YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Quitting Smoking Through Nursing Intervention
Essays 31 - 60
Theoretical Considerations College is a time when the individual is moving away from identity with...
In 5 pages this paper discusses smoking cessation and presents 2 research studies in an overview that contrasts and compares the r...
more likely to give birth prematurely, have children with low-birthweights, and experience pregnancy problems like eclampsia. Fur...
any number of physical ailments, including halitosis and lockjaw throughout Europe (ASH, 2006; Randall, 1999). Sir Frances Drake ...
(Ferrence and Ashley 310, Brownlee 66). The evidence is mounting, however, that secondary smoke is more than just a nuisance to n...
hazard and choosing to smoke is the risk factor. Being exposed to secondhand smoke is a risk factor as well. Just because tobac...
goes into the air will harm them. Some take it so far as to want to ban cigarette smoking in outdoor parks for example, but usuall...
health risks. Children: The risk to children comes largely from secondhand smoke, derived from the tobacco products their parents...
There are more than 40 million smokers in the United States. Of those who try quitting through groups, patches, or gum, very few s...
This research paper pertains to smoking as a nursing advocacy issue, and describes how nurses are addressing this issue. Three pag...
with clear results provided. Quantitative and Discussion articles needed to present information that directly addresses the purpos...
necessary health-related behaviors" required for meeting "ones therapeutic self-care demand (needs)" (Hurst, et al 2005, p. 11). U...
In five pages this paper reviews a safer sex intervention and abstinence study published in 1998 by Jemmot, Jemmot and Fong and ev...
frequently use mental health nurses as a means for expanding services (Winefield and Chur-Hansen, 2004). The following examination...
to smoking for medical care for one year, 1993, was in excess of $50 billion and estimated lost productivity due to smoking-relate...
known to cause cancer (Kuhn, Swartzwelder & Wilson, 2003). The real ethical problem is that while adults have a choice whether or ...
(Townsend, 2000). This study is advantageous in many other ways as well to the nursing educator. It utilizes methodologi...
them emotional and psychologically in their efforts to quit smoking. These sessions will also include the presentation and reinfor...
and ultimate goal. One of the easiest ways to achieve this is with a written behavior recording plan that can be as simple as div...
People with mental illness are two to three times more likely to be tobacco-dependent than the general population and their attemp...
This research paper/essay concerns a home visit with an older woman suffering from congestive heart failure (CHF, hypertension and...
interests and values considered and respected in the decision-making process" (Fly and Johnstone, 2002). This rationale is undoubt...
This involves intensive, one-on-one teaching, which enables autistic children to learn the intricacies of behaviors or skills via ...
to five-times the risk for CHD, which contrasts sharply with the double risk encountered in African American men. There is also a ...
how the quality of this relationship affects the therapeutic success of nursing interventions. Major concepts (adaptation) : Lite...
2005, p.165). In obese children, the number of fat cells present in the body can be as much as three times higher than in normal w...
In twelve pages problems within the community nursing landscape are discussed such as parent alteration and social isolation and t...
patient was in a significant amount of pain, he made jokes throughout his entire stay, as family members remained at his bedside. ...
individual is an "open system," which includes "distinct, but integrated physiological, psychological and socio-cultural systems" ...
autistic children (Sallows and Graupner, 2005). In Sallows and Graupner (2005), 48 percent of the group were enrolled and perfor...