YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Four Nursing Theorists
Essays 31 - 60
The concept of health also has undergone change over the years. It formerly referred to absence of disease, but now it generally ...
Leadership and management while related are two distinctively different concepts. Leadership can be discerned from simply manageme...
there a time when an individuals interests supersede those of the masses? These are ethical questions posed each and everyday thr...
with humanity, that is, to be humanistic in ones orientation refers to the principles of humanism, which has been given a variety ...
2008, p. 208). The purpose of the study designed by Sorensen and Yankech (2008) was to investigate whether a "research-based, th...
that not only were nurses retained but that everyone on staff is motivated to be actively engaged and involved in the work environ...
"interactive, systems, and developmental" approaches (Tourville and Ingalls 21). The systems model of nursing perceives the meta...
Today, the theories of Orem, Roy, Neuman, Rogers, King, and others seem to be more popular than older theories such as those of Fl...
on education and prevention, and on how individual and social systems work together in the "society" of the health care industry. ...
of her theory is the "improvement of nurses relationships with patients," which is a goal that she proposed can be accomplished by...
nursing. Forchuk and Dorsay (1995) and Barker, Reynolds and Stevenson (1997) identify Hildegard Peplau as the first to apply nurs...
A 3 page research paper that compares and contrasts the way in which nursing theorists Hildegard Peplau, Dorothea Orem, and Betty ...
prompts nurses to cultivate the "conscious intent to preserve wholeness; potentiate healing; and preserve dignity, integrity and l...
of this perspective for modern nursing practices. The Theory of Unitary Human Beings Rogers theory described as the "Science of...
couldnt get along without nurses any more than they could get along without mothers" (Garey et al, 1988, p. PG). II. VIRGINIA HEN...
CP/M, which was shortly to be succeeded by MS/DOS (Alsop 188). The Macintosh operating system offered an icon-driven system that a...
Hospital. The purpose here is to describe and evaluate the restructuring of St. Vincents ICU to gain one-on-one nursing and so im...
cope with ethical situations primarily from experience and only minimally from formal education, which leaves novice nurses with "...
some determining the study was inconclusive, others saying certain interventions should be made universal and still others stating...
definitions of community have emerged, with the consequence that, concurrently, definitions of health promotions have also evolved...
in populations, the increase in the complexity of players in any given war, and the evolution of humanity overall. In all honesty ...
fulfillment. John Cassian (1997) wrote extensively about this topic. For Cassian, the goals of asceticism seem to be the preparati...
to some extent helps to explain human behavior. One may think of people being made up of emotions, desires, good and evil. These a...
at this stage ("Stages of Social-Emotional Development," 2005). This may be equated with Maslows physiological phase where physic...
and Erhardt studied a group of girls who had been wrongly identified as boys at birth, and originally raised as boys. They stated ...
and nursing literature abounds with how such theories influence and guide nursing practice in all of its varied aspects. For exa...
they can be perceived as being hierarchical integrations of skills and abilities. They are different in a number of ways, also. F...
trade tariffs and taxes, but also measures such as minimum wages legislation as well as production limits. The policy that was fou...
during which time they reviewed data regarding the patient and made adjustments to the clinical care program. The advanced practic...
free citizens to own and inherit property as well as to be free from excessive taxation (1997). It created the right of widows who...