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Western Journal of Nursing Research
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Characteristics of Intuitive Nurses

Virginia G. Miller

Lubbock, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, School of Nursing.

A description is provided of the process used to verify characteristics of intuitive nurses that had been reported in the literature. These characteristics supplied the frameworkfor construction of the Miller Intuitiveness Instrwnent (MII) reported earlier (Miller, 1993). Evidencefor validity of the MI! was provided in the Miller (1993) study by examiningfactor analyses and correlations with the intuitive component of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI). The following characteristics were subsequently verified: Intuitive nurses are willing to act on their intuitions, are skilled clinicians, and incorporate a spiritual component in their practices. In addition, intuitive nurses express an interest in the abstract nature of things and are risk takers. Intuitive nurses prefer intuition to sensing (as reflected by the MBTI) as a way to take in information. They are extroverted and express confidence in their intuitions. Likewise, nurses who delay making decisions until all the information is in are more intuitive than those who make decisions abruptly.

Western Journal of Nursing Research, Vol. 17, No. 3, 305-316 (1995)
DOI: 10.1177/019394599501700306


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