YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Current Shortage in Nursing
Essays 61 - 90
The crisis of a nursing shortage will continue for at least another three years. Some colleges have added additional programs in a...
This paper discusses the problem of the nursing shortage and its impact on nursing recruitment and retention. Six pages in length,...
In six pages this essay discusses nursing shortages and examines the employment satisfaction aspects or lack thereof as it pertain...
all aspects of professional nursing and a nurses obligation to patients to provide ethical and professional quality care. The firs...
embarrassment in front of others, withheld pay increases, and termination" (Marriner-Tomey, 2004, p. 118). While conferring reward...
numbers of young students came to believe that perhaps nursing would provide an outlet for caring natures as well as support a fam...
socially isolating, as outside opinion is discounted. The team adopts a "defensive posture," which is evidenced by "derogatory, de...
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 ...
This 3 page paper looks at the potential for an entrepreneur to startup and energy business in Albania. The paper considers the ma...
patient was in a significant amount of pain, he made jokes throughout his entire stay, as family members remained at his bedside. ...
In a paper consisting of six pages the shortage of white collar professionals in an ever changing workplace is examined and conten...
available in the need for workers. There is also the consideration of the destruction it is taking place in the country and the ne...
In 2006, Ryan reported there was a serious shortage of principals in the entire Northeast region of the United States, encompassin...
ability to empower and grow people" (Gokenbach, 2003, p. 8). Over the past decade, there have been numerous studies that have fou...
Nursing (Webber, 2007). However, this is not a long-term solution. The long-term solution to achieving an adequate nursing force f...
quality and care" of health services that offered to rural areas throughout the US (Clinton, 2007). In addition to providing fun...
considering this economic downturn, the numbers of undergraduates pursuing nursing careers began to also decline. In 1991, Canada ...
staff them (Ocala, Fla., Hospitals Tackle Nursing Shortage, 2002). The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizati...
In 2001, health care spending as a percentage of GDP was 14.1 percent, or $5,035 per capita (Levit, Smith, Cowan, Lazenby, Senseni...
educators in the past, are lured away from academia by better-paying positions in clinical and private practice (Mee, 2003). Furth...
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 ...
1999). Elderly patients who are alert, and not declared incompetent, have the right to refuse treatment, which includes turning or...
the new paradigm becomes the new standard. Lewin once commented, "If you want to truly understand something, try to change it" (Go...
Beginning in the early 1990s, managed care targeted nursing as an expenditure where hospitals could cut costs. Managed care consul...
budget restraints. Nurses leave the profession because they are "distressed by being unable to provide quality nursing care, disgr...
in death is a wise safeguard. In the early part of the twentieth century, rationalizations abounded in medical literature that def...
Another issue is that of inexperience. Because nursing tends to be such a high turnover field, new graduates are frequently hired ...
have simply left the profession (Fox and Abrahamson, 2009). Buerhaus, Auerbach and Staiger (2009) reported that while there has b...
for certainty is that as demand for health care services grows, nurses will be pressed more and more into taking over doctors duti...