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Intellectual disability nursing in Ireland: identifying its development and future.

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journal contribution
posted on 2013-02-27, 15:26 authored by Owen DoodyOwen Doody, Eamonn Slevin, Laurence Taggart
As a profession, intellectual disability nursing has often come under scrutiny and been called into question. Since its inception as an individual nursing profession in 1959 in Ireland, both education and service provision philosophies have changed over time. These changes have been in response to national and international reports and changing attitudes. The changes have led to the current position where intellectual disability nurse education in Ireland is a four-year undergraduate course. As the discipline of intellectual disability nursing is unique to Ireland and the United Kingdom, there is a responsibility on intellectual disability nurses to identify their unique identity and their responses to the demands of changing services. This article traces the development of intellectual disability nursing in Ireland and identifies implications for the future.

History

Publication

Journal of Intellectual Disabilities;16(1), pp. 7-16

Publisher

Sage Publications Ltd

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

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