YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Emergency Room and Intensive Care Unit Nursing Retention
Essays 541 - 570
In twelve pages this paper discusses how the nursing profession's health care workers can benefit from the educational theories of...
In three pages this paper presents a summary and review of an article that describes how marketing principles are being applied to...
which both of those impacts are important. The question of what statistics should be collected in a medical facility, however, is...
operations of nursing" (Horan, Doran and Timmins, 2004, p. 30). This is broken down into three basic categories: 1) wholly compen...
a list of advantages for patients, which include: * Greater coordination of services leads to higher quality care for the patient ...
activities" (Orems Self-Care Model Concepts) that patients need to undertake to meet their own health care needs on a routine basi...
moment to moment as the changing patterns of shifting perspectives weave the fabric of life through the human-universe interconnec...
caring as the very definition of what constitutes personal values from a nursing perspective (2003). Koerner (1996), likewise, e...
Critically-Care nurses, 1989 in Nursing Management, 1999, p. 38). This abbreviated version of AACN nursing standards was located...
in order so that it can be determined if all of the childs educational needs are being met. Aiding disabled children in reaching t...
classifies the stroke patients needs in four domains: 1) medical/surgical issues; 2) mental status/emotion/coping behaviors; 3) ph...
the "number of initial admissions with at least one readmission divided by total discharges excluding deaths" (Lagoe, et al., 1999...
on an evidenced based evidence based practice and the development of increased individual accountability in the area of clinical g...
learned long ago the value of yet another Deming (1986) exhortation, that of continuous improvement. By definition, the concept i...
balance these too opposing criteria. Empowering care aids the geriatric patients in overcoming learned helplessness, as they take ...
departments (Courson, 2004). It isnt that nurses have not been serving in these roles, they have but today, nurses receive speci...
the same sort of indirect methods that they have advocated will aid the economy. For example, the Republicans are pursuing putting...
or reject MEDITECHs suggestions as they see fit. Whether users accept or reject the suggestions made by MEDITECH, care prov...
carcinoma in situ (DCIS). This is also known as "intraductal carcinoma or non-invasive breast cancer" (Breast Cancer, 2004; p. PG...
the most frequently reported intervention classifications for NPs were patient education, drug management, nutrition support, risk...
the medical team with which these patients have surrounded themselves. It is the patients responsibility to cooperate and do ever...
undergoes surgery for a hip arthroplasty 24 hours after admission. Twenty-four hours after surgery the nurses note that Mrs. Gale...
caused by the illnesses the may then have a negative physiological backlash on the patient. For other condition it may be the ro...
experience, particularly that immigrant experience as it occurs within the modern medical environment, revolves around cultural un...
is wheelchair bound, but nevertheless cooks for herself and shops for herself in a nearby grocery store, using her motorized wheel...
achieved that the critical care nurse may address the bio-psycho-social implications of the event (Alfafara and Hedges, 1996). Fur...
is they do, when they change their actions, then the image of nursing will change" (Watson, 1996, p. 142). Watson has recognized ...
on nurses increase (Cullen, 2003). Nevertheless, nurse educators and scholars stress that it is through recognition of caring as a...
health of the individual and to their success in recuperation. The Association for Spirit at Work is comprised of medical profess...
that make use of color, but even these efforts have not typically met with good response by patients or hospital administrators (S...