YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Forensic Psychiatric Nursing
Essays 1921 - 1950
In three pages this paper examines community based nursing and its associated issues within the context of Imogene King's theories...
In ten pages this research paper discusses nursing educational intervention regarding information about secondhand smoke's dangers...
In four pages a character analysis of this novel by Ken Kesey focuses upon McMurphy and Nurse Ratched. There is no bibliography i...
In five pages this paper reviews a safer sex intervention and abstinence study published in 1998 by Jemmot, Jemmot and Fong and ev...
studies alike. Bandura is considered amongst others as having expanded on Vrooms original expectancy-valence theory. Lawler was an...
In five pages a hospital environment is considered in a discussion of a family centered care approach with pediatric nursing being...
In two pages this paper examines the nursing field and the growing complexities involving managed health care. Two sources are ci...
In seven pages this paper discusses the nurse leader in a consideration of skills, theory, and recommendations on how crisis manag...
In two pages this paper examines how hospital administrators and staff nurses share medical liability in a definition of the term ...
In six pages empowerment as it pertains to the field of nursing is discussed. Six sources are cited in the bibliography....
In six pages the role of nurses in the patient process of dying is considered in two scenario types that also involves caring for ...
In three pages this paper presents a summary and review of an article that describes how marketing principles are being applied to...
In nine pages executive nursing is examined in a discussion of their many concerns regarding the industry itself, patient care, an...
Emergency rooms are, at least in many cases, the primary health care provider to the underinsured and uninsured patient (Isenstein...
and empowerment must be mutually exclusive. Falk (1995) describes empowerment as a more contemporary concept than advocacy, and...
In nine pages this paper examines causes, symptoms, and results of patient stress in a nursing overview that includes the servant ...
their roles. As a result, there is a need to temper the actions of the nurse in the carative environment with a recognition of th...
and the directives of the medical environment. For over two decades, for example, the health care industry has recognized a decli...
quality of a patients life, (4) implementing managed care policies that threaten quality of care, and (5) working with unethical/i...
In a paper consisting of six pages the argument is presented that nurses should be paid not on their level of education but rather...
patient care" (p. 438). Prior to 1970, nursing training in the UK could be described as rigid and highly structured. After...
Primary Care Act, a feature of both practices is that the patients have the option of seeing a GP or a NP as their first point of ...
their wishes for the patients care. Every nursing home resident has a right to such a plan by law (Stern), and it does not only p...
call for compliance with standardized procedures, health codes, and licensing requirements, all of which have been initiated to su...
deal of pain likely will occur during the first 24 hours after surgery (Drakeford, Pettine, Brookshire and Ebert, 1991). Preventi...
governor should strive to at least make a dent in the problem in the next four years. It seems that the most pertinent problems ar...
on a global scale. Therefore, for nurses to succeed in the complex world of the twenty-first century, many authorities feel th...
"Many changes in health care yesterday, have major unforeseen consequences today. While it is easy to predict results with the be...
Issues pertinent to these five elements include conceptual framework, scope of practice, policy implications and support of social...
be in agreement with a working definition of autonomy. Thus, the following attributes should be seen: self-determination, in...