YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Importance of Nurses using Evidenced Based Care
Essays 691 - 720
While only 6 percent of newborns require advanced life support in 1997, the rise in the number of neonates since that time weighin...
inflamed, tender to the touch and evident of a small amount of pus (DAlessandro et al, 2004), becoming more painful as time progre...
and specific therapy" (Newswanger and Warren, 2004, p. 2405). As patients advance through the acute phase of the illness, supporti...
In fourteen pages the past decade of changes in US health care and nursing are discussed in terms of funding and other issues of r...
In ten pages a tutorial review on the article 'Discharge Teaching Work Strategies for Patients and Families for Care in the Home'...
first essential step in the pursuit of any lifelong goal such as this is to develop a "five year plan". In the development of su...
between a patient and a doctor in a community practice setting" (Manias, 2010, p. 934). However, this scenario is no longer the mo...
utilized 184 consecutive patients. All of the patients who were admitted were provided with informed consent. The researche...
By addressing this need, which includes rehabilitation designed to aid her mobility, nursing intervention can also have a positive...
prompts nurses to cultivate the "conscious intent to preserve wholeness; potentiate healing; and preserve dignity, integrity and l...
phenomena of health care marketing and branding. One of the most instructive lessons in modern health care marketing and branding ...
and how this equipment should differ for this population: Bariatric patients are typically defined as those who are extremely obe...
the business. Otherwise, it could impact sales margins. For example, if a statistician attempts to conduct a statistical analysis ...
Florida cancer center, one can successfully examine how organizational structure and governance, as well as an organizations cultu...
facilities that it was intended to achieve. Looking at more specific indicators, however, one can see from the literature review ...
refers to instances in which patients who have been admitted to a health care facility decide to refuse treatment from doctors (Lo...
health screening or immunization clinics and blood drives (Registered Nurses, 2010). Kin a hospital setting, RNs are known ...
nursing quality of care" (Hart, et al, 2006, p. 256). These indicators specifically indicate that complications, such as pressure ...
is still those are very disturbing numbers when one considers that the problem may be eliminated to some degree by the simple task...
In eight pages this paper discusses Watson's contributions to the nursing theory of caring. Six sources are cited in the bibliogr...
cosmic forces: they comprise the primal and universal psychic energy yet are overlooked * We have to treat our "self" with gentlen...
goes way beyond the paradigm of nursing as simply a "handmaiden" to physicians. The nursing professional is required to know virtu...
issues along a continuum of health and good health is defined as a "state of complete physical, mental and social well-being" (Ada...
the problem and to eliminate it where possible. Nester (1998) quantifies the extent of the problem relating that an estimated 1,2...
making a critical separation between their medical and social responsibilities within the short time allowed in an office visit. ...
importance in the immediate nature of the patients problems, however. In critical care, theory can wait. Nurses need to be focus...
dependency upon others for assisted daily living skills, and institutional care. Rockwood (1997) defined frail elderly people as t...
In five pages this paper discusses ethical situations that typically arise for nurses in clinical care environments. Six sources ...
to focus more upon running smooth production rather than customer needs. By skewing the focus in this way, health care organizati...
In this paper consisting of ten pages the addiction to opiates as it applies to managed care nurses is discussed in detail. There...