American Nurses Association (1987). The nursing center: Concept and design. Kansas City, MO: Author.
3.
American Nurses Association (2002). Nursing Information and Data Set Evaluation Center (NIDSEC) recognized languages for nursing. Retrieved January 31, 2002, from http:www.ana.orgnidsecclasslst.htm.
4.
AORN (2000). Perioperative nursing data set: The perioperative nursing vocabulary. Denver: Author.
5.
BroadheadJ.ParraD.SkeltonP. (2001). Emerging multiresistant organisms in the ICU: Epidemiology, risk factors, surveillance, and prevention.Critical Care Nursing Quarterly, 24 (2), 20–29.
6.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2001). Updated guidelines for evaluating public health surveillance systems: Recommendations from the Guidelines Working Group. MMWR, 50(RR–13), 1–29, 31–35, CE1–7.
7.
CoenenA.McNeilB.BakkenS.BickfordC.WarrenJ. J. (2001). Toward comparable nursing data: American Nurses Association criteria for data sets, classification systems, and nomenclatures.Computers in Nursing, 19240–246.
8.
CookD.M. (2001). Iatrogenic illness: A primer for nurses.MEDSURG Nursing, 10139–144.
9.
CreedyD.ENoyD.L. (2001). Post discharge surveillance after cesarean section.Birth, 28264–269.
10.
DoughertyC.M. (1999). Surveillance. In BulechekG.M.McCloskeyJ.C., (Eds.), Nursing interventions: Effective nursing treatments (3rd ed., pp. 524–532). Philadelphia: Saunders.
11.
GoldrickB.A. (1999). Infection control programs in long-term-care facilities: Structure and process.Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, 20764–769.
12.
GoossenW.T.F. (2000). Toward strategic use of nursing information in the Netherlands. Doctoral dissertation, Northern Center for Health Care Research, Groningen, The Netherlands.
13.
GordonM. (1998, September 30). Nursing nomenclature and classification system development. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing. Retrieved March 22, 2000, from http:www.nursingworld.orgojintpc7tpc7_1.htm.
14.
GrobeS.J. (1990). Nursing intervention lexicon and taxonomy study: Language and classification methods.Journal of Advanced Nursing, 13 (2), 22–33.
15.
GrobeS.J.HughesL.C. (1993). The conceptual validity of a taxonomy of nursing interventions.Journal of Advanced Nursing, 181942–1961.
16.
Home and Community Care (1994). CNMDSA Community Nursing Minimum Data Set Australia Version 1.0 1994: Data dictionary and guidelines. St. Kilda, Victoria, Australia: Australian Council of Community Nursing Services.
17.
HuberD.G.SchumacherL.DelaneyD. (1997). Nursing management minimum data set.Journal of Nursing Administration, 27 (4), 42–48.
18.
International College of American Pathologists. (2001). Statistical nomenclature of medicine (SNOMED RT). Retrieved July 3,2001, from http:www.snomed.org.
19.
International Council of Nurses. (2001). The international classification for nursing practice beta 2. Retrieved January 31, 2002, from: http:www.icn.chicnp.htm.
20.
JenningsR.M.LoanL. (2001). Misconceptions among nurses about evidence-based practice.Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 33121–127.
21.
JohnsonM.MaasM.MoorheadS. (2000). Nursing outcomes classification (2nd ed.). St. Louis: Mosby.
22.
KellerL.O.StrohscheinS.Lia-HoagbergB.SchafferN. (1998). Population-based public health nursing interventions: A model from practice.Public Health Nursing, 15207–215.
23.
LundeenS.P.FriedbacherB.E. (1994). The automated community health information systems (ACHIS): A relational database application of the Omaha System in a community nursing center. In GrobeS.J.Pluyter-WentingE.S.P., (Eds.), Nursing informatics: An international overview for nursing in a technological era (pp. 393–397). Amsterdam: Elsevier.
24.
MartinK.S.ScheetN. (1992). The Omaha classification system: Applications for community health nursing. Philadelphia: Saunders.
25.
McCloskeyJ.C.BulechekG.M. (2000). Nursing interventions classification (3rd ed.). St. Louis: Mosby.
26.
North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (2001). NANDA nursing diagnoses: Definitions and classification, 2001–2002. Philadelphia: Author.
27.
OzboltJ.G. (1998). Ozbolt's patient care data set: Standard terms and codes for patient care data. Charlottesville, VA: Author.
28.
Public Health Nursing Section (2001). Public health interventions: Applications for public health nursing practice. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Department of Health.
29.
RussellR. (1999). Nosocomial infections.American Journal of Nursing, 99 (6),24J–24P.
30.
SabaV.K. (1996). Home Health Care Classification (HHCC): Nursing diagnoses and nursing interventions. Retrieved July 3, 2001, from:http:www.sabacare.com.
31.
SchonemanD. (1999). Surveillance as a nursing intervention: Use in community nursing centers. Doctoral dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI.
32.
SchonemanD. (2002). Surveillance as a nursing intervention: Use in community nursing centers.Journal of Community Health Nursing, 19 (1), 33–47.
StoneD.S. (2000). Health surveillance for health care workers: A vital role for occupational and environmental health nurse.AAOHN Journal, 48 (2), 73–79.
35.
ThackerS.R. (2000). Historical development. In TeutschS.M.ChurchillR.E., (Eds.), Principles and practice of public health surveillance (pp. 1–16). New York: Oxford University Press.
36.
ThackerS.B.StroupD.F.ParrishR.G.AndersonH. (1996). Surveillance in environmental public health: Issues, systems, and sources.American Journal of Public Health, 86633–638.
37.
TitlerM.G. (1992). Interventions related to surveillance.Nursing Clinics of North American, 27495–515.
38.
WarshawskyB.HussainZ.GregsonD.B.AdlerR.AustinM.BruckschwaigerD., et al. (2000). Hospital- and community-based surveillance of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus: Previous hospitalization is the major risk factor. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, 21724–727.
39.
WerleyH.H.LangN.M. (1988). The consensually derived nursing minimum data set: Elements and definition. In WerleyH.H.LangN.M., (Eds.), Identification of the nursing minimum data set (pp. 402–411). New York: Springer.