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JournalISSN: 1074-8407

Journal of Family Nursing 

SAGE Publishing
About: Journal of Family Nursing is an academic journal published by SAGE Publishing. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Family nursing & Health care. It has an ISSN identifier of 1074-8407. Over the lifetime, 747 publications have been published receiving 17588 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A family resilience orientation, based on the conviction that all families have inherent strengths and the potential for growth, provides the family nurse with an opportunity to facilitate family protective and recovery factors and to secure extrafamilial resources to help foster resilience.
Abstract: Family resilience is the successful coping of family members under adversity that enables them to flourish with warmth, support, and cohesion. An increasingly important realm of family nursing practice is to identify, enhance, and promote family resiliency. Based on a review of family research and conceptual literature, prominent factors of resilient families include: positive outlook, spirituality, family member accord, flexibility, family communication, financial management, family time, shared recreation, routines and rituals, and support networks. A family resilience orientation, based on the conviction that all families have inherent strengths and the potential for growth, provides the family nurse with an opportunity to facilitate family protective and recovery factors and to secure extrafamilial resources to help foster resilience.

436 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Examining more fully Confucianism as a conceptual framework for understanding EA family processes and health practices can provide guidance in exploring the complex and multidimensional aspects of EA family life and allow for broader articulation of family processes.
Abstract: Confucianism is the central philosophic background for much of the culture in East Asia (EA), particularly for understanding family and social context. The purpose of this article is to examine more fully Confucianism as a conceptual framework for understanding EA family processes and health practices. Confucianism stresses the traditional boundaries of ethical responsibility and the ideal of good human life as a whole. Embedded within Confucian values are five principal relationships, through which each person defines a sense of identity, duty, and responsibility. Current studies of EA families that consider Confucianism as a theoretical base focus almost exclusively on filial piety and collectivism. Focusing only on these two aspects prevents scholars from exploring more complex interpretations of EA family life. A broader inclusion of multiple concepts from Confucianism can provide guidance in exploring the complex and multidimensional aspects of EA family life and allow for broader articulation of family processes.

269 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The basic principle of the Theory of Dyadic Illness Management is that illness management is a dyadic phenomenon; the theory focuses extensively on the dyad as an interdependent team.
Abstract: Despite the importance of both members of the adult patient-care partner dyad, a majority of research on illness management is focused on the patient or the care partner. The basic principle of the Theory of Dyadic Illness Management is that illness management is a dyadic phenomenon; the theory focuses extensively on the dyad as an interdependent team. The way dyads appraise illness as a unit influences the ways in which they engage in behaviors to manage illness together in a recursive fashion that influences dyadic health. Optimizing the health of both members of the dyad is a goal of the theory. In turn, the health of the dyad can feedback to influence how they appraise and manage illness together. Finally, dyadic illness management is an inherently variable process that is influenced by several contextual factors. Supportive evidence and implications for practice and future research are presented.

178 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors’ efforts to expand the family management style framework are reported and the revised framework described, based on a review of results from 46 studies focusing on family response to childhood chronic conditions, is described.
Abstract: This article reports the authors’ efforts to expand the family management style framework and describes the revised framework. Framework development was based on a review of results from 46 studies...

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence that family interventions improve health in persons with chronic illness and their family members, across the life span is examined, focusing on recent meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials of family intervention research.
Abstract: The central aim of this article is to examine the evidence that family interventions improve health in persons with chronic illness and their family members, across the life span. The review focuses on recent meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials of family intervention research. In adults, evidence supports the salutary effects of family interventions versus usual medical care for patient health and mental health, and for family member health. In children, robust evidence supports family-based multimodal interventions for obesity treatment. Reasonable evidence supports family approaches to type 1 diabetes treatment in children. Nurses led the research or were members of interdisciplinary research teams in several of these literatures, representing one quarter to one third of the research cited, but were absent in other literatures, such as family treatment of childhood obesity.

146 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202327
202240
202126
202027
201925
201828