YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Care and Patient Diagnosis
Essays 841 - 870
activities" (Orems Self-Care Model Concepts) that patients need to undertake to meet their own health care needs on a routine basi...
Developing New Nurse Leaders also considers the issue of shifts in leadership and governance, with a focus on the role of nurses a...
(Wichowski, 2004). This certainly appeared to be the case for Elvis, as he complained about the "Croatian people" in his head who ...
is simply to require that their nursing staff make up for understaffing by working mandatory overtime on a more or less permanent ...
trying times of their lives. Nurses have the capacity to improve lives. Nothing could be more meaningful or provide a greater sens...
These authors conducted a large study of 3,830 individuals consisting of 17.8 percent nurses, 21.8 percent physicians, 29.6 percen...
learned long ago the value of yet another Deming (1986) exhortation, that of continuous improvement. By definition, the concept i...
suggestions for future action in regards to this problem. Section A: Problem identification The Problem and its importance The G...
make a real difference. In helping professions, such leadership is desirable. The health care industry today is fraught with probl...
runs $127 on average (Cummings, 2002). The goal of the ALF is to help senior citizens maintain as much independence as possible wi...
the same sort of indirect methods that they have advocated will aid the economy. For example, the Republicans are pursuing putting...
undergoes surgery for a hip arthroplasty 24 hours after admission. Twenty-four hours after surgery the nurses note that Mrs. Gale...
the medical team with which these patients have surrounded themselves. It is the patients responsibility to cooperate and do ever...
or reject MEDITECHs suggestions as they see fit. Whether users accept or reject the suggestions made by MEDITECH, care prov...
a specific number or percentage of Australian citizens who have or may be suffering from unstable angina. Part of the reason for ...
the most frequently reported intervention classifications for NPs were patient education, drug management, nutrition support, risk...
phenomenological, existential, and qualitative components (Cohen, 1991). These combine to create a theory that addresses the pers...
nursing from the time when Florence Nightingale founded modern nursing in the nineteenth century. Since Nightingale, a variety of ...
The SCDNT regards the meta-paradigm of "Nursing" as an art, that is, a "helping service," but also as a technology ("Dorothea," 20...
It also is clear that readily accessible primary care services are essential to achieving effective health care reform. The World ...
client who is the focus of this case study is an 86-year-old woman who has been living at home with her husband. Her medical histo...
of literature pertaining to type 2 diabetes mellitus, begins by describing, summarizing and analyzing the study conducted by Barko...
The paper is a presentation designed to introduce and explain a new fall prevention policy for a home care nursing agency. The pr...
experience, particularly that immigrant experience as it occurs within the modern medical environment, revolves around cultural un...
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...
She has promoted her theory of human caring throughout the world from various positions including lecturer at several universities...
and the patient are often unproductive (Roberson and Kelly, 1996; Hanna, 1997). Understanding the basis for this cultural percept...
health of the individual and to their success in recuperation. The Association for Spirit at Work is comprised of medical profess...