YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Bone Cancer Case Study and Nursing Interventions
Essays 3811 - 3840
concepts dominated the field of stress research beginning in the 1950s; however, by the 1970s, there was opposition to Selyes stre...
devastating effects of cancer and the lack of available organs for the purposes of transplant. Indeed, the 1980s is often dubbed t...
York found that, in the past, ambulance diversions were a seasonal event. However, more recent research finds that diversional sta...
: The precise causes of ovarian cancer remain unknown, but some researchers believe that it has to do with the processes of tissue...
ability to empower and grow people" (Gokenbach, 2003, p. 8). Over the past decade, there have been numerous studies that have fou...
to break. To bring the point home, half a million people die each year from cigarette-related causes (Whelan, 1994, p. 77), with ...
illustrates how she ignored the potential for causing harm when she increased the patients drugs; only after the medication had be...
to work efficiently and effectively across cultural boundaries. This concept also encompasses not only the assumption that nurses,...
in death is a wise safeguard. In the early part of the twentieth century, rationalizations abounded in medical literature that def...
In five pages this report examines the risk factor represented by tobacco in the incidence of oral cancer. Five sources are cited...
In eight pages a March 2001 article published in The New York Times about prostate cancer and the unusual approach it takes in ter...
In twenty pages this report discusses the link between breast cancer and postmenopausal estrogen replacement therapy with pros and...
In six pages this paper discusses the connection between skin cancer and sun exposure. Six sources are cited in the bibliograph...
In a paper consisting of six pages the various psychological issues connected with breast cancer are examined as a way of coping b...
In five pages this paper considers the perpetuated images of nurses in general and of the nursing profession overall. Three sourc...
In ten pages this paper discusses the holistic approach of Sr. Callister Roy's nursing theories in terms of how they successfully ...
crosses over all these disciplines (Warda, 2001). Family is defined broadly to incorporate the diverse structures of family in to...
Continuing education as it relates to the nursing profession is considered in this paper containing five pages and discusses nursi...
In a paper consisting of six pages the growing trend towards treating cancer patients at home rather than at a medical facility is...
time were better qualified to make such definitions. Baker had received her preliminary degree in nursing in 1945, a degree which...
the males in the REACH study than in the females." Taken together, had these hypotheses been supported then it would be exp...
much broader in its application. It is this broadness that allows nurses to reach across religious lines and distinctions. In a su...
it comes to orders, medications, tests, transfers and so on. Another problem for both physicians and nurses is identifying all p...
legislation that authorizes a Nurse Licensure Compact (National Council of the State Boards of Nursing, Nurse Licensure Compact, 2...
Additionally, the model also "incorporates a life span continuum, where the individual passes from fully dependent at birth, to fu...
that has been devoted to it over the years, we still do not know what causes cancer. We know what cancer is and in most situation...
of the patient experience" (Engebretson 20). The background provided by a large, close-knit family means that, from childhood, I h...
NAON recognizes that learning and developing professional is a life-long processes and it helps orthopedic nurses achieve the goal...
In eleven pages this paper discusses legal issues of which nurses should be aware, lawsuit avoidance, and the importance of malpra...
to the health care system, or that everyone should be screened just in case, but rather, that the testing can be uncomfortable, an...