Concerns about intellectual property for nursing are becoming increasingly acute as information becomes highly accessible in the digital age. Nurse faculty members need to check policies of the agencies that they work for to evaluate explicit written policies for their protection and full understanding of the agency’s rights.
BonnerK. (2006). The center for intellectual property handbook. New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc.
3.
CateF. (1996). Intellectual property and networked health information: Issues and principles. Bulletin of the Medical Library Association, 84(2), 229-236.
4.
ConnorsH. (2001). Intellectual property and technology transfer. Journal of Professional Nursing, 17(4), 155.
NelsonC.BarnettG.GormanR.ReichmanH.ZurbriggenE.NisensonA. (2014). Defending the freedom to innovate: Faculty intellectual property rights after Stanford v. Roche. American Association of University Professors Bulletin Academe, 100(4), 40-58.
TwiggC. (2000). Who owns online courses and course materials: Intellectual property policies for a new learning environment. The Pew Learning and Technology Program. Troy, NY: Center for Academic Transformation Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Retrieved from: http://www.thencat.org/Monographs/Whoowns.html.