YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Analysis of Scholarly Articles
Essays 2281 - 2310
as a solution to the problem of developing reflective skills, Ferrario defines reflective thinking as: a) analyzing, synthesizing,...
ethics are a part of the concern. The hospital should not accept a patient load that it cannot handle. Another example of an issue...
"special rewards". Berkley Wellness Letter. (1994, Jan). Saving Womens Lives (Reducing Deaths from Lung Cancer). The Univer...
their final portfolio as an example of an "ah-ha" moment in the course" (McArthur, 1999, 46). An example is provided of a Worst A...
when the user clicks on it. The text begins with a general geographical description of the river, and the focus of the article rem...
and realities of the Vietnam struggle prior to the United States involvement. In this particular commentary he is clearly indicati...
inquiries, the scientific information covered in any particular lesson plan will undoubtedly be remembered long after memorized fa...
may be given increasing autonomy in their learning activities. Martin-Hansen provides a chart that illustrates this by showing the...
Rights Act of 1991 and what it meant to people at the time it was implemented. What Businesses Should Know about the Civil Right...
All of the results of this reengineering, however, were not as positive. The process had not taken into consideration the fact th...
that the function of homeless shelters should be to provide an avenue out of homelessness. Instead of providing this, she argues t...
are under our care. By promoting healthy and better communication between us and the patient, we do not need to involve the famil...
(Hammond et al, 2004). Looking at the Memory and Problem Solving items, 34 percent improved, 48 percent did not change in either d...
boy. That said, there is a lot one can glean from the essay from the fact that gender roles may indeed be socially constructed to ...
seems to be too much to the general public. While this article is not published in a popular magazine for the average consumer, th...
and fear and engenders feelings of support and help for the patient " (MacLean, et al, 2003). In regards to negative outcomes, fam...
and encouraging writing (Lacina and Austin, 2003). They also provide other sources for more knowledge, such as Web sites (Lacina a...
establish policy guidelines. In the administration of medication, "processes have been virtually ignored in the search for EBP" (...
2003 NPR segment, for example, featured an interview with Dr. Barbara Methe, the collaborative investigator at the Institute for ...
is not surprising given that one of the primary functions of labor unions is to insure its members jobs. Without the volunteer pa...
effectiveness has been studied extensively, and that studies consistently conclude that NP-based care is comparable to that origin...
American Psychiatric Association. The authors indicate that postpartum depression has received a great deal of research att...
with that problem or challenge being solved by either an individual, a team within the organization, or the organization as a whol...
and the effect on the occupational arena. Both articles, however, emphasize that asthma takes a tremendous economic toll in the U...
where the strategy stretches the company. For the larger company the gap is usually less. Where the company is the leader ...
that emerge in therapeutic settings, for example. They are referred to as boundary issues. Reamer (2003) notes that boun...
suffered frontal lobe damage are often misdiagnosed as having ADD, as the symptoms tend to mimic each other (Shelley-Tremblay et a...
middle class is actually doing pretty good and that the increase in alarming statistics is due to the continuing wave of low-inco...
contends that conflicting results occurred in such studies because of "inadequate sample size". The article references the World ...
five different groups of people whose ancestors were typically isolated by oceans, deserts or mountains" (Bamshad and Olson, 2003)...