YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Carative Nursing Model and Nurses Image
Essays 631 - 660
There are many settings in which nursing can occur within this framework. The most obvious is...
from disease to non-disease to health. She argues that "This synthesized view incorporates disease as meaningful aspect of health...
and environment integral relationships" (Carey, 2003). One way in which to determine the usefulness of the theory and how p...
individuals belief, values, and membership in family and social groups. Brodie (2001) asserts that it is the hallmark of professio...
In fifteen pages male nursing is examined in an overview that includes history, the increasing role of men in the profession in th...
In five pages this paper reviews a safer sex intervention and abstinence study published in 1998 by Jemmot, Jemmot and Fong and ev...
In five pages this paper discusses the holistic nursing model and the role played by Jean Watson in its development. Four sources...
In seven pages the NCLEX RN testing and its associated issues are examined in this topical overview. Nine sources are cited in th...
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 detecting and preventing elderly abuse in nursing homes are considered in a top down healthcare model examination. ...
This paper examines Madeleine Leininger's theories of human care as well as her trans-cultural nursing model. This seven page pap...
adaptation has a process in which individuals respond positively to environmental changes and described three types of stimuli: fo...
includes strategies that are designed to make the individual feel better, such as "exercise, spirituality, support groups and humo...
activities" (Orems Self-Care Model Concepts) that patients need to undertake to meet their own health care needs on a routine basi...
define what other mechanisms are brought into the healing process. For example, Gordon et al (2002) argue that depending on the v...
train sufficient numbers of new nurses. Turnover is high among those who remain in the profession, and those so dissatisfied - an...
is defined as the needs of that individual to meet "Universal self-care requisites associated with life processes and maintenance ...
each of the six areas of life: family and home; spiritual and ethical; social and cultural; financial and career; physical and hea...
the concept of paying it forward. Praying forward is that act of doing something kind or helpful for someone else, they, in turn, ...
reach an adaptive state. This will improve the patients health (Nicholson, 2009). The physiological mode refers to all physical ...
this scenario, the question to be explored now is how each of above named nursing models addresses these patient needs. The Syste...
nurse seeks to preserve any culture-specific aspect of the patients life everywhere possible. When some culturally-linked aspect ...
the daughter who has lost a mother and does not know it: "She was growing too attached to the child and wanted desperately to help...
in diagnostic, prescriptive, and regulatory operations of nursing" (Horan, Doran and Timmins, 2004, p. 30). From this perspective,...
In fourteen pages this paper discusses the nursing field and offers a proposal for an assessment tool that measures self esteem wi...
the people involved (Oberle and Allen, 2002). The principal focus of the simultaneity paradigm is on the clients perspectives of t...
In ten pages this paper discusses patient stress in an application of the Orlando and Newman stress models and the development of ...
very opposing forces. There is an evident duality to Herakles. On the one hand, he has a compassionate side that truly wants to ...