YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Continuing Problem of Shortages of Nurses
Essays 31 - 60
that hospital nurse staffing levels are inadequate to provide safe and effective care" (DPE Research Department, 2003). Physicians...
This essay provides data regarding the shortage and turnover and causes for these events. The essay also discusses why there is a ...
This research paper presents a comprehensive discussion of the American nursing shortage. A brief history of the shortage is prese...
less people living in rural communities and the "more remote geographical regions" of Australia than in urban locales (Bushy 104)....
positive effect on the nursing staffing shortage being experienced at Hospital Name. Assessment of the environment Internal envir...
2010 and it indicated that the nursing shortage was being addressed by Maryland schools, this made me curious and this led me to t...
well. This study also appears to be sound scientifically. Its primary means of data analysis is statistical; the methods b...
Kanters position that the situational aspects of a working environment have the ability to influence worker attitudes and behavior...
developing countries, while it alleviating the nursing shortage in the industrialized countries to a certain degree, is creating a...
available in the need for workers. There is also the consideration of the destruction it is taking place in the country and the ne...
expectancy is increasing and more people are surviving serious illness and living longer with chronic illness. At the same time, t...
the question of what effect an aging nursing work force has on American healthcare in general. First and foremost, the aging of ...
budget restraints. Nurses leave the profession because they are "distressed by being unable to provide quality nursing care, disgr...
for registered nurses by 2010 (Feeg 8). While statistics such as these have received a great deal of press, what is less well kno...
US shortage has caused many healthcare institutions to look for nurses outside their countrys borders and many nurses are leaving ...
many contemporary societies still reflect incredible amounts of poverty, disease and homelessness in spite of the fact that their ...
since the survey was initiated in 1977, for example, between 1992 and 1996, the number of nurses grew by 14.2 percent (Mee, 2001)....
due to a number of reasons. First of all, the average age of the population is getting progressive older. As a people. America, an...
1999). Elderly patients who are alert, and not declared incompetent, have the right to refuse treatment, which includes turning or...
investigations that "successfully demonstrate the unfairness that only Affirmative Action can begin to redress" (Bradley 450). Spe...
The writer looks at the concept and problems associated with energy security. The influences including but not limited potential d...
the women who have traditionally filled nursing positions will undoubtedly continue to pursue other professional opportunities tha...
In six pages this essay discusses nursing shortages and examines the employment satisfaction aspects or lack thereof as it pertain...
2002 and allowed for a National Nurse Service Corps program to provide funding for tuition, expenses and a stipend to those nursin...
in this case for a variety of reasons (Chaguturu and Vallabhaneni, 2005). First of all, despite any financial incentives, it has b...
in metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas in every State" (Occupational, 2006). Annual wages were determined by "multiplying the ...
interests and values considered and respected in the decision-making process" (Fly and Johnstone, 2002). This rationale is undoubt...
In five pages this paper discusses how the shortage of nurses compromises the safety of both patients and nurses alike. Six sourc...
in nursing educators aged 36 to 45 (Lewallen, et al, 2003). To complicate matters further, recent statistics show that nurses wh...
today will reach retirement age within 15 years (Mee and Robinson, 2003). At the same time, fewer people are entering nursing, as ...