YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Transcultural Nursing
Essays 241 - 270
In six pages this essay discusses nursing shortages and examines the employment satisfaction aspects or lack thereof as it pertain...
In six pages this paper examines the nurse's role from an ambulatory care perspective with service complexities and constant chang...
In twelve pages this literature review considers the changes in nursing roles as they involve the postoperative management of pain...
In five pages this paper discusses nurse socialization and gossip's role in this research article evaluation. Three sources are l...
In ten pages a home healthcare case study is employed to examine what nursing approaches would best be used in this scenario and a...
In five pages this paper discusses the plight of the homeless and health care access in a consideration of a nurse's role. Six so...
In five pages this paper examines how psychiatric nursing's role has developed in this professional literature overview on the top...
In eight pages this essay discusses efforts to reconcile euthanasia and the Nurse's Code in a consideration of the ethics nonmalef...
In fifteen pages male nursing is examined in an overview that includes history, the increasing role of men in the profession in th...
In two pages an article featured in a nursing journal is reviewed that considers the correlation between patient health care quali...
In seven pages the NCLEX RN testing and its associated issues are examined in this topical overview. Nine sources are cited in th...
In six pages this nurse's job loss is examined in terms of the reasons behind it after her failure to save a terminally ill patien...
of patients that not only speak about the medical problem, but also monopolize the staffs time by discussing volumes of informatio...
most often have a great deal of training and, in most mainstream settings, are also nurses or nurse-midwife practitioners. Many ar...
management. Howard Leventhal is responsible for developing an important research model that can be easily tailored to address any...
not only better oriented overall to do the job but who also would be paid enough to have an incentive to stay in the job or put ma...
Today, the problem of the nursing shortage has grown to the point that it is no longer only added stress and long hours for those ...
as a therapeutic relationship between patient and nurse (Frisch and Kelley, 2002). Other theorists since that time have examined t...
several years. Psychologically, it has been found that individuals more actively involved with their own health care often fare m...
as how the profession has been viewed for at least a century. It was an honorable and respected position for a woman and one that ...
Replicatability is one hallmark of valid quantitative research. In past years, qualitative research in nursing has been ass...
follow-up full medical treatment and counseling. 5. Bargain for violence-prevention provisions. 6. Make violence-prevention progra...
on the following (Nursingworld.org, 2004). * Human dignity * Commitment to the patient * Protection of the patients privacy and co...
nursing. Forchuk and Dorsay (1995) and Barker, Reynolds and Stevenson (1997) identify Hildegard Peplau as the first to apply nurs...
in young people (age 15-24) and 40% include women ? Newborns comprise 600,000 of the newly infected people ? More than 500,000...
issues of spirituality. In essence, the parish nurse has the ability to treat the whole patient, rather than only addressing symp...
(Walsh, 2003; p. 22). The intended role is that of partner with an MD in providing direct patient care in terms of serving in rol...
considered one of a number of high stress jobs, and stress is problematic, causing inefficiencies, high staffing turnover rates an...
the changes that have occurred since she founded modern nursing. "Florence Nightingale provided us with a framework, relevant tod...
of a unified health care organization that included both Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH...