YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Forensic Psychiatric Nursing
Essays 451 - 480
quality and safety for the care they can expect to receive from nurses and midwives and other health professionals are the same" (...
individual family member are considered within this context (Friedman, Bowden and Jones 37). In analyzing the various theories th...
This involves intensive, one-on-one teaching, which enables autistic children to learn the intricacies of behaviors or skills via ...
is a term that refers to "a formal way of thinking (i.e. conceptualizing) about a process/system under study" (Conceptual Framewor...
Aesthetic, the need for beauty, order and symmetry (Huitt, 2004). 7. Self-actualization is a plateau not all people reach. At this...
verifies old knowledge (Wilkerson, 1998). As this suggests, the continuation of scholarly advances in the development of nursing t...
makes the point that EBP involves more than simply utilize research evidence; and Penz and Bassendowski emphasize this point by s...
interests and values considered and respected in the decision-making process" (Fly and Johnstone, 2002). This rationale is undoubt...
information. These guidelines are also based on this researchers finding that self-care promotes the pediatric patients spiritual ...
many of the findings of nursing research have little or no relevance to their daily practice. Im and Meleis (1999) cite several re...
with their illness decreases and their partners ability to help them with the process is impeded as well. Decreased communication...
concepts dominated the field of stress research beginning in the 1950s; however, by the 1970s, there was opposition to Selyes stre...
York found that, in the past, ambulance diversions were a seasonal event. However, more recent research finds that diversional sta...
ability to empower and grow people" (Gokenbach, 2003, p. 8). Over the past decade, there have been numerous studies that have fou...
For example, in regards to nurse practitioners from other state, the law states, "The Board (meaning the Board of Nursing) may iss...
potential for long term physiological complications as well as long-term emotional impacts. Not only does the type of care needed...
to work efficiently and effectively across cultural boundaries. This concept also encompasses not only the assumption that nurses,...
illustrates how she ignored the potential for causing harm when she increased the patients drugs; only after the medication had be...
secretary, should leave the ward when there were fewer than three children on the unit and work a second adult unit as well. He wa...
the study intervention. Also, as yet, Cook is not clear about the purposes, aims or goals of the study. Literature Review While ...
In five pages this paper discusses contemporary nursing and the caring philosophy's role. Seven sources are listed in the bibliog...
it comes to orders, medications, tests, transfers and so on. Another problem for both physicians and nurses is identifying all p...
of the patient experience" (Engebretson 20). The background provided by a large, close-knit family means that, from childhood, I h...
as well as those studies that have suggested broadening students exposure to families and children with special needs. This discus...
in nursing educators aged 36 to 45 (Lewallen, et al, 2003). To complicate matters further, recent statistics show that nurses wh...
partners in the healthcare process. Through training and education, nurses learn to make decisions on multiple issues of patient c...
the nursing theorists that have come after her (Tourville and Ingalls, 2003). The interactive model focuses on the significant of ...
all aspects of nursing. While the prime relationship in nursing is the one between the nurse and patient, relationships between nu...
much broader in its application. It is this broadness that allows nurses to reach across religious lines and distinctions. In a su...
are necessary for patient survival" (Kelley, 2005, p. 2). When the blood volume in the body is too low, it activates "compensatory...