YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Holistic Nursing Journal
Essays 181 - 210
expected only to continue for several years to come. Then, growth will begin to decline in response to fewer numbers of people re...
are getting calls from every part of the country every day. I am hearing from nurses that the working conditions are intolerable a...
use this possibility as an excuse to not provide other people, people who are obviously suffering tremendously and would inevitabl...
all aspects of professional nursing and a nurses obligation to patients to provide ethical and professional quality care. The firs...
Domain concepts Health: The traditional understanding of "health" is that is the absence of illness and/or injury. However, for ...
can only be expected to escalate in the near future. Therefore, issues of affordability, in relation to equitable healthcare servi...
developing countries, while it alleviating the nursing shortage in the industrialized countries to a certain degree, is creating a...
the politics found in hospitals and other environments (Reuters, 2008). Supply and demand is always a major driver of salaries in...
to holistic nutrition with a prescriptive connotation as being used as "an alternative to, or in conjunction with, traditional med...
has always been about the development of autonomy, equality, social justice and democracy" (Mezirow, 1999). The transformative app...
(p. 835) among Medicaid residents of Massachusetts nursing homes between 1991 and 1994. This mixed method (i.e., quantitative as ...
well. This study also appears to be sound scientifically. Its primary means of data analysis is statistical; the methods b...
to changes which in turn can result in higher costs and reduced perceived quality of care. Primary nursing is not a new con...
Statistics expects that number to rise to more than one million in less than 20 years. The American Nurses Association and Monste...
The ever-changing nature of Americas health care system has introduced a chaos in a population that for more than a century has be...
during which time they reviewed data regarding the patient and made adjustments to the clinical care program. The advanced practic...
The concept of health also has undergone change over the years. It formerly referred to absence of disease, but now it generally ...
and Robinson, 2003). Another element complicating the problem is the fact that in the early 1990s, many hospitals restructured a...
today will reach retirement age within 15 years (Mee and Robinson, 2003). At the same time, fewer people are entering nursing, as ...
chosen. The Metropolitan Museum of Art indicates two events that would be appropriate for a humanities-oriented fieldtrip geared...
embarrassment in front of others, withheld pay increases, and termination" (Marriner-Tomey, 2004, p. 118). While conferring reward...
defining the leadership characteristics that would be the focus of this educational effort (Pintar, Capuano and Rosser, 2007). As ...
promotion can address a variety of nursing clients in a variety of circumstances. For example, Richardson (2002) acknowledges that...
age. Therefore, the patient population is increasing. This factor is also influenced by the fact that that the huge lump in the Am...
are RNs who are "prepared, through advanced education and clinical training, to provide preventive and acute health-care services"...
umbrella of gestalt therapy that reaches far into this vast cavity of the human beings visual imagery and draws out a response tha...
numbers of young students came to believe that perhaps nursing would provide an outlet for caring natures as well as support a fam...
self-knowledge (Simpson, 2004). While anecdotal evidence is not regarded as conclusive, the experience of individual nurses in reg...
are under our care. By promoting healthy and better communication between us and the patient, we do not need to involve the famil...
and Ingalls (2003) describe the four metaparadigms allegorically as the "roots" of a living tree, emphasizing that the metaparadig...