YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Immunization Policy and Australian Nursing
Essays 181 - 210
nurse practitioners how they could join the movement and help. The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1989 included minimal reimbursem...
This research paper pertains to the nursing shortage and discusses its current state and possible policy approaches. Six pages in ...
quality and care" of health services that offered to rural areas throughout the US (Clinton, 2007). In addition to providing fun...
imply, a standardized nursing language provides a "uniform nomenclature for the diagnosis, intervention, and evaluation components...
30 months, as this is when between 13 and 28 percent of senior nurses are due to retire (Sibbald, 2003). Currently, close to a thi...
socially isolating, as outside opinion is discounted. The team adopts a "defensive posture," which is evidenced by "derogatory, de...
generations. Though Nightingale promoted a professional demeanor, nursing was not something that most well-bred women would even ...
were organized and participative, then they took great risks in alienating the public by participating in suffrage events like the...
graduate nursing hires (Truman, 2004, p. 45). The novice nurses participate in six hours of classroom instruction, plus thirty hou...
upholding the human dignity of the people involved, as well as their "unique biopsychosocial, cultural, (and) spiritual being" (LM...
fence, but rather that remedies should address both social concerns and the realities of this social, economic and political probl...
higher nurse-to-patient ratios suffer an increased rate of burnout and experience greater dissatisfaction with their jobs. In resp...
This section describes how nurses partner with "individuals, families, communities and populations" in order to address a variety ...
international trade, has also increased pollution from diesel engines (Bostwick, 2004). A 20 parts-per-billion increase in ozone l...
gives the appearance of increased attention to theory and evidenced-based nursing in an atmosphere of caring for the individual. ...
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...
determine their relationships with others, as well as pull people of similar interests and often similar personalities together an...
to changes which in turn can result in higher costs and reduced perceived quality of care. Primary nursing is not a new con...
a method which pursues both action and understanding at the same time, and points out that it is particularly relevant in situatio...
(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...
base on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, officially bringing the United States into World War II. At the time of the surprise attack, howev...
use this possibility as an excuse to not provide other people, people who are obviously suffering tremendously and would inevitabl...
eventually revert to many of the methods formerly used in patient care. She makes clear distinction between research in nursing t...
(Snyder and Lindquist, 2001). Under this philosophy the social factors and even the spiritual factors of an individuals existen...
that have affected my choice of working as a nurse. Of course many people have these factors in common within their personal valu...
during which time they reviewed data regarding the patient and made adjustments to the clinical care program. The advanced practic...
are getting calls from every part of the country every day. I am hearing from nurses that the working conditions are intolerable a...
expected only to continue for several years to come. Then, growth will begin to decline in response to fewer numbers of people re...