to hospitalization: separation anxiety to lack of mothering care? (0) [Transcultural nursing and its study of European variabilities. Interview by Jouko Ranta, Päivi Voutilainen, Pirkko Meriläinen]. (0) [Conference on the nature of science in nursing. Introduction]. (0) Health care issues (0) Re: Image of the nurse on the Internet. (0) [Cultural dimensions of humane care--the Sunrise Model]. (0) Boston College Conference on Teaching Transcultural Nursing: A Great Need and Success (0) Founder’s Focus: Linguistic Clichés and Buzzwords in the Culture of Nursing (0) Founder's Focus (0) Founder’s Focus: Honoree’s Thanks for the Wonderful Celebration, October 16, 2003 (0) Reflections on an international theory of nursing. (0) Witchcraft practices and nursing therapy. (0) Community Psychiatric Nursing in Community Mental Health—Trends, Issues, and Problems (0) Re: Review of ???Qualitative Research Methods in Nursing??? (0) Health care delivery systems for tomorrow: possibilities and guidelines. (0) Leininger's Brief Rejoiner to Feild's Response (0) Founder's Focus (0) Initiator of the Culturally-Based Human Care Movement Chair of the National Caring Research Conferences—1978-1987 IAHC President—1987-1989 (0) Taft-Hartley amended: implications for nursing. Conflict and conflict resolution. (0) EXPERIMENT IN CHANGE—by Jane A. Schmahl, R.N., M.A. Macmillan, New York City, 1966, 460 pages, $9.95 (0) Creativity and challenges for nurse researchers in this economic recession. (0) This I believe--about interdisciplinary health education for the future. (0) Our Gratitude to Editor McFarland with Progress Reflections on the Journal of Transcultural Nursing (1989-1998) (0) Conflict and conflict resolutions: theories and processes relevant to the health profession. (0) Transcultural Nursing Society News Department (0) Request from Transcultural Nurse Researchers to Share Problems to Receive Research Funds (0) Great Loss of President of the Michigan Transcultural Nursing Society: David B. Stasiak (0) Suggested bibliography on cultural diversities and transcultural nursing. (0) More Papers This paper list is powered by the following services:
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